2012-03-22

Thought I’d post a bit of history: the IRC (Internet Relay Channel) log from the first THATCamp in 2008, presciently saved by Bess Sadler. We do still have a room called thatcamp on the IRC channel at irc.freenode.net, but Twitter has taken over much of the function that IRC then served. Do feel free to use the thatcamp IRC channel whenever you like!

I’ve edited the log so that it can be more easily read, taking out all the lines about so-and-so leaving or joining the IRC. Enjoy.

— Log opened Sat May 31 10:19:27 2008

10:19
just imagine if we were all piling on one collaborative spreadsheet

10:19
so can whoever controls thatcampbot consider the room-specific IRC channels?

10:19
ok

10:20
a wiki page for the schedule?

10:21
give me a sec to figure this out

10:21
is it possible to simultaneously irc chat, twitter, blog, and podcast? I’m going to try.

— Log opened Sat May 31 10:26:08 2008

10:29
thatcamp450 for rdf discussion

10:30
about to start the text mining session

10:31
RDF… am curious if anyone is working with AJAX or JavaScript browsing and navigation of OWL ontologies

10:34
text analysis software: www.lib.uchicago.edu/efts/ARTFL/philologic/

10:35
philomine: philologic.uchicago.edu/philomine/

10:37
in the text mining session in the lab (rm 462)

10:39
sean takats is explaining CHNM’s upcoming NEH-funded text-mining project

10:40
Sean’s not a “better” historian, he’s a “different” kind of historian

10:40
dancohen: hooray for funding

10:41
the techies are having an impromptu “keeping the wheels on” meeting — sustainability from a technical point of view

10:42
good thing we’re inside–just got a tornado watch alert from the fairfax messaging system, active until 10:30 tonight

10:42
yowza

10:42
RDF group talking about bibliographic data, citations, Zotero, data about museum/library objects

10:43
according sean: three aspects of text mining: locating or finding documents, automatically extracting data from documents (instead of manually reading), analysis of corpus

10:45
according to laura mandell: text mining can be used to identify terms of analysis not within your discipline

10:45
wow. really doesn’t LOOK like tornado weather (at least through my small window)

10:46
it feels like it, though

10:48
it’s great to see everyone on IRC!

10:51
RDF: used to define relationships in restricted domains, perhaps more interesting. But movement in developing it is to make it applicable to broader and broader domains.

10:52
davelester: I set up thatcampbot to record the channel. I’ll give you the logs afterwards.

10:52
thanks bess_

10:56
can someone add thatcampbot to thatcamp450

10:56
asolove++ great idea. can you do that bess_?

10:57
dan cohen: text mining tools need to useful for historians and may not be

10:58
text mining tasks: summarization, classification, extractions

10:59
asolove and davelester : I’ll give it a shot

10:59
asolove and davelester : I’ll get to it on the break, I’m in the middle of a good conversation

10:59
np

11:03
ok thanks

11:06
I will be posting the URL’s we are talking about on del.icio.us with tag thatcamp

11:07
I’m going to start doing that for the RDF session as well

11:10
text mining does more than speed up historical thought; it should give us a new level of comprehension

11:11
FYI – I updated the schedule, so that should be current based on the last change we tried to implement downstairs

11:11
thanks to everyone for patience and input

11:11
schedule at thatcamp.org/schedule/

11:12
clioweb: thanks–you did a great job with the schedule; hard to optimize something that complicated

11:12
I think it worked out well

11:13
clioweb++

11:14
people should feel free to use other rooms and spaces for ad hoc meetings

11:20
Karin, is there any chance you could let us use your wiki?

11:25
ben – sure, pass is karin

11:25
I’ll clean up later

11:29
www.dancohen.org/2006/08/08/mapping-what-americans-did-on-september-11/

11:30
my best effort on text mining + geolocation

11:32
Karin, can you paste the URL?

