tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11471598.post2821290045877873030..comments2023-08-18T13:14:37.128+02:00Comments on WebQuery @ Wageningen UR: Moving to SOLRPeter van Boheemenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04167022326725060851noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11471598.post-91811223389271609252009-06-09T14:18:23.231+02:002009-06-09T14:18:23.231+02:00Disclaimer: I am the technical project lead for th...Disclaimer: I am the technical project lead for the Summa project.<br /><br />Have you considered looking at the <a href="http://wiki.statsbiblioteket.dk/summa" rel="nofollow">Summa project</a> for this?<br /><br />Like Solr, Summa is a search engine built on top of Lucene, but the advantage I can see for using Summa in this instance is that it comes with a lot of support for creating workflows like the ones you are planning.<br /><br />In particular it is quite easy to configure <a href="http://wiki.statsbiblioteket.dk/summa/Architecture/Ingest" rel="nofollow">ingest of data</a> from a variety of sources, and add extra information to them or manipulate them in other ways using what we call <a href="http://wiki.statsbiblioteket.dk/summa/Architecture/Filters" rel="nofollow">filters</a>.<br /><br />In fact I would go so far as to say that supporting workflows such as yours is precisely what we designed the workflow part of Summa for. We use it ourselves at <a href="http://www.statsbiblioteket.dk/" rel="nofollow">the State and University Library</a> in a wide variety of ways.<br /><br />So have a look, and if you have any questions, comments, or just want to know more feel free to contact me directly or post a question to the <a href="http://wiki.statsbiblioteket.dk/summa/Community/MailingList" rel="nofollow">Summa mailing list</a>.<br /><br />Regards<br />Mads Villadsen (mv@statsbiblioteket.dk)Mads Villadsenhttp://www.statsbiblioteket.dknoreply@blogger.com