No worries, Florence, and by all means – more information about our pilot implementation of RiC-O at the Archives of Ontario is available from its GitHub page:
We try to keep this page up to date. We are also excited about the recently released EGAD RiC resource list and aim to file a submission once we have something stable to release.
As a brief overview, our project is a collaboration between the University of Toronto’s GLAM Incubator and the Archives of Ontario. Here is a short video that introduces the team:
https://youtu.be/3ZtTppHhyN0
Over the past two years, we’ve been able to assemble an end-to-end spreadsheet—to–RiC-O conversion pipeline and run our entire Authorities and Description datasets through it (producing about a million asserted triples). We had no EAC/EAD XML data to begin with, so we had to experiment. We leveraged the beautiful Richard Williamson’s Draw.io tools and our own Python code to construct RDF Mapping Language (RML) graphs. We have also established internal guidelines for URI modeling, including some provisions for an open-world URI resolver.
In terms of the infrastructure, we are experimenting with open source quadstores (e.g., Trifid, Oxigraph) and local VPS and cloud service providers. We have been exploring Sparnatural as a web frontend component. We have also been developing a suite of Visual Studio Code extensions to enable graph editing, creation, and validation. We are also exploring the interoperability between RDF and large language models (e.g., through Pydantic and JSON schemas).
Aaron Hope, Senior Archivist at the Archives of Ontario, is leading this project and is also an active member of this Google Group. We will also speak about the project at the upcoming Association of Canadian Archivists (ACA) conference in Ottawa on June 10, 2025.
As a message to the community – don’t hesitate to get in touch with us using the contacts indicated on our GitHub page.
Thank you to everyone for your amazing work!
Best regards,
Pavel
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Pavel Zhelnov