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Register!

There is no charge to register and we need to know how many people are comingthanks for doing so as soon as you know your plans.

Fall, 2014 Hackathon

QuestionAnswer
WhereMann Library, Cornell University, Ithaca NY 14853
Monday Schedule 10/13/14

8:45 am Morning coffee, Mann Room 160

9-10 am Welcoming remarks and lightning talks proposing project ideas in Mann Room 160, followed by initial group formation there and on the 2nd floor in the Bissett Collaborative Area or the ITS Offices. See http://goo.gl/pLsJeM for a document with proposed topics/teams.

10:00 am Coffee break, Mann Room 160

12:00 pm Touching base in Mann Room 160 before lunch break

1:00 - 5:00 pm Group work in Mann Room 160 and on the 2nd floor in the Bissett Collaborative Area or the ITS offices

2:30 - 3:00 pm Light refreshments offered in Mann Room 160

5:00 pm (weather permitting) Guided walk from Mann Library through campus and down the Cascadilla Gorge Trail to the Hotel Ithaca

6:15 pm Meet at Hotel Ithaca for rides to Jon C-R's house for pizza & beer, salad, & dessert (303 Winthrop Drive, Ithaca) or self-arrange groups for dinner at downtown restaurants in walking distance from the hotel.

Tuesday Schedule

10/14/14

8:45 am Morning coffee, Mann Room 160

9:00 am - 12:00 pm Group work in Mann Room 160, Bissett Collaborative Area, and ITS Offices

12:00 pm Touching base in Mann 160 before lunch break

1:00 - 5:00 pm (or later) Group work in Mann Room 160 and on the 2nd floor in the Bissett Collaborative Area or the ITS offices

2:30 - 3:00 pm Light refreshments offered in Mann Room 160

6:00 - 8:30 pm Dinner in self-arranged groups at downtown restaurants

Wednesday Schedule 10/15/14

8:45 am Morning coffee, Mann Room 160

9:00 am - 10:00 am Final group work in Mann Room 160, Bissett Collaborative Area, and ITS Offices

10:00 am - 12:00 pm Group presentations of results and discussion of how to continue to make progress from a distance

Who

Anyone interested in participating and hopefully contributing to the development, documentation, or testing of VIVO software, the VIVO-ISF ontology, or apps & tools to produce, visualize, or leverage VIVO data

CostNo registration fee, but you pay your travel, hotel, and meals. We provide space, our local developers, and light refreshments
GoalsLearning, training, gathering requirements, brainstorming ideas, writing documentation, improving the ontology, having fun and encouraging collaborative patterns of work related to VIVO that can continue between such events
ExtrasIf you arrive by noon(ish) Sunday, we are planning a Finger Lakes Winery excursion for the afternoon, including options for dinner

 

As part of graduation from incubator status with DuraSpace, the VIVO Project needs to grow our base of committers and contributors, defined as people who submit new code, bug fixes, documentation, sample data, tests, ontology changes, applications such as the Harvester that generate VIVO RDF from other sources, apps and visualizations that use VIVO data, and tools that make any part of creating and sustaining your VIVO easier.  We see another hackathon building on Chris and Ted's March, 2014 Hackathon at Duke as a good way to encourage involvement as well as to make progress on a number of fronts, collectively and individually.

This is a big tent, but VIVO has been open since the first days that Chris Barnes and his UF development team pushed to get our code in SourceForge.  Now we're a VIVO project on GitHub, a wiki, and there are lots of tools from our community and friends of our community such as the Karma project at the USC Information Sciences Institute.

Furthermore, this is your event – if you come, you will have a part in deciding what gets worked on and can directly contribute to the event's success.

Logistics including hotel, shuttle, bus, parking, and restaurant information


Proposed Topics

Additional topics and ideas are being collected in this document: http://goo.gl/pLsJeM.  Fell free to add an idea or proposal.


TopicResource Person(s)Comments
VIVO-ISF OntologyMelissa HaendelWork with the lead of the Ontology Working Group to improve and extend the ontology to be compatible with the HCLS/W3C Dataset Description ontology and work on integrating local extensions that belong in the VIOV-ISF ontology; learn how to use Protégé and other ontology editing and management tools
VIVO HarvesterJohn FereiraLearn to use the Harvester and help with sample configurations or data, connecting to Karma, extending the types of RDF output it supports, testing, and documentation
Consuming data from VIVOTed Lawless How do you deliver VIVO data to apps written by people who don't know LOD or SPARQL?
Adding a new vocabulary service to VIVOHuda Khan VIVO can be configured to link to external vocabulary services that meet certain criteria – learn how to link to a new service such as the APA Thesaurus, and/or how to implement a vocabulary service that can serve VIVO or other applications
Customizing VIVOTim Worrall Learn how to modify a VIVO list view, how to add a map to the VIVO homepage, and other techniques
New visualizations for VIVOPaul FriedmanUse D3 or other JavaScript library to create visualizations on the VIVO profile page, or on related pages. Combine the power of JavaScript with VIVO's APIs.
Deep dive into the core codeJim BlakeExplore the structure of VIVO internals. Follow the flow of data and authorization. Find the key points for deep-level customization. Discuss potential improvements that can be included in future releases.
Wiki improvementsPaul and LayneReorganizing and consolidating
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