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Invelos Forums->DVD Profiler: Contribution Discussion |
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Vote on Hong Kong/Asian movie actor 'community' name! |
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Registered: August 22, 2007 | Reputation: | Posts: 1,807 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting DariusKyrak: Quote: Skip
The problem is that the database and software design contradicts what your saying. I think that you're right in what you say (although I'm not 100% sure), but everything that is presented to the user implies you're not. It implies interpretation.
For the current rules, the database and software has been very poorly designed by breaking down the name into such a recognisable format. This is confused further by poor adaptations to the rules (e.g. if it were simply parsing, then Dr John Smith should be Dr/John/Smith, but it's not).
For me, the source of the confusion and dissatisfaction is something like 10% user and 90% poor software and rules design. Your 'follow the rules' standpoint my be correct, but is ultimately unhelpful, naive, and very disingenuous. It ignores the problem... and there IS a problem, as can be seen by the resurfacing of the same issue in different forms again and again.
If it looks like a duck, quacks like a duck, and walks like a duck, of course people are going to find it hard to accept that it's a dog!
Stuart Everything you say is true, but changing the software is up to Ken. DVDP version 3.51 still shows "first name", "middle name" and "last name", whatever those labels mean, so I guess we have to live with that. Another problem is that the rule "list names exactly as they are in the credits" doesn't say what "exactly" means, exactly!, leaving it to interpretation. So, I can just say how I understand it and how I think it can make sense in the program. Let's see... > "Exactly" in the same order? YES, that's the only way it will work. On the contrary, finding out each Chinese name to reverse, is too complex to handle in a system based on thousands of user contributions, having to contribute tens of thousands of actor names. The only thing I can think of is a check box for Chinese names in the program, so that you could display them in a reversed order if you want. > "Exactly" word 1, word 2, word 3? NO, because usually "Gen." is not a name and ", jr." is not a name, "d'" is not a name, "von" is not a name (there is an explicit rule on this: enter articles in the appropriate name field along with the name that they precede). > "Exactly" name 1 / name 2 / name 3 as on screen? YES. Maybe I'm wrong, but I guess that's what Ken had in mind. Something like: Gen. John / M. / von Doom Is that parsing always "correct"? No, because Chinese do list names the other way round, and because large parts of the world don't even use middle names. My own country (Italy), for one, does not usually use "middle names". We use double barreled first names (where the second name is equally important, like for the French, but without their hyphens) and double barreled last names. Yet, having thought of this, I say that's the only way it can *realistically* work in *this* program: name 1, name 2, name 3, as on screen. If we agree so far, the next question is: allow documentation of different parsing? For instance, can a user "document" a reversed Chinese name? What makes valid documentation? I personally think that the system should stay as simple as possible, while "documenting" can be hard work and only a very few users will do it properly. Most will just follow their whim. Thus, we end up with the same credits entered in different ways. No good! | | | -- Enry | | | Last edited: by White Pongo, Jr. |
| Registered: March 15, 2007 | Posts: 374 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting DariusKyrak: Quote: Your 'follow the rules' standpoint my be correct, but is ultimately unhelpful, naive, and very disingenuous. It ignores the problem... and there IS a problem, as can be seen by the resurfacing of the same issue in different forms again and again. Stuart You described the problem very well, I couldn't agree more. Also EnryWiki// (?) made some very good points why 'exactly as credited' does not go along together well with the 3 naming fields all the time. | | | Last edited: by sugarjoe |
| Registered: August 22, 2007 | Reputation: | Posts: 1,807 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting sugarjoe: Quote:
[...]Also EnryWiki// (?) made some very good points [...]
Thanks, joe//sugar | | | -- Enry |
| Registered: March 13, 2007 | Posts: 21,610 |
| Posted: | | | | Darius:
You are interpreting. STOP IT. oN TOP OF THAT YOU ARE wrong.
