removed notes associated with example figures
authorLuc Moreau <l.moreau@ecs.soton.ac.uk>
Thu, 22 Mar 2012 13:25:41 +0000
changeset 1971 a64d08d6e70c
parent 1970 3b32fa3db268
child 1972 2bfaab692d8d
removed notes associated with example figures
model/prov-dm.html
--- a/model/prov-dm.html	Thu Mar 22 13:50:50 2012 +0100
+++ b/model/prov-dm.html	Thu Mar 22 13:25:41 2012 +0000
@@ -729,11 +729,6 @@
   </figure>
 </div>
 
-<div class='note'>
-Illustration to be hand crafted instead of being generated automatically. It's important to adopt a common style for all illustrations across all PROV documents.
-<p>CG: It would be helpful to see the properties labelled in the figure.
-</div>
-
 
 <p> This simple example has shown a variety of PROV-DM constructs, such as Entity, Agent, Activity, Usage, Generation, Derivation, and ActivityAssociation. In this example, it happens that all entities were already Web resources, with readily available URIs, which we used. We note that some of the resources are public, whereas others have restricted access: provenance statements only make use of their identifiers. If identifiers do not pre-exist, e.g. for activities, then they can be generated, for instance <span class="name">ex:act2</span>, occurring in the namespace identified by prefix <span class="name">ex</span>.  We note that the URI scheme developed by W3C is particularly suited for expressing provenance of these reports, since each URI denotes a specific version of a report. It then becomes very easy to relate the various versions, with PROV-DM constructs. </p>
 
@@ -810,12 +805,6 @@
   </figure>
 </div>
 
-<div class='note'>
-Illustration to be hand crafted instead of being generated automatically. It's important to adopt a common style for all illustrations across all PROV documents.
-<p>CG: It would be helpful to see the properties labelled in the figure.
-<p> simplify the figure (leave just 2 authors (as in the example), or the editors), and label the edges as well.
-</div>
-
 </section>
 
 <section id="section-example-c">