@Tim:
For total extra kudos, provide query rewriting rules
from yours site to LoC data, linked so that you can write a program
to start with a sparql query which fails
and figures out from metadata how to turn it into one which works!


Is the combination of 301 + owl:sameAs that we have used for RAMEAU, e.g,
http://stitch.cs.vu.nl/vocabularies/rameau/ark:/12148/cb11932889r
good enough?
Or would you recommend more/different?


@Bradley:
Thanks for the void suggestion. dcterms:replaces seems like a good property to 
use between the service resources.
But I see you're suggesting/using skos:exactMatch for the link between 
individual concept resources. Do you think owl:sameAs is not good for that 
scenario?
We had the discussion before; Bernard, notably, was against owl:sameAs. I was 
not convinced then, and we kept using it. But if we're the only ones, my doubts 
are growing. I still have to be explained when we can use owl:sameAs, if we 
can't use it here.
(and if we are not to use owl:sameAs, then I'd prefer to use dcterms:replaces!)

Best,

Antoine


Tim- OK, I'm game. I am in the process of hacking together a small redirect 
server that would replace the existing site, and can easily incorporate the 
ability to return something like the following on a request for the root 
resource:

@prefix rdf: <http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#> .
@prefix rdfs: <http://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#> .
@prefix foaf: <http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/> .
@prefix dcterms: <http://purl.org/dc/terms/> .
@prefix void: <http://rdfs.org/ns/void#> .
@prefix skos: <http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#> .

<http://www.t4gm.info/>
rdf:type void:Dataset ;
foaf:homepage <http://www.t4gm.info/> ;
void:uriSpace "http://www.t4gm.info/concept/"; ;
dcterms:isReplacedBy <http://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/graphicMaterials> .

<http://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/graphicMaterials>
rdf:type void:Dataset ;
foaf:homepage <http://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/graphicMaterials.html> ;
dcterms:replaces <http://www.t4gm.info/> .

<http://www.t4gm.info/linkset/>
rdf:type void:Linkset ;
void:linkPredicate skos:exactMatch ;
void:subjectsTarget <http://www.t4gm.info/> ;
void:objectsTarget <http://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/graphicMaterials> ;
void:dataDump <http://www.t4gm.info/linkset/> .

Would something like that suffice? I think this captures the crucial 
information that there are two datasets, that one is replacing the other, and 
that (following Antoine's lead) we provide access to a linkset that maps 
resources from one dataset to its replacement. Additionally we could provide 
additional general voiD dataset metadata and provenance information to give 
additional background.

I could not, however, find a vocabulary that made it easy to express the normative 
statement that <http://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/graphicMaterials> was in some manner 
better or to be preferred to <http://www.t4gm.info/>. The provenance vocabularies 
don't seem to address this question; the closest thing I can find are the predicates in and 
around stating opinions about scientific discourse in ontologies like SWAN. Perhaps this is 
an issue that could be taken up in the Open Provenance effort, if someone hasn't already 
addressed it.

I'm regret to say that I'd already nuked the CKAN record by the time this email 
reached me, but I'll follow up and see what support there is there to provide a 
historical record with similar information for others proceeding down this path 
in the future.

Finally, I'd like to try to do something to address your suggestion with 
respect to providing query rewrite rules, but I'm unclear exactly what you mean 
by that; what form would you expect that kind of information to take? - 
regards, BPA

Bradley P. Allen
http://bradleypallen.org


On Wed, May 30, 2012 at 3:57 AM, Tim Berners-Lee <ti...@w3.org 
<mailto:ti...@w3.org>> wrote:

    Seems to me that the crucial bit of information that the data
    which is served by your site now can be got much better by
    going th LoC site woul dbe nice to have in machine readable
    form.

    One idea is *leaving* it in CKAN but mark it
    as historical so it can be a place o make the pointer the
    the superceding point. The entry could be a sort of rallying
    point for people who were interested in the data.
    In a way, the CKAN entry has an added value once you are gone.
    I don't know if CKAN has that facility.

    For total extra kudos, provide query rewriting rules
    from yours site to LoC data, linked so that you can write a program
    to start with a sparql query which fails
    and figures out from metadata how to turn it into one which works!


    Tim


    On 2012-05 -29, at 16:47, Antoine Isaac wrote:

     > Dear Bradley,
     >
     > The second part of your plan reminds me of my recent question on 
"moving" a dataset
     > http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-lod/2012Apr/0123.html
     >
     > The object moved (a thesaurus) is quite the same, as the cause for the 
"moving": in both cases an official version has arisen to replace a first 
prototype.
     >
     > We have tried to create a redirection, using a 301 code. But I guess 
that if we had decided to shut done our server altogether, we would have opted for 
the same 410 code as you!
     > and maybe we'll do, one day...
     >
     > Cheers,
     >
     > Antoine
     >
     >
     >> Back in 2009, as an experiment in working with RDFa and linked data, I created t4gm.info 
<http://t4gm.info> <http://t4gm.info>. It is based solely on US Library of Congress library 
linked data (specifically, the Thesaurus for Graphical Materials), which at the time I created the site 
didn't have any equivalently accessible linked data. That has long since been rectified by the LoC. So 
t4gm.info <http://t4gm.info> <http://t4gm.info> is at best redundant and at worst potentially 
confusing.
     >>
     >> So what I want to do is shut the site down. But there doesn't seem to 
be much if any best practice around doing that, especially when the site by virtue of 
its listing with CKAN is part of the LOD Cloud diagram. What I want to do is 1) 
delist it from CKAN, and then 2) shut the site down, perhaps replacing it with a 
simple web service returning a 410 status code per RFC 2616. I assume it will be 
removed from the LOD cloud diagram when that is next updated from the CKAN data.
     >>
     >> Anyone have any suggestions beyond that? Also, if anyone from CKAN is 
reading this, I could also use some guidance on how deletion of records is 
accomplished through the online interface. - cheers, BPA
     >>
     >> Bradley P. Allen
     >> http://bradleypallen.org
     >
     >
     >





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