I'm skeptical of anything that claims to implement BIBFRAME for production, 
since BIBFRAME appears to still be an experimental work in progress 
(https://www.loc.gov/bibframe/faqs/#q09). That said, it does seem like folk 
like Ex Libris are trying to use BIBFRAME 2.0 in production 
(https://www.loc.gov/bibframe/implementation/register.html). I suppose every 
technology needs its early adopters. I can see why places like Oslo Public 
Library, the National Library of Sweden, and la Bibliothèque Nationale de 
France are using their own schemas though. 

The ReasonableGraph Github only seems to have 1 contributor and a handful of 
commits. Mostly from 1 year ago and 15 days ago. I wonder what is missing? I 
haven't had time to deep dive the code yet.
https://github.com/reasonablegraph

That said, I'm intrigued by anything that claims to use Linked Data. To date, 
I've mostly only seen systems that use RDF stored locally. That is, that only 
link internally and don't resolve external links.  The most interesting example 
of Linked Data that I've actually found is with OCLC WorldCat: 
http://www.worldcat.org/title/good-omens-the-nice-and-accurate-prophecies-of-agnes-nutter-witch-a-novel/oclc/21678602.
 If you open the "Linked Data" section, you can see that "New York" from the 
top of the webpage comes from  this predicate and object: 
library:placeOfPublication <http://dbpedia.org/resource/New_York_City>. The 
interesting bit is if you go down to "Related Entities", you'll see 
'schema:name "New York"'. I find that interesting because 
http://dbpedia.org/page/New_York_City doesn't have a predicate of schema:name. 
So, in theory, OCLC must be converting a triple from another vocabulary into 
Schema.org. Either that or they provide the link as the authoritative link and 
then just add their own local triple saying "New York". I suppose that's a 
possibility too. But it kind of defeats the purpose of machine readable Linked 
Data. But Linked Data is hard since you never know what you're going to get 
back from the other end.

At this point, what could Reasonable Graph offer for Koha? 

Apologies if that sounds rude at all. I've just been thinking a lot about RDF 
and Linked Data for the last couple of years. 

David Cook
Systems Librarian
Prosentient Systems
72/330 Wattle St
Ultimo, NSW 2007
Australia

Office: 02 9212 0899
Direct: 02 8005 0595


-----Original Message-----
From: koha-devel-boun...@lists.koha-community.org 
[mailto:koha-devel-boun...@lists.koha-community.org] On Behalf Of Paul Poulain
Sent: Tuesday, 30 January 2018 11:45 PM
To: koha-devel@lists.koha-community.org
Cc: Nikos Papazis <papa...@altsol.gr>
Subject: [Koha-devel] Koha hackfest in Marseille & https://reasonablegraph.org/ 
platform

Hi koha-devel,

I had a hangout with Nikos (in cc:) , from Reasonablegraph. 
reasonablegraph is a platform (L-GPL) that is able to deal with MARC records, 
transform them into FRBR / Bibframe /linked data. They made some work with Koha 
(http://unioncatalog.reasonablegraph.org/?lang=en,
click on "Search" top-left)

At the end of Nikos demo, I suggested him to come to the hackfest for a day or 
two, in order to present reasonablegraph to anyone interested, and talk about 
any possible collaboration between Koha community and reasonablegraph. He will 
probably come.

That's another very good reason to come to Marseille in March :D

--
Paul Poulain, Associé-gérant / co-owner
BibLibre, Services en logiciels libres pour les bibliothèques BibLibre, Open 
Source software and services for libraries

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