We have Rules FOLLOW them and stop playing cultural interpretation games. They aren't for profiler/
Skip | | | ASSUME NOTHING!!!!!! CBE, MBE, MoA and proud of it. Outta here
Billy Video |
| Registered: March 13, 2007 | Posts: 21,610 |
| Posted: | | | | For me darius, it has nothing to do wiyth poor design in either the Rules or the Progra. I t has to do with utter idiocy on the part of users of who absol;ute refuse to comprehend how it works and want to use their cultually correct interpretations.. Stuart, you are among the absolute worst, naieve indeed, rxcuse me SIR but I know abouthis stuf than you are likely to ever learn. Including the Asian naming unless you are Asian, i can't know more than a native, but I probably know more about than anyone here that is non-native. So take yhour insulting platitudes and peddle them over at IMDb where you can do whatever you damn well please. Skip | | | ASSUME NOTHING!!!!!! CBE, MBE, MoA and proud of it. Outta here
Billy Video |
| Registered: March 13, 2007 | Posts: 21,610 |
| Posted: | | | | Enry:
All your attempt a5 arguing the meaning of a word show is that you have an agenda. This has discussed, cussed and re-cussed and your little game changes nothing. This gets old, for three years you people say the sme thing and you refuse to accept the answer, for what reason i can speculate, buty the answer is what it is, FOLLOW it the, the data is what the data is and yes I IGNORED totally Asian parsing and ordering and did so deliberately to maintain consistency in appearance of data. And I contuinue to IGNORE it, and you would be well advised to ignore it as well, unless you are 5trying to drag profiler towards the garbage can that is IMDB. I don't care what you do locally, Enry, but ther objective is to resemble the Online credits as closely as possible.
Skip | | | ASSUME NOTHING!!!!!! CBE, MBE, MoA and proud of it. Outta here
Billy Video |
| Registered: March 14, 2007 | Reputation: | Posts: 4,678 |
| Posted: | | | | I think Skip is basically right.
The labeling of the fields confuse the issue. One should think of them as "First part of name", "Middle part of name" and "Last part of name". That would eliminate some of the cultural confusions.
I do disagree though with Skip's contention that parsing requires no interpretation. There are some special cases that are spelled out in the rules, and it does take interpretation in order to know when they are applicable. The stage name rule is a good example. Without interpretation you wouldn't parse "Cedric the Entertainer" all in the first name field.
That said, correct parsing of Asian names should normally not be difficult to determine. | | | My freeware tools for DVD Profiler users. Gunnar |
| Registered: March 15, 2007 | Posts: 374 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting GSyren: Quote: The labeling of the fields confuse the issue. One should think of them as "First part of name", "Middle part of name" and "Last part of name". That would eliminate some of the cultural confusions. I tend to disagree. If that was the case it would be Max/von/Sydow and Helena/Bonham/Carter and (even better) Joe/Smith/Jr. In the case of HBC we argued that BC was her last name. Accepting that asian names work the other way around, first names would go in the last field e.g. Chow//Yun-Fat (or Yun Fat). And Skip, repeating the same old stuff over and over again does not make your case stronger. And my interest in having correct data in the DB is as big as yours is, we just have a different angle. | | | Last edited: by sugarjoe |
| Registered: March 14, 2007 | Reputation: | Posts: 4,678 |
| | Registered: March 23, 2007 | Posts: 317 |
| Posted: | | | | Where the heck did that come from? Of course I'm interpreting - that was the whole point of my post! The rules and the system both invite interpretation. If you see Dr John Smith, you have to apply some interpretation to decide if Dr is a name or a honorific - the rules tell us to do so. To require interpretation of prefixes / honorifics, and then to require their prevention when it comes to ordering of name is counter intuitive, and thus poorly designed. This could be resolved either by changes to the rules or to the database/software, but to deny that incongruity exists is to pretend that black is white. I made no claims as to what should be done or who should do it - there are several options as to what, and the ultimate decision belongs to Invelos - I merely stated that a problem exists. As EnryWiki shows, it's not as easy as it may originally seem. I stand by my comment that the 'follow the rules' standpoint is unhelpful and naive, and I cite the number of times that issues relating to this topic have come up as proof. Given how poorly this standpoint achieves the goal of resolving the matter, to continue to think it is the answer is the very definition of