Obviously openRefine will be used in many applications, but you've got to get your data TO openrefine, and you've got to do some programming to do that, and then to return the data to however you store it. OpenRefine is a great tool, but not a complete solution, IMO.

kc

On 4/30/14, 10:47 AM, Simon Brown wrote:
What about OpenRefine?


On Wed, Apr 30, 2014 at 10:34 AM, Karen Coyle <li...@kcoyle.net> wrote:

Thanks, Richard. I ask because it's one of the most common questions that
I get -- often about WorldCat, but in general about any source of URIs --
"How do I connect my data (text forms) to their URIs?" And these questions
usually come from library or archive projects with little or no programming
staff. So it seems like we need to be able to answer that question so that
people can get linked up. In fact, it seems to me that the most pressing
need right now is an easy way (or one that someone else can do for you at a
reasonable cost) to connect the text string "identifiers" that we have to
URIs. I envision something like what we went through when we moved from
AACR name forms to AACR2 name forms, and libraries were able to send their
MARC records to a service that returned the records with the new name form.
In this case, though, such a service would return the data with the
appropriate URIs added. (In the case of MARC, in the $0 subfield.)

It's great that the "big guys" like LC and OCLC are providing URIs for
resources. But at the moment I feel like it's grapes dangling just beyond
the reach of the folks we want to connect to. Any ideas on how to make this
easy are welcome. And I do think that there's great potential for an
enterprising start-up to provide an affordable service for libraries and
archives. Of course, an open source "pass in your data in x or y format and
we'll return it with URIs embedded" would be great, but I think it would be
reasonable to charge for such a service.

kc


On 4/30/14, 9:59 AM, Richard Wallis wrote:

To unpack the several questions lurking in Karen’s question.

As to being able to use the WorldCat Works data/identifiers there is no
difference between a or b - it is ODC-BY licensed data.

Getting a Work URI may be easier for a) as they should be able to identify
the OCLC Number and hence use the linked data from it’s URI <
http://worldcat.org/oclc/{ocn}> to pick up the link to it’s work.

Tools such as xISBN <http://xisbn.worldcat.org/xisbnadmin/doc/api.htm>
can
step you towards identifier lookups and are openly available for low
volume
usage.

Citation lookup is more a bib lookup feature, that you could get an OCLC
Number from. One of colleagues may be helpful on the particulars of this.

Apologies for being WorldCat specific, but Karen did ask.

~Richard.


On 30 April 2014 17:15, Karen Coyle <li...@kcoyle.net> wrote:

  My question has to do with discoverability. Let's say that I have a
bibliographic database and I want to add the OCLC work identifiers to it.
Obviously I don't want to do it by hand. I might have ISBNs, but in some
cases I will have a regular author/title-type citation.

and let's say that I am asking this for two different institutions:
a) is an OCLC member institution
b) is not

Thanks,
kc




On 4/30/14, 8:47 AM, Dan Scott wrote:

  On Tue, Apr 29, 2014 at 11:37 PM, Roy Tennant <roytenn...@gmail.com>
wrote:

  This has now instead become a reasonable recommendation
concerning ODC-BY licensing [3] but the confusion and uncertainty
about which records an OCLC member may redistribute remains.

[3] http://www.oclc.org/news/releases/2012/201248.en.html

  Allow me to try to put this confusion and uncertainty to rest once
and
for
all:

ALL THE THINGS. ALL.

At least as far as we are concerned. I think it's well past time to put
the
past in the past.

  That's great, Roy. That's a *lot* simpler than parsing the
recommendations, WCRR, community norms, and such at [A, B] :)

   Meanwhile, we have just put nearly 200 million works records up as
linked

open data. [1], [2], [3]. If that doesn't rock the library open linked
data
world, then no one is paying attention.
Roy

[1] http://oclc.org/en-US/news/releases/2014/201414dublin.html
[2]
http://dataliberate.com/2014/04/worldcat-works-197-million-
nuggets-of-linked-data/
[3] http://hangingtogether.org/?p=3811

  Yes, that is really awesome. But Laura was asking about barriers to
open metadata, so damn you for going off-topic with PR around a lack
of barriers to some metadata (which, for those who have not looked
yet, have a nice ODC-BY licensing statement at the bottom of a given
Works page) :)

A. http://oclc.org/worldcat/community/record-use.en.html
B. http://oclc.org/worldcat/community/record-use/data-
licensing/questions.en.html

  --
Karen Coyle
kco...@kcoyle.net http://kcoyle.net
m: 1-510-435-8234
skype: kcoylenet



--
Karen Coyle
kco...@kcoyle.net http://kcoyle.net
m: 1-510-435-8234
skype: kcoylenet




--
Karen Coyle
kco...@kcoyle.net http://kcoyle.net
m: 1-510-435-8234
skype: kcoylenet

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