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27 December 2010

Quantitative Analysis of Culture Using Millions of Digitized Books | Science/AAAS

Quantitative Analysis of Culture Using Millions of Digitized Books | Science/AAAS

Nodalities » Blog Archive » Challenges and Opportunities for Linked Data

Nodalities » Blog Archive » Challenges and Opportunities for Linked Data

Nodalities » Blog Archive » What place for libraries in a Linked Data world?

Nodalities » Blog Archive » What place for libraries in a Linked Data world?

CLIR Report

CLIR Report: "While the purview of digital forensics was once specialized to fields of law enforcement, computer security, and national defense, the increasing ubiquity of computers and electronic devices means that digital forensics is now used in a wide variety of cases and circumstances. Most records today are born digital, and libraries and other collecting institutions increasingly receive computer storage media as part of their acquisition of 'papers' from writers, scholars, scientists, musicians, and public figures. This poses new challenges to librarians, archivists, and curators—challenges related to accessing and preserving legacy formats, recovering data, ensuring authenticity, and maintaining trust. The methods and tools developed by forensics experts represent a novel approach to these demands. For example, the same forensics software that indexes a criminal suspect's hard drive allows the archivist to prepare a comprehensive manifest of the electronic files a donor has turned over for accession.

This report introduces the field of digital forensics in the cultural heritage sector and explores some points of convergence between the interests of those charged with collecting and maintaining born-digital cultural heritage materials and those charged with collecting and maintaining legal evidence."

RDF and JSON: A Clash of Model and Syntax « Lost Boy

RDF and JSON: A Clash of Model and Syntax « Lost Boy

First issue of Semantic Web journal published | KurzweilAI

First issue of Semantic Web journal published | KurzweilAI

inkdroid › dcat:distribution considered helpful

inkdroid › dcat:distribution considered helpful: "dcat:distribution considered helpful
The other day I happened to notice that the folks at data.gov.uk have started using the Data Catalog Vocabulary in the RDFa they have embedded in their dataset webpages. As an example here is the RDF you can pull out of the HTML for the Anonymised MOT tests and results dataset. Of particular interest to me is that the dataset description now includes an explicit link to the actual data being described using the dcat:distribution property."

The Risks of Cloud: Lessons from Wikileaks - Simon Says...

The Risks of Cloud: Lessons from Wikileaks - Simon Says...

SSRN-Contracts for Clouds: Comparison and Analysis of the Terms and Conditions of Cloud Computing Services by Simon Bradshaw, Christopher Millard, Ian Walden

SSRN-Contracts for Clouds: Comparison and Analysis of the Terms and Conditions of Cloud Computing Services by Simon Bradshaw, Christopher Millard, Ian Walden

What is data science? - O'Reilly Radar

What is data science? - O'Reilly Radar