So I was inspired by reading a blog post on "Truly Open Data" by Bill Mills: http://billmills.github.io/blog/truly-open-data/
We engaged in a bit of back-and-forth, and he encouraged me to set my ideas out a bit more clearly. I got somewhat inspired, and created an imaginary tool called "odit" -- the Open Data Integration Tool. I mocked out a functional design, and wrote a user guide outlining the intended functionalty.
Here's the result: http://odit.readthedocs.org/en/latest/
I'd appreciate comments and feedback. Is this something you'd consider valuable enough to use? Is it worth building?
Here's a teaser of what you'll find over at readthedocs....
We engaged in a bit of back-and-forth, and he encouraged me to set my ideas out a bit more clearly. I got somewhat inspired, and created an imaginary tool called "odit" -- the Open Data Integration Tool. I mocked out a functional design, and wrote a user guide outlining the intended functionalty.
Here's the result: http://odit.readthedocs.org/en/latest/
I'd appreciate comments and feedback. Is this something you'd consider valuable enough to use? Is it worth building?
Here's a teaser of what you'll find over at readthedocs....
Command Summary
odit fetch | Create a new project. | odit share | Shares the dataset online |
odit append | Append to a local dataset. | odit update | Revise the content of a dataset |
odit set-licence
| Specify the license for a data set |