11:35
Got it

11:35
could people post their session notes on the blog? that’d be great

11:35
so far, been able to blog, tweet, and irc chat all at once; adding in the podcasting might be hard…

11:36
There was a GREAT discussion of technology and sustainability at EPA’s Science Forum last week – William McDonough, author of The Cradle to Cradle Revolution – www.amazon.com/Cradle-Remaking-Way-Make-Things/dp/0865475873/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1212248155&sr=8-1

11:37
dancohen: I’d love to see a live digital campus

11:37
me too – do it, Dan

11:37
actually, just set up a new wiki www.nirak.net/thatcamp/pmwiki.php?n=Main.HomePage

11:37
davelester: tom and I were thinking of doing it

11:37
Oh. Sweet!

11:38
anyone mind if I look like I’m manning a McDonald’s drive-thru?

11:38
Well, I need a place to put the DorkShorts material now, so I’ll get started with Karin’s

11:38
there’s already a whiteboard in the main room for dork shorts with a list of names

11:38
feel free to do whatever you want there

11:43
Bill: text mining, given abundant texts, can ask questions about simultaneity and co-incidence.

11:43
epiphany!

11:44
add geotagging to the mix and you also have geo-enabled text mining

11:45
and temporal coincidence / simultaneity?

11:50
what is the method for getting slides in to Dork Shorts?

11:51
Karin, can you enable uploads on the wiki? www.nirak.net/thatcamp/pmwiki.php?n=PmWiki.Uploads

11:52
asolove … thumbdrive?

11:53
hmm

11:53
I can just download from email

11:53
if that works. what kind of slides? ppt? keynote?

11:53
Will we be able to hook up the projector to our own laptops?

11:53
it’s actually just xul

11:54
oh

11:54
np

11:54
ben… that’s going to be tough

11:54
we’re going to be pretty pressed for time

11:54
Okay — wiki it is

11:54
but we could add another dork shorts session maybe

11:55
session 1 made me think of “glass house”

11:56
Lunch is served!!!

11:56
and Dork Shorts is starting!

12:00
great adhoc session in 402. thanks, everybody

12:13
lunch is teh awesome. Great spreat, guys!!

12:22
syndication architecture ++

12:29
lunch was excellent

12:33
omeka in action: exhibitions.nypl.org/eminent/

12:37
enjoying the dork shorts

12:39
oooh, pretty! typographia

12:41
can anyone read the url?

12:42
www4.ncsu.edu/~dmrieder/typographia

12:42
www4.ncsu.edu/~dmrieder/typographia

12:47 -!- Netsplit calvino.freenode.net
irc.freenode.net quits: asolove, karindalziel, bess__, bess_, matthewgaventa, epistemographer, jgsmith, dancohen, sgillies

12:53 -!- Netsplit over, joins: dancohen

12:53 -!- Netsplit over, joins: sgillies

12:54 -!- Netsplit over, joins: epistemographer

12:55 -!- Netsplit over, joins: bess_

12:58
Collaborative annotation: ecomma.cwrl.utexas.edu/0.2.0/

13:02
#thatcamp401

13:02
doh

13:06
In session on search, listening to Karin Dalziel show some interesting, wide-ranging examples.

13:07
i’d never seen etsy

13:07
nice

13:08
etsy++

13:10
All of the stuff Karin’s talking about is also available at www.nirak.net/2008/05/29/alternative-search-analyzing-document/

13:13
learning about iggy pop’s beat down

13:14
etsy beer can hat: www.etsy.com/view_listing.php?listing_id=10966874

13:14
cleveland rocks

13:16
tinyurl.com/3cmfdy

13:17
davelester: thanks, dave.

13:17
that better not be atsly

13:17
Josh G. says “It’s all about leveraging solipsism.” Love it!

13:17
that’s cruel

13:33
www.gilderlehrman.org/collection/battlelines/chapter3/chapter3_1a.html

13:36
crowdsource transcribing first, then present like this: dohistory.org/diary/exercises/lens/index.html

13:41
twitter is down again? boo

13:44
the rain must have gotten it

13:46
omg the rain!

