Hi
In practical terms (and a bit of thinking out loud) I can see that if a MapMate record finds its way into a warehouse and has a persistent identifier (from now on PID) that record would be considered a copy. So, if someone exports from MapMate to excel excluding the PID and then passes this on for inclusion into a dataset there may be a duplication of records from that route which can be resolved through user training perhaps? So it might be that I'm given an excel worksheet, but I don't know if this has come from MapMate or otherwise and now I'm beginning to see that the problem is how people get from individually recording something to contributing that something into a global arena with a persistent identifier.
How things are recorded by an individual (just thinking electronically here) and this is a generalisation to reflect a multitude of different ways
1) by phone (direct to warehouse)
2) online recording form (direct to warehouse)
3) excel or other non-dedicated software (not obvious how to create PID)
4) local installation of dedicated recording software (mapmate, recorder etc - can generate PID)
5) PDA/data capture in the field (more likely as part of systematic survey rather than personal, but still generates useful records)
Probably others as well, but that's a few to get me thinking.
1, 2 and 4 should be relatively easy to generate a PID - the problem with 4 is that the value of this information might not be understood and might get lost before it has a chance to find its way into the system.
5 with the appropriate expert knowledge a system could be in place to generate a PID on the fly - but it's possible (and perhaps more likely) that this ends up in a spreadsheet.
So, my question - I receive a spreadsheet with no PID which is in effect the master copy. It's relatively simple to plonk this into Indicia of course but then do I generate the PID attach it to a spreadsheet and send it back for the users' reference and tell them to enter records online from now on (that'll work...) or is it better to accept that the PID starting point is when the record actually enters the world of online biodiversity informatics? (I guess it would be fair to assume that the reason for passing the record on in the first place was to allow for a wider accessibility to the records)
Sorry for the ramblings... Hope some of the above makes sense
Ta
Iain