View allAll Photos Tagged MetaData
SCSL hosted a Metadata Tea and invited SCSL retirees to help identify people in photos. A great time was had by all and many subject headings created :-)
SCSL hosted a Metadata Tea and invited SCSL retirees to help identify people in photos. A great time was had by all and many subject headings created :-)
Natalie Pollecutt and Deborah Leem of the Wellcome Library talk about their work in "Putting Medical Officers of Health reports on the map" at the GeoSpatial in the Cultural Heritage Domain - Past, Present and Future event.
Natalie Pollecutt and Deborah Leem of the Wellcome Library talk about their work in "Putting Medical Officers of Health reports on the map" at the GeoSpatial in the Cultural Heritage Domain - Past, Present and Future event.
www.onlinecommunityreport.com/categories/3-Key-Resources
Our social network research focuses on relationships in older forms of computer-mediated social network services like email lists, newsgroups, web boards and other repositories of threaded conversation. We found interesting “roles” like “answer person” (seen below). We documented this “answer person role: in a paper we recently published in the Journal of Social Structure: “Visualizing the Signatures of Social Roles in Online Discussion Groups” which is available from: www.cmu.edu/joss/content/articles/volume8/Welser/ Some of the tools we used to do this study along with others are available from our website (http://www.research.microsoft.com/community/projects). Our research points to the way to move from “page rank” to “people rank” by generating “social accounting metadata”. These measures of author behavior capture the structure of conversations and populations of community participants; the results can provide useful relevance ranking features for improving community search. Eric Brill published on the topic of making use of Netscan metadata as a feature of relevance ranking algorithms:
Clay markers from ancient Mesopotamia used to provide clues to the contents of associated clay tablets. Girginakku represent the oldest know examples of metadata.
Metadata:
ISO: 3600
f/5.3
1/1000
Inspiration: I like the way the water bounces or spills off the vase onto the plant below and how the australian natives contrast the smooth texture of the water.
For: New Moments - Camera Craft Challenge
SCSL hosted a Metadata Tea and invited SCSL retirees to help identify people in photos. A great time was had by all and many subject headings created :-)
SCSL hosted a Metadata Tea and invited SCSL retirees to help identify people in photos. A great time was had by all and many subject headings created :-)
SCSL hosted a Metadata Tea and invited SCSL retirees to help identify people in photos. A great time was had by all and many subject headings created :-)
one of the concluding points from David Weinberger's talk "The End of Information" at the Smithsonian on September 16, 2008
SCSL hosted a Metadata Tea and invited SCSL retirees to help identify people in photos. A great time was had by all and many subject headings created :-)
VLUU L100, M100 / Samsung L100, M100
What if objects can show their metadata.
And why is metadata only useful for buying them?