13:46
twitter’s a little slow

13:46
if you poke at it with sticks a little it eventually loads

14:06
we got crazy geeky in the Search session

14:12
hoping that folks might post what was discussed in the Search session on the wiki…

14:14
lisa spiro takes kick-ass notes and will be sharing a summary of the “research methods” session on the blog.

15:00
quick call out: what’s being talked about in the sessions people are in?

15:01
in “Museums” we’re talking about the difference between how museums, libraries and archives approach digita vs. physical issues

15:03
in Games we’re talking about how to evaluate history-based video games based on their value as teaching tools

15:50
www.zotero.org/download/dev/zotero-1.5a.sync1.xpi

15:51
is patrick in here?

16:08
sustainability has been moved to rm 450

16:11
Dorkshorts is nearly empty. We’ll probably wrap up early.

16:12
aw

16:28
open street maps project offers lots of potential for dh projects to create maps for their own purposes (historical, not street based, available)

16:37
elli: would you please post any notes you have on historical applications for open street maps? I was sorry to miss that session.

16:38
bess___: we’re not talking about historical maps in OSM… yet…

16:39
openstreetmap.org

16:39
bess_: I”ll do my best,

16:43
Now we are discussing how you might use the technology to walk places and map traces of roads, settlements, battlegrounds, and use the OSM software to incorporate this information

16:45
discussing sustainability models for zotero

16:46
anyone who is not in rm 450 who has ideas, drop them into IRC or Twitter

16:46
Mapping: freemap.in site with links to open source mapping software

16:49
Mapping: Shekhar is showing a free map of Mumbai with historical layers overlaid from the freemap site.

17:00
I’ve heard a bit about processing, but I had no idea how awesome it was. What a great session!

17:05 * shekhar just showed mumbai.freemap.in and the testing version of a zotero openstreetmap plugin web.mit.edu/shekhar/zotero-maps.xpi

19:30
howdy all

19:34
Hi Dave. Wish I was there.

19:35
aw, maybe next year?

19:36
Sounds like it has been great!

19:36
Elli will surely debrief me when she returns.

19:37
definitely

19:51
#thatcamp port 7000 at GMU.

19:51
#thatcamp port 7000 at GMU

21:45
hello?

21:53
hiya. I am just hanging out in here while working on a blog post.

22:03
soooo….is everyone else exhausted, or is it just me?

22:21
karindalziel: also exhausted

22:21
karindalziel: it’s so great to meet you! We have a lot of the same research interests.

22:22
I am somehow wired too. Brain is racing. Which is good!

22:22
bess: Great to meet you too!

22:23
I feel like I have SO much to learn.

22:23
karindalziel: You might enjoy this paper: www.ualberta.ca/~sruecker/links/07_Ruecker_Pill_Identification.pdf

22:24
It’s an interface I worked on while at U of Alberta.

22:24
Stan Ruecker was the primary investigator, and if you don’t know his work you might also enjoy it… www.ualberta.ca/~sruecker/

22:24
cool- thanks! Something to read ont he plane ride home.

22:26
Are you leading any discussions tomorrow?

22:26
no, I don’t think so

22:26
I plan to be an “active participant” in the omeka one, though!

22:27
I can’t decide betwen that and interface design. So many tough choices.

22:27
oh damn, did they schedule those across from each other?

22:28 * bess_ runs off to check the schedule

22:29
Dammit, I want to attend every single one of the first sessions

22:30
I mean the second session

22:30
I know. :/

22:30
I’m sure all the first sessions will be great, too, but mashup is the only one for me.

22:30
Hopefully people will blog their sessions/

22:30
but GIS, interface design, omeka, and bibliographic standards… I’m working on every one of those right now.

22:31
I will go to management since it pertains most to my job. Unless I change my mind tomorrow morning.

22:31
management? really? what kind of management?

22:32
Project management.. lemme go find link

22:32
thatcamp.org/2008/05/2-ideas/

22:35
geez, linking blog posts takes forever

22:36
hi ben

22:41
Done with THAT Camp day 1 recap

22:41
www.nirak.net/2008/05/31/that-camp-day-1/

22:41
and with that, off to read for a bit before bed. *yawn*

22:41
anybody else got a 5:11 flight from dulles and want to share a cab? lemme know

22:43
hope I didn’t get anyone’s name wrong.