naive. Quoting from Blackadder Goes Forth on the latest plan to go over the top of the trenches "...Doing precisely what we've done 18 times before is exactly the last thing they'll expect us to do this time!" I think that you (Skip) could do with turning down your ego. I'll presume from your responses that you consider the current rules for cast and crew to be very much a product of your work, and that is why you are taking things so personally (and lashing out personally as well). Whether it is or not is totally irrelevant. To declare yourself the expert on all things and superior to people of whom you have little or no knowledge demonstrates a clear lack of both perspective and the issue at hand. At the foundation of this issue is perception, and if someone states their perception to be one thing, you are certainly not in a position of superiority to tell them they are wrong. I also do not believe that I have made ANY insult at all. I find it far more likely that you have taken issue with me personally and have interpreted my comments in such a way that justify your lashing out. You may have taken issue at my statement that a particular approach is naive, but it clearly is as demonstrated above. Even if it were not, I do not believe that 'naive' is an insult. I do take issue with you using a post from me (regardless of whether I was nasty or not) as an excuse to call OTHER PEOPLE idiots. On this issue, I firmly believe (as a former professional system owner, supporting hundreds of people from different locations, backgrounds, education, and seniority) that bad data or confusion within data entry is far more the result of issues with the systems and guidance than with the people doing the data entry. Stuart | | | This is a sig... ... ... yay...
Don't understand? Maybe DVDProfilerWiki.org does! |
| Registered: August 22, 2007 | Reputation: | Posts: 1,807 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting Dr Pavlov: Quote: [...] This gets old, for three years you people say the sme thing and you refuse to accept the answer, [...]
"say the same thing"? Not at all. Sorry you don't get it, or maybe I wasn't clear. Actually I quite changed my position on Chinese names (the change happened a long time ago in a thread on Gong Li, by the way). Maybe my reasons are different than yours, so perhaps you don't like my line of reasoning, but my conclusions on Chinese names are just the same as yours: enter what you see on screen in the order you see it. If I see on screen "Chow Yun-Fat", I would enter Chow//Yun-Fat, "and beyond that the most commonly Credited name", like you said in this thread. Do you disagree with that? | | | -- Enry |
| Registered: March 13, 2007 | Posts: 21,610 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting DariusKyrak: Quote: Where the heck did that come from?
Of course I'm interpreting - that was the whole point of my post! The rules and the system both invite interpretation. If you see Dr John Smith, you have to apply some interpretation to decide if Dr is a name or a honorific - the rules tell us to do so. To require interpretation of prefixes / honorifics, and then to require their prevention when it comes to ordering of name is counter intuitive, and thus poorly designed. This could be resolved either by changes to the rules or to the database/software, but to deny that incongruity exists is to pretend that black is white.
I made no claims as to what should be done or who should do it - there are several options as to what, and the ultimate decision belongs to Invelos - I merely stated that a problem exists. As EnryWiki shows, it's not as easy as it may originally seem.
I stand by my comment that the 'follow the rules' standpoint is unhelpful and naive, and I cite the number of times that issues relating to this topic have come up as proof. Given how poorly this standpoint achieves the goal of resolving the matter, to continue to think it is the answer is the very definition of naive. Quoting from Blackadder Goes Forth on the latest plan to go over the top of the trenches "...Doing precisely what we've done 18 times before is exactly the last thing they'll expect us to do this time!"
I think that you (Skip) could do with turning down your ego. I'll presume from your responses that you consider the current rules for cast and crew to be very much a product of your work, and that is why you are taking things so personally (and lashing out personally as well). Whether it is or not is totally irrelevant. To declare yourself the expert on all things and superior to people of whom you have little or no knowledge demonstrates a clear lack of both perspective and the issue at hand. At the foundation of this issue is perception, and if someone states their perception to be one thing, you are certainly not in a position of superiority to tell them they are wrong.
