On Wed, 6 Feb 2002 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > On Wed, 6 Feb 2002, Andrew Ho wrote: > > >If Gerardo or anyone is willing to download the content from the OIO > >Library's projects/documents database as an XML file and merge them into > >LinuxDoc or other place, that will be great. Alternatively, if Gerardo or > >anyone is willing to contribute/give their content to the OIO Library, > >that will be great too. Of course, having some kind of open content > >license and a structured/tagged output will be helpful. > > > > What documents did you have in mind that I take a look at?
Take Res Medicinae for example, at: http://www.txoutcome.org/scripts/zope/library/files/browse/show_contents/objectid-291 You will see: --------------------- Res Medicinae Posted by Karsten Hilbert on 2001/12/25 17:08:16 US/Pacific, 14 reads. This project draws from several sources: The overall structure and design is related to OpenEMed, the immediate intention is to build a GNUmed compatible Java frontend, openEHR principles are kept in mind and it is based heavily on a long analysis being actively developed on one of it's mailing lists by German primary care doctors. It currently aims for the inidividual outpatient clinic but hopes to expand into a hospital information system eventually. It also currently focusses on German requirements. License: GPL Home Page ----------------------- This is the Res Medicinae project's "record" as maintained by the OIO Library. If you click on the _Download as XML_ link on the lower-right corner of the page, you will see/download the Res Medicinae record in XML. Like this: <project> <data> <item> <name>name</name> <value>Res Medicinae</value> </item> <item> <name>submitter</name> <value>Karsten Hilbert</value> </item> <item> <name>submitter_email</name> <value>[EMAIL PROTECTED]</value> </item> <item> <name>time</name> <value>2001/12/25 17:08:16 US/Pacific</value> </item> <item> <name>description</name> <value>This project draws from several sources: The overall structure and design is related to OpenEMed, the immediate intention is to build a GNUmed compatible Java frontend, openEHR principles are kept in mind and it is based heavily on a long analysis being actively developed on one of it's mailing lists by German primary care doctors. It currently aims for the inidividual outpatient clinic but hopes to expand into a hospital information system eventually. It also currently focusses on German requirements.</value> </item> etc... With this structured XML document, we can propagate updates and exchange project records between sites. This function is analogous to moving patient records between different clinics and hospitals. The OIO Library also supports bulk download of all projects/document records contained within any given folder. Therefore, if you go to to top-most folder (Projects), you can download the entire content of the Projects database as a single XML document. Finally, the project records are available under the copyleft Design Science License (http://dsl.org/copyleft/dsl.txt). Best regards, Andrew --- Andrew P. Ho, M.D. OIO: Open Infrastructure for Outcomes www.TxOutcome.Org (Hosting OIO Library #1 and OSHCA Mirror #1)
