habitually probing generalist

Palmer, CL. “Structures and strategies of interdisciplinary science.” JASIS 50(3): 242-253, 1999

Main menu

Skip to primary content
Skip to secondary content
  • Home
  • About
  • Archives
  • Contact Me!

Monthly Archives: June 2007

Post navigation

Newer posts →

Some things read this week, 27 May – 2 June 2007

Posted on Sunday, June 3, 2007 by Mark

Note: Sorry for the non-existent annotations. It was a light week as I prepped for and then attended NASIG.

Sunday, 27 May

Harris, Roy. The Language-Makers. London: Duckworth, 1980.

Finished chap. 2.

Monday, 28 May

Harris, Roy. The Language-Makers. London: Duckworth, 1980.

Read chap. 3.

Tennis, Joseph. “SKOS and the Ontogenesis of Vocabularies.”

Cited by Harper, Corey A. and Barbara B. Tillett. “Library of Congress Controlled Vocabularies and Their Application to the Semantic Web.” Co-published simultaneously in Cataloging & Classification Quarterly 43 (3/4), 2007: 47-68 and: Knitting the Semantic Web (ed. Jane Greenberg and Eva Méndez) Haworth Information Press, 2007: 47-68. doi:10.1300/J104v43n03_04

Vizine-Goetz, Diane. “Terminology Services: Making Knowledge Organization Schemes More Accessible to People and Computers.” [pdf] OCLC Newsletter, no. 266.

Cited by Harper, Corey A. and Barbara B. Tillett. See above for full reference.

Monday – Tuesday, 28 – 29 May

CISAC. Outline for ISO Standard ISPI (International Standard Party Identifier Code) [pdf].

Cited by Harper, Corey A. and Barbara B. Tillett. See above for full reference.

Tuesday, 29 May

Fallgren, Nancy. “Brief Meeting Summary: May 9, 2007. Structures and Standards for Bibliographic Data (Chicago, IL).”

Miles, Alistair, Brian Matthews, Michael Wilson and Dan Brickley.”SKOS Core: Simple Knowledge Ogranisation for the Web.” International Conference on Dublin Core and Metadata Applications: Vocabularies in Practice. Available: http://purl.org/dcpapers/2005/Paper01

Cited by Harper, Corey A. and Barbara B. Tillett. See above for full reference.

Harris, Roy. The Language-Makers. London: Duckworth, 1980.

Read chap. 4-5.

Wednesday, 30 May

Harris, Roy. The Language-Makers. London: Duckworth, 1980.

Read chap. 6-8. Finished.

Posted in Articles, Books, Librariana, Metadata, Ontologies, Vocabularies, Web/Tech, XML

Post navigation

Newer posts →

unglue.it

Please help me fund the release of this book from the clutches of the University of California Press!

“Words of Wisdom”

Words are clumsy tools. And it is very easy to cut one's fingers with them, and they need the closest attention in handling; but they are the only tools we have, and the imagination itself cannot work without them * (Frankfurter 1947: 546) as quoted in Harris and Hutton, Definition in Theory and Practice 2007: 135

Recent Posts

  • Two-Thirds Book Challenge Update 7
  • Emmons, Baseball nights and DDT
  • Two-Thirds Book Challenge Update 6
  • Blog redesign and other putterings
  • Todorov, In Defence of the Enlightenment
  • Two-Thirds Book Challenge, a non-update
  • Levithan, The Lover’s Dictionary
  • Wilkins, Ragged Point Road: Poems

Recent Comments

  • My Two-Thirds Book Challenge – Intro « Highway to Helen on My Two-Thirds Book Challenge
  • 2/3 Book Challenge: The Wild Palms (If I Forget Thee, Jerusalem) | latter day bohemian on My Two-Thirds Book Challenge
  • Quiet Renaissance Power « esquetee on My Two-Thirds Book Challenge
  • Walt Crawford on Blog redesign and other putterings
  • Mark on Had me a “Jenica” day
  • Jenica on Had me a “Jenica” day
  • Todorov, In Defence of the Enlightenment on My Two-Thirds Book Challenge
  • Mark on Levithan, The Lover’s Dictionary

Categories

Creative Commons license

Creative Commons License
habitually probing generalist by Mark R. Lindner is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 United States License.
Permissions beyond the scope of this license may be available at http://marklindner.info/blog/contact/.

Tags

2/3rds Book Challenge 12 Books 12 Months Birthday Month history Info lit metaphor Michael Gorman personal learning poetry research Sioux City
Proudly powered by WordPress