[annotator-dev] FinalsClub Annotations

Samuel Klein sjklein at post.harvard.edu
Tue Nov 29 19:54:07 UTC 2011


Was there followup to this?

I am working on a project to share - discuss - annotate citations (there
the annotations are comments on the cite as a source, or on the
citation-link itself, rather than on the underlying text of the cite), and
would be glad to coordinate.

http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikicite

Sam.

On Thu, Nov 3, 2011 at 8:14 PM, Rufus Pollock <rufus.pollock at okfn.org>wrote:

> On 3 November 2011 16:07, Andrew at FinalsClub.org <andrew at finalsclub.org>
> wrote:
> > Rufus,
> > Thanks for the reply.  I was beginning to think you weren't interested.
>
> Definitely interested -- just been very busy the last couple of weeks
> (also on this issue it is really my colleague James Harriman-Smith you
> should talk to but I am not sure he checks this mailing list -- as
> suggested earlier best place for this discussion might be
> open-humanities ...).
>
> >  I've actually been talking with another company (Highlighter.com) about
> > helping out in the meantime.  Since I am a believer in free and open
> > knowledge, I hope there is a compelling reason for us to work together
> > instead.
> > A call on Sunday, November 20th would work.  What time were you thinking?
>
> Our usual Open Literature meetups are at around 3 or 4pm GMT. Would
> that work for you?
>
> Rufus
>
> > Looking forward,
> > Andrew Magliozzi
> > Founder, FinalsClub.org
> > On Nov 2, 2011, at 3:08 PM, Rufus Pollock wrote:
> >
> > On 30 October 2011 18:58, Andrew Magliozzi <andrew at finalsclub.org>
> wrote:
> >
> > Thanks for the words of support, Philipp.
> >
> > To follow up my other email ...
> >
> > I'd love to help the OKF as much as possible. Since Shakespeare is only
> part
> >
> > of the content we have I'd love to get your platform running on
> >
> > FinalsClub.org so our community can resume annotating even more great
> public
> >
> > domain texts.
> >
> > That would be great. One of our plans (as just mentioned) is to expand
> > Open Shakespeare (and Open Milton) to be Open Literature i.e. to be a
> > place for all open texts. We'd love to collaborate here since it
> > sounds like we're both interested inthis. As this is less relevant to
> > Annotator list so may want to move to open humanities mailing list:
> > <http://lists.okfn.org/mailman/listinfo/open-humanities>
> >
> > I would also like to discuss some ideas I have about annotation in
> general,
> >
> > particularly with regard to the kindle and other e-readers. Rufus, would
> you
> >
> > be free for a Skype chat this Thursday perhaps?
> >
> > Tomorrow (thursday) would be possible though it would be really good
> > to be able to bring in my colleague James. What about tying this in
> > with the next biweekly Open Literature / Open Humanities meetup
> > (sunday after next)?
> >
> > Rufus
> >
> > Looking forward,
> >
> > Andrew
> >
> >
> >
> > On Oct 30, 2011, at 1:11 PM, Philipp Schmidt <philipp at p2pu.org> wrote:
> >
> >
> >
> > On 17 October 2011 08:52, Andrew at FinalsClub.org <andrew at finalsclub.org>
> >
> > wrote:
> >
> > Dear Annotation Aficionados,
> >
> > I am involved with FinalsClub.org, a non-profit open education project
> for
> >
> > college students to share their knowledge freely with the world.  In
> >
> > addition to note-sharing, the project also had an annotation component
> from
> >
> > 2007 to 2009.  During that time, we hired about a dozen Harvard PhDs to
> >
> > annotate public domain works of literature, including ten Shakespeare
> plays.
> >
> > Unfortunately, our old site is down and those annotations are not
> publicly
> >
> > visible.  I have, however, attached the xml file for Romeo and Juliet
> with
> >
> > about 500 annotations.  If anyone is interested in helping us resurrect
> >
> > about 90 public domain texts with some 9000+ high quality annotations, we
> >
> > would very much like the help.
> >
> > Wow. How hard would it be to import them? For example to this:
> >
> > http://openshakespeare.org/work/romeo_and_juliet
> >
> > @Rufus - could be a good way to bootstrap open shakespeare, but also a
> >
> > broader annotation community around annotator. Is there still a public
> site
> >
> > - I could only find http://okfn.org/projects/annotator/
> >
> > There may be an opportunity to turn Annotator into a service like
> Universal
> >
> > Subtitles
> >
> > P
> >
> >
> > Given that all of our content is creative commons attribution only, we're
> >
> > glad to share it with proper attribution to finalsclub.  I'd also love to
> >
> > get the annotate software running on our servers so our community of
> >
> > scholars can start adding more value to these classic texts.  There is,
> >
> > however, no urgency to the matter.
> >
> > Please do let me know if you're interested in helping.  Thanks in
> advance!
> >
> > Looking forward,
> >
> > Andrew Magliozzi
> >
> > Founder, FinalsClub.org
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > _______________________________________________
> >
> > annotator-dev mailing list
> >
> > annotator-dev at lists.okfn.org
> >
> > http://lists.okfn.org/mailman/listinfo/annotator-dev
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > --
> > Co-Founder, Open Knowledge Foundation
> > Promoting Open Knowledge in a Digital Age
> > http://www.okfn.org/ - http://blog.okfn.org/
> >
> >
>
>
>
> --
> Co-Founder, Open Knowledge Foundation
> Promoting Open Knowledge in a Digital Age
> http://www.okfn.org/ - http://blog.okfn.org/
>
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>



-- 
Samuel Klein          identi.ca:sj           w:user:sj          +1 617 529
4266
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