Difference between revisions of "Filmographic information in the ocean of data"

From filmstandards.org

(Drowning, getting diluted, or taking on the challenge?)
(Drowning, getting diluted, or taking on the challenge?)
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The quality of these datasets ranges from wretched to wonderful, and some of the services seem to be defunct most of the time while others do an admirable job. In this respect, linked open data is '''still little different''' from the rest of the Internet.
 
The quality of these datasets ranges from wretched to wonderful, and some of the services seem to be defunct most of the time while others do an admirable job. In this respect, linked open data is '''still little different''' from the rest of the Internet.
  
What makes a differerence, however, is the '''long-term potential''' of organising knowledge publicly by expressing relationships between myriads of statements.
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What makes a differerence, however, is the '''long-term potential''' of organising knowledge publicly by expressing typed (i.e. semantic) relationships between myriads of statements.
 
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Revision as of 20:25, 11 April 2011

From the TC 372 Workshop Compendium

Drowning, getting diluted, or taking on the challenge?

Metadata from film archives may appear as little more than a drop in the ocean of factual data that already exists on the net. Is it worthwhile to join the game of linked open data?

Lod-datasets 2010-09-22r.jpg

From: http://richard.cyganiak.de/2007/10/lod/imagemap.html

This is a scaled-down rendering of Richard Cyganiak's famous visualisation of the linked open data cloud, as of September, 2010. Updates of this are published on http://lod-cloud.net/ .

The quality of these datasets ranges from wretched to wonderful, and some of the services seem to be defunct most of the time while others do an admirable job. In this respect, linked open data is still little different from the rest of the Internet.

What makes a differerence, however, is the long-term potential of organising knowledge publicly by expressing typed (i.e. semantic) relationships between myriads of statements.