Hi Karen. Great question! As a former cataloger/library student, I would say that my biggest interest is how to establish one LD project using the easiest/cheapest method (for example, Python, maybe)? Creating an ontology may be part of this question, but I am more interested in a general (and probably broader) perspective. Another potential question may be how to make use of linked data elsewhere as a librarian.
I would like to take such a training, if there will be one. And I would like to know the results of this conversation. Kai On Sun, Sep 1, 2013 at 12:37 PM, Karen Coyle <li...@kcoyle.net> wrote: > I'm thinking about training needs around linked data -- yes, that includes > basic concepts, but at the moment I'm wondering what specific technologies > or tasks people would like to learn about? Some obvious examples are: how > to do SPARQL queries; how to use triples in databases; maybe how to use > Protege (free software) [1] to create an ontology. Those are just a quick > shot across the bow, and from my basically non-techie point of view. Please > add your own. > > If you can't say it in terms of technology, it would be as good (if not > maybe better) to say it in terms of what you'd like to be able to do (do > searches, create data... ) > > This is very unscientific, but I think it's a worthwhile conversation to > have, and maybe can help get some ideas for training. > > kc > [1] http://protege.stanford.edu/ > > -- > Karen Coyle > kco...@kcoyle.net http://kcoyle.net > ph: 1-510-540-7596 > m: 1-510-435-8234 > skype: kcoylenet > -- Kai Li | 李恺 MLIS student School of Information Studies, Syracuse University 343 Hinds Hall, Syracuse, New York 13244-4100 My Personal Page: https://sites.google.com/site/kailinalsi/ Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/kai.lee.nalsi Twitter: https://twitter.com/#!/Nalsi Blog: http://librarianforthefuture.blogspot.com/ Gmail/Gtalk: islande...@gmail.com 博客: http://nalsi.net/ 微博: http://weibo.com/nalsi