22:43
good recap

22:43
wow, you’re quick!

22:43
ok, really going now.

22:44
where is the recap?

22:45
www.nirak.net/2008/05/31/that-camp-day-1/

22:46
thanks!

22:46
see you all in the morning

22:53
anyone in #thatcamp coming to the ‘hacking omeka’ session tomorrow? I’m still deciding what I want to show

22:55
davelester: I’ll be there

22:55
nice, I saw your tweet

22:56
I’ll definitely show off the OAI-PMH ingestion plugin

22:56
davelester: NYPL and UVA are both very interested in how we can bring digital repository objects into omeka exhibits.

22:56
davelester: I’d also like some advice on how to get started writing omeka themes and plugins

22:57
davelester: I think the more eyecandy themes we can provide for omeka the more people will oooh and ahhh.

22:57
agreed!

22:58
davelester: I’m really looking forward to it, but now I have to go to sleep so I can wake up on time. See you tomorrow!

23:15
Having trouble deciding ‘Hacking Omeka’ vs ‘GIS/Maps’ vs ‘Interface Design’!

— Day changed Sun Jun 01 2008

07:11
mornin’

07:11
how do i see what everybody has twittered to @thatcamp all at once?

07:44
morning

09:14
asolove breaking free of xml!

10:09
text session has been interesting

10:10
mashup session is fascinating.

10:10
what was covered?

10:10
what was covered in text?

10:10
just using Yahoo/Google/Simile tools, or something additional?

10:11
mashups talked more about APIs, permanence and guidelines for APIs, and not so much about tools and implementations.

10:11
uh huh

10:11
we discussed some uses and issues with TEI, alternate storage formats

10:11
(importance of spending the time to develop APIs and make available)

10:12
and cool graphical interfaces for creating digital texts without knowing XML

10:12
what alternate storage formats

10:12
very interesting

10:13
asolove: we’re talking about everything from google maps, to library of congress web services, to the importance of permanent urls and the implications for scholarship

10:14
excellent conversation, I’m generating way more ideas than I’ll possibly be able to implement

10:14
sounds very interesting, sorry I had to present this round

10:15
asolove: I get the feeling there will be lots of blog posts and writeups about this one

10:15
Raymond closed with programmableweb,com

10:36
fyi.. I posted a summary of the Text Mining session from yesterday: www.spellboundblog.com/2008/06/01/thatcamp-2008-text-mining-and-the-persian-carpet-effect/

10:41
INTERFACE DESIGN IN 401

10:41
whoops

10:43
asolove: what’s the discussion about in 401?

10:43
funny

10:43
I think we’re looking at the JGAAP interface

10:46
can’t believe I didn’t realize you can put a URL to a KML file like this in the search blank for Google Maps!

10:46
pleiades.stoa.org/places/archaic.kml

10:47
nowviskie: wow! I didn’t know you could do that either!

10:49
yeah, bess — guess what’s going to be on Joe’s to-do list when we get home!

10:49
Bibliograph session

10:50
I mean Bibliography

10:50
Zotero is a good tool for moving bibliographic information from one place to another

10:51
Bruce D’Arcus style language for bib (CSL)

10:51
bibliograph(y or ic)

10:52
re: mashing up georeferenced data — this also works in Google Maps: pleiades.stoa.org/places/archaic.atom

10:52
if the biblio group would like me to come over to 450, let me know

10:52
we have Trevor here!

10:53
ok, just checking

10:53
for future thatcamp – find software for all urls opened in all sessions to be automatically saved into one big links file (coins-enabled?) so people could later follow links from sessions they missed

10:55
zotero/content/tools/csleit.xul

10:59
nowviskie: maybe we could give David G. access to the google sat imagery that way… allow people to export a kml file of the layer he wants and open it in google maps / google earth

11:00
tjowens: note the second author at rfc.net/rfc1165.html

11:05
in the interface design session (rm 401) we’re debating how much to ask users what a good UI is for a tool or collection

11:07
re ui: unix tends to optimize for the most common use case, which is the experienced user — explains why man pages tend to be cryptic for those unfamiliar with a particular command

11:08
jgsmith: right. good point.

