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Re: cygwn uses for public document retrieval
- From: "Mike Marchywka" <marchywka at hotmail dot com>
- To: cygwin-talk at cygwin dot com
- Date: Tue, 10 Oct 2006 12:11:51 -0400
- Subject: Re: cygwn uses for public document retrieval
- Bcc:
- Reply-to: The Cygwin-Talk Maiming List <cygwin-talk at cygwin dot com>
Mike, FWIW I thought about answering this and decided I didn't have enough
to offer, but Carlo's observations essentially match my own; this sort of
thing can sometimes be done on a site-by-site basis, but that's usually the
best you get. I have not, however, talked to
That is why you may be pleasantly surprised if you hit the ncbi eutils link.
Surely, you can apprecaite how big a problem this is given the volume of
information available- any serious usage requires automated access and
it is just as easy to provide as a web page.
anyone about more automation-friendly access. (Honestly, I have not dealt
with government sites and some of the ones I have played with probably
wouldn't be very happy about auto-grabbing :-)
The government doesn't have any reason, other than server load constraints,
to be unhappy about this- the private sites have various issues but
perhaps a little thought on usability could impact revenue models ( I am
big on advertising and free-to-user access but admit there are problems
in the automated access area).
This first came to my attention in the investment area but it is pretty
obviously
extendable to many areas. Let's say you want to provide weather info on your
site? Could you do this easily from NOAA? I actually think their support is
generally
good but I haven't actually checked this out. I do know that patents are
literally
intended to be "open" but the simple voliume of patents makes manual access
essentially useless. With the SEC documents, we now have the potential to
spot
many possible problems but, IMO, just need better electronic tools.
There is a slightly related issue that comes up while considering the local
government
situation. Often, they have information of relevance for a limited time (
child abduction alert,
ban on outside watering, utility outage, etc) and for a location defined
audience.
If you had a site that managed to get location info from visitors, you may
be able to
go to a clearinghouse and get the latest alerts and offer them to visitors.
( I ran into one case where a municipal sewer system was getting clogged
because someone
within a several block region was flushing nylon towels- the professional
response was to
go door-to-door with flyers- seems there is a better way since the offender
may not even
be the owner/occupant and never see the flyer- could be a visiting nurse for
example).
Anyway, at least youi appreciate the problem and have not seen a wide-spread
effort
to offer automation friendly data for people wishing to redistribute it.
...especially the ones that run ads; not that WebWasher doesn't kill those
anyway.)
--
Matthew
KDE: Desktop Excellence