Please feel free to rephrase and modify.
Aubrey
On Tue, Jul 30, 2013 at 9:25 PM, Sumana Harihareswara <sumanah(a)wikimedia.org
Andrea, now that I understand better what you want,
could you add it as
an idea to
https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Mentorship_programs/Possible_projects ,
especially if you would be willing to be paired with a technical expert
to mentor a student in making this? Thanks!
--
Sumana Harihareswara
Engineering Community Manager
Wikimedia Foundation
On 07/02/2013 02:13 AM, Andrea Zanni wrote:
Yes, you're right.
I know, for example, that Pundit is a tool for semantic annotation,
and it would probably be a good candidate to start with.
http://www.thepund.it/
(the won best poster at LODLAM, and are based in Italy. I met some of the
staff and have already hinted about this possible feature).
The also collaborate with OKFN.
Aubrey
On Mon, Jul 1, 2013 at 9:57 PM, Sumana Harihareswara
<sumanah(a)wikimedia.org>wrote;wrote:
> On 06/21/2013 08:00 AM, Aubrey wrote:
>> Another dream of mine is an annotator that could save "facts" in
Wikidata
>> statements.
>> We could reald a newspaper online, or a book, or an article on a
> scientific
>> blog, and highlight a short sentence, and this sentence would be a
>> statement (Item has a Property Value), with a source (the original
>> document).
>> I bet this is not *so* difficult.
>
> At first I thought you meant that it would be good to implement this in
> Zotero
https://www.zotero.org/ , Annotator
>
https://github.com/okfn/annotator , or a similar tool, to help a user
> keep track of their own favorite Wikidata facts. Now I understand :)
> that you'd like, perhaps, a client-side browser plugin or script that
> takes some highlighted text, offers the user a GUI to fix up the
> statement and source, and then feeds it into Wikidata. Am I right?
>
> --
> Sumana Harihareswara
> Engineering Community Manager
> Wikimedia Foundation