I also do not believe that I have made ANY insult at all. I find it far more likely that you have taken issue with me personally and have interpreted my comments in such a way that justify your lashing out. You may have taken issue at my statement that a particular approach is naive, but it clearly is as demonstrated above. Even if it were not, I do not believe that 'naive' is an insult.
I do take issue with you using a post from me (regardless of whether I was nasty or not) as an excuse to call OTHER PEOPLE idiots. On this issue, I firmly believe (as a former professional system owner, supporting hundreds of people from different locations, backgrounds, education, and seniority) that bad data or confusion within data entry is far more the result of issues with the systems and guidance than with the people doing the data entry.
Stuart It came fro,m this "Your 'follow the rules' standpoint my be correct, but is ultimately unhelpful, naive, and very disingenuous." I suggestn that since you had nbo involvement in the Rules nor did anyy of the other voices, that you simply have no idea what you are talking and are being naieve, disingenuous and ultimately unhelpful. you have been repeatedly been advised of the answer and you simply do not want to accept it. You want to be able to do things YOUR way, not the way of Proifiler. Skip Skip | | | ASSUME NOTHING!!!!!! CBE, MBE, MoA and proud of it. Outta here
Billy Video |
| Registered: March 13, 2007 | Posts: 2,759 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting sugarjoe: Quote: Quoting RHo:
Quote: Therefore we get "Yun-Fat//Chow [Chow Yun-Fat]" for those credits. This is one possible interpretation besides others. The rules leave us alone here. No, not really. The fields are labelled first name, middle name, and last name. Those labels have a meaning and the meaning is not the same as first word, middle word, last word. First name is a synonym to given name and forename. And last name is a synonym to family name and surname. Therefore Chow has to go into the last name field. And since the resulting string composed by profiler does not match the credit this way, we have to use the credited as field as well. |
| Registered: March 13, 2007 | Posts: 2,759 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting 8ballMax: Quote: Don't know about everyone else but when I see film credits with Name 1, Name 2, Name 3 I enter them in the three available fields, Field 1, Field 2, Field 3. Unless it's proven with documentation that Name 1 & Name 2 both belong in Field 1 or that Name 2 & Name 3 both belong in Field 3. I don't fret much over it. You do not see a credit with "Name 1, Name 2, Name 3". You see a credit with "Word 1, Word 2, Word 3". This could mean "First Name, Middle Name, Last Name". It could also mean "First Name, Last Name" (last name composed of two words) or "Last Name, First Name" (Asian style with a two worded first name) or "Title, First Name, Last Name" or "Stage Name" (composed of three words) and many more possiilities. You have to interpret the words in the credit. Otherwise you can not apply the given rules. As you have said, with the given documentation a 3 worded credit may need to be stored differently as the simple "Word 1, Word 2, Word 3". | | | Last edited: by RHo |
| Registered: March 13, 2007 | Posts: 2,759 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting Dr Pavlov (formerly known as skipnet50): Quote: Do YOU see Family Name in use. Stop trying your BS argument, the only person who looks stupid is YOU.
Skip Last name is a synonym to surname and family name. And yes, I can see a field with that label. | | | Last edited: by RHo |
| Registered: March 13, 2007 | Posts: 2,759 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting madacid: Quote: Quoting RHo:
Quote: Last time I have checked my dictionary, family name, last name, and surname were synonyms. +1
Thanks! Quote:
and thats why the CLT is useless for nearly any hongkong, chinese or hungarian film and more (exceptions may appear). No, the CLT is uefull for those credits. For example with our famous Yun-Fat Chow the CLT gives "CHOW YUN-FAT" as the most common credit for this person. We can document, that this credit consists of the family name "CHOW" and the given name "YUN-FAT". We apply standard capitalisation rules which results in "Chow" and "Yun-Fat". Then we store the family name in the approriate field (the one labeled last name) and the given name in the first name field (first name = given name). After this we see that profiler constructs the credit "Chow Yun-Fat" for this name. Therfore we haveto store "Chow Yun-Fat" in the credited as field. All of this is completely conforming to the current rules. But I would welcome if Invelos would add such an example to the rules for clarification. |
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