11:10
in the omeka hacking talk we’re making unreasonable demands of the omeka dev team

11:10

11:11
jgsmith: does unix optimize for the most common use case, or the simplest, decomposed, filterable use case?

11:11
it optimizes for the case of people who have write access to the man page in a project

11:11
asolove++ # so true!

11:12
well, most people using unix are experienced in unix — the inexperience period is short compared to the rest of a person’s career

11:12
nice parallel: in bibliography, we’re bordering on making unreasonable demands on the zotero team

11:12
matthewgaventa: I’m going to make my unreasonable demands during the lunchtime zotero session

11:13
doesn’t mean an interface should be poorly designed — but designed for the person familiar with the process or the concepts involved

11:13
the design might encourage users to learn the underlying system

11:14
asolove: -nod- — easier to do in a GUI than a CLI

11:15
note to people making unreasonable demands of CHNMers: don’t make us release the hounds on you.

11:18
unreasonable demands++

11:19
fluidproject.org/ and Yahoo UI provide open source nice-looking widgets for websites

11:19
that are tested across many browsers

11:20
for reference: URL I demo-ed is labs.nypl.org/projects/maps/transparent.html

11:40
OAI/PMH plugin for omeka is fantastic. I’ve never cared deeply about OAI before, but I think I just started.

11:42
bibliographicontology.com/

11:50
use for upcoming mapping plugin in zotero–map your research trips by where archives are located–could be done if there is an archival collection item type with a “place” field

11:58
simile.mit.edu/wiki/Zotz

12:21
Lightning talks: first up, Mark Tebeau presenting the Euclid Corridor

12:28
next up in dork shorts: jeffrey talking about CSS file structure and organization

12:37
dancohen is about to start the zotero demo

12:39
dave lester is talking about scholarpress

12:41
zotero demo starting

12:49
Goodbye and thank you to everyone at ThatCamp, enjoy the rest of the day. It’s been great camping with you all.

12:49
leaving early?

12:50
cheers, elli. great to meet you

12:50
yes. have to take a train. It’s been great to meet you, too.

12:53
Twitter seems to be down

12:53
just thing

12:53
Jobs at WWDC, Cohen announcing Zotero server

13:20
The librarians on twitter are asking me lots of questions about Zotero server. Much excitement.

13:32
good visualizations anyone? post them to IRC

13:33
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_Tufte – Tufte’s done a lot of work on data visualization in general

13:34
Interesting discussion of event microformat standard

13:35
and now the event discussion is moving into visualization issues and we ought to be talking to the people in 402

13:36
hey people talking about time in rm 462: why not join us in rm 402?

13:37
winds changed and now we’re into interdisciplinary discussion

13:39
if only we could fold time and space. and then visualize that.

13:41
come on down!

13:42
somehow i read that as “interplanetary”

13:44
whoops, misunderstood visualization

13:48
asolove: What did you think visualization meant?

13:49
I thought we were talking about GIS type issues and graphing not quick display of information

13:50
asolove:ah, OK

14:02
we solved all our problems in the international issues session, so we’ve dispersed to other sessions

21:27
any thatcampers want to grab a drink in DC?

21:28 * shekhar opens a beer for thatcampbot

22:02
hey shekhar, where in DC are you at? I’m in Arlington right now

22:14
davelester: i’m in columbia heights

22:14
a bit far, i imagine

22:14 * shekhar passes the pipe to omeka-bot

— Day changed Mon Jun 02 2008

14:03
sgillies and jgsmith: great to meet you both this weekend!

14:03
hope you enjoyed #thatcamp

14:04
davelester: it rocked

14:04
i have a feeling that good things will ripple out of it

— Day changed Tue Jun 03 2008

Show more