Hoi, One reason why discussions like this stall is because of the terminology expected. Take the previous mail; is "ecomplexity" a probable typo or is it a term I do not know. It turned me of from reading much further.
I do not care all too much but when people are pedantic and do not explain their point of view, they lost either the argument or the audience or both. Thanks, GerardM
On 17 May 2017 at 19:29, Thomas Douillard thomas.douillard@gmail.com wrote:
To be pedantic, not everything is an item. There is entities who are not items and the non-entity datatype are not.
What's not possible is to have sets or clusters of items, and to give
properties to such sets and clusters. This is somehow related to the book topic.
This is something I’d definitely miss in Wikidata : the lack of explicit data model that defines implicit values for instances of classes … Considering th ecomplexity involved, this means that the software is no help at all to the editor, this is why such a mail is definitely not surprising. There is ongoing wiki discussion, on https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Wikidata:WikiProject_Reasoning especially, but it’s stalled due to lack of inputs and/or manpower unfortunately.
One other less ambitious approach would be to define a javascript gadget specialized for bibliographical datas that take the user by the hand in the mess. Of course that means that we agree on a datamodel, we identifies usecases and so on.
Tom
2017-05-17 17:17 GMT+02:00 Andrea Zanni zanni.andrea84@gmail.com:
[Sorry for cross-posting. I just sent this mail to the Wikicite mailing list, but I thought it could be of interest also here. Moreover, the community here could provide some important insight to better explain wikidata to "newbies" and set the right path for a meaningful conference.]
Dear all, sorry for the messy email, but I'd like to to express a small concern I have regarding the awesome Wikicite conference we'll have in few days.
My main point is that Wikidata is *complex*. It's not just the data model (which is not easy, per se), but the whole idea behind wikidata, the policies, the community, the workflow, the tools, and the whole helo of vagueness that sorrounds it.
My favourite example about this is this little story: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blind_men_and_an_elephant (which was actually a very good metaphor used by my professors introducing the Information Science course...)
Different people with different background work with data in different manners: the word "data" (as "information") means anything and its contrary, so we must be careful. You know better than me that everyone projects her own dreams and delusions upon Wikidata, so we must work towards a good understanding at the beginning, to avoid the painful and time-consuming job of making people un-learn things they think they know. This was quite evident especially last year, when a lot of librarians and wikimedians were in the same room, and everyone knew many things about metadata and their metadata model: librarians had difficulties grasping things about Wikibase, Wikidata, policies and communities, and wikimedians about bibliographic models and complexities.
We spent at least 30 minutes explaining Wikidata from the beginning, also adding some "color" about strategies, policies and community.
I'll try to make examples.
- we need to explain that in Wikidata (and Wikibase) everything is an
*item*. Everything. Every items has properties, values, qualifiers. What's not possible is to have sets or clusters of items, and to give properties to such sets and clusters. This is somehow related to the book topic.
- we need to explain that there are at least 2 different possible
strategies: create few general properties and many specific items, or create many specific properties and less general items. Wikidata chose the former.
- we need to explain the "scaffolding principle", meaning that we don't
need to put *all the info in all the items*. We need to create and organize items that are *queriable*, in such a way that I can make a query that get all the data and details I need, scattered among different items. If the items in questions are built "on top of each other", this is doable. It is actually very important to understand this, because people get confused about how many things to say inside one item. This principle (and the former) was explained to me by Tobias1984, and helped me a lot in my understanding of Wikidata.
I think that this kind of insight is crucial for working with Wikidata in a meaningful way, because wikidata offers *one product*, with *one data model*, and it simply impossible to adapt and stretch the Complexity Of The World to Wikidata without loss of information. I'm sure many of you know this perfectly, but other people maybe don't, or at least they will struggle with it. We all come from different backgrounds and are emotionally very attached to our models and our crucial pieces of information we don't want to lose: in this sensse, Wikidata is much more a "negotiation" than Wikipedia, because Wikipedia is not structured and llows for much more messiness.
Every model and decision we will make will be a trade-off, and I think it's worth trying to save time and effort trying to establish these boundaries at the beginning. Of course, there are many insights about Wikidata I don't have, but those are kinda the things we want to understand first in these kind of conferences. Hope this makes sense.
Aubrey
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