Labelling and metadata on the hodge-podge of recordings on your home computer
Aidan Wilson
aidan.wilson at SYDNEY.EDU.AU
Sun May 2 11:31:17 UTC 2010
Hey Greg,
I'd actually leave most of the stuff in your filename to a metadata file
and leave the filename like:
20100405-01.wav, .eaf, .mp3, whatever,
And have a spreadsheet of metadata for a bunch of recordings, where you
keep information like recordist, speaker, language, location, as well as
date and a rough breakdown of contents. It's probably a good idea to also
have this stuff in a text file; one per file, but also in a general
spreadsheet for all files:
filename, date, language, recordist, speaker, location
20100405-01, 2010-04-05, Marra, gd, fr, Ngukurr
20100405-02,
etc.,
While it's a good idea to try and keep as much identifying information in
the filename, it can look cluttered, and it may tempt you from proper
collection of metadata in a spreadsheet. Also, without a list of
abbreviations to inform someone looking at your files how to interpret
the elements in your filename, it may go to waste.
-Aidan
--
Aidan Wilson
The University of Sydney
+612 9036 9558
+61428 458 969
aidan.wilson at usyd.edu.au
On Sun, 2 May 2010, Greg Dickson wrote:
> Hello,
> I'm trying to tidy up my files on my home laptop, which I've only ever used
> secondarily to whatever computer I was assigned by various workplaces. Over
> about four years, I've ended up with a real hodge-podge of recordings and
> files in all kinds of languages made in all kinds of situations by all kinds
> of people even! (When you lend out your Zoom recorder it can come back with
> interesting things on it!). I thought it's time for a spring clean.
>
> I'm pretty decided on a way to label my files consistently, but would
> appreciate any feedback or shared experiences.
>
> I thought I'd go with something like:
>
> 100405MARfrNGUgd01
>
> Which is DATE (April 5, 2010) LANGUAGE (Marra) speaker (initials: fr)
> LOCATION (Ngukurr) "recorded by" (gd = me) Series number (1st in the series)
>
> And then any ELAN, metadata, video or text files will have the same name,
> just a different file extension.
>
> I'm wondering though, what should I do about metadata? What do others do?
> How necessary is keeping metadata for such a miscellaneous collection of
> files? And how do I do it? One place I worked at just kept a store of .txt
> files of metadata - 1 file for each recording. Is that a good way?
>
> Any help or info appreciated.
>
> Guda mingi,
> (That's all now)
>
> Greg Dickson
>
> PO Box 2468
> Katherine NT 0852
> Ph: 8971 0207 / 0427 391 153
> Email: munanga at bigpond.com
>
>
>
>
>
>
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