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Is common sense a valid source?
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DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorWinston Smith
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Registered: March 13, 2007
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It is about linking of names and obviously the existing system is not working and I think I understand the reasons it is not and have explained in detail why it does not work, the current practice of users running around based on the assumption that ALL Credits are the same across all Regions and Versions is well-meaning but wrong and is not really helping, it will only ultimately make matters much worse.

Skip
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DVD Profiler Desktop and Mobile RegistrantStar ContributorTaro
Registered: February 23, 2009
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Quoting Dr Pavlov:
Quote:
I want to be able to accomodate BOTH, the cultural side AND the HARD data side.
Skip

GOOD! I agree and I'm listening. What's your solution to the problem? So far, the only solutions you've provided accomodate the HARD side (your view) and nothing you've suggested so far accomodates our side.

So how do you propose we solve the various issues at hand?
- correct cross linking for actors and crew
- a uniformed way for romanizing discs from asian localities



Also, do you even know what cross linking and a relational database is? You say that a relation is what I want to see but that's not what is the matter at hand. I'm starting to think you misunderstand what I'm trying to say. Here's what I mean, and what is currently happening in DVD Profiler:
A is in movie 1
A is in movie 2
A' is in movie 3
A" is in movie 4

Where A = the official, correct name of an actor, A' = said actor with a spelling error, A" = said actor but with first and last name reversed

When cross linking with A, I'll only get movies 1 & 2 as results, because the computer won't make the assumption that A = A' = A".

That means the relational database is broken. The data does not permit correct cross linking.

How on earth is such a thing a matter of personal opinion? It's purely technical! The solution how we solve this problem, yes, that's personal but the problem at hand isn't a matter of personal preference or interpretation, it is an inherent database problem.
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 Last edited: by Taro
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar Contributorsurfeur51
Since July 3, 2003
Registered: March 29, 2007
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Quoting Dr Pavlov:
Quote:
The tick box will not allow what i think is at the root of the problem and that is somehow representing the cultural issue Online while still retaining the As Credited foundation.


The tick box resolves the sorting issue for asian names and stage names, that is not at all cultural. We'll have Chow Yun-Fat with the C, and Queen Latifah with the Q, not before the A.
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DVD Profiler Desktop and Mobile RegistrantStar Contributoreommen
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Registered: March 13, 2007
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Taro,

Well said. Though I think Skip once mentioned he was an OAP with an IT background, so I guess he knows about data base relations.

The funny thing is, the "credited as" feature allows very much to cover the hard and soft side. Underlying the credited as (spelling errors warts and all) can be the official name.

Problem is, we have few rules on what constitutes the official name. IMdb is out (for legal reasons as well as its apparent errors), no problem with that. The numerous threads in this particular forum to find out a common agreed name for many cast and crew bear witness to that. There is even a call to make these topics a forum in their own right.
For any new or additional rules to cover these issues, well, they're not there yet. Any claim to an official name will probably have to be substantiated by external evidence (not CLT, that is internal to DVDp). But it'll work only as a charm as known variations of a name will be automatically translated during upload, much like the "Jr" to ",Jr" thing. It'll require some permanent Invelos magenement I guess for new additions and exceptions to that translation list.

Anyway, hence my earlier suggestion to use the credited as feature for Nakamura. Since you provided enough evidence to his official name (IMO), that covers the underlying name as well.

As I understand Skip, his position is to keep to the literal text, at least as long as the new/additional rules aren't there yet. With all the cons it carries along. When external evidence is explicitly absent, he is equating any such contribution to a personal opinion (I think). Skip, correct me if I misunderstood you.
Point is, even with lacking evidence, the contribution can be correct for all intents and purposes. Hence the many heated disputes...

I am happy though he want to accomodate BOTH. He'd make a lot more friends if he highlighted this part of his intentions a bit more.
Eric

If it is important, say it. Otherwise, let silence speak.
 Last edited: by eommen
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorWinston Smith
Don't be discommodious
Registered: March 13, 2007
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Quoting surfeur51:
Quote:
Quoting Dr Pavlov:
Quote:
The tick box will not allow what i think is at the root of the problem and that is somehow representing the cultural issue Online while still retaining the As Credited foundation.


The tick box resolves the sorting issue for asian names and stage names, that is not at all cultural. We'll have Chow Yun-Fat with the C, and Queen Latifah with the Q, not before the A.

But that is local is it not, Yves. It has no impact on the Onlin, at all, which is my sole concern

Skip
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Billy Video
Invelos Software, Inc. RepresentativeGerri Cole
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Registered: March 10, 2007
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Quoting Taro:
Quote:



I'm trying to say. Here's what I mean, and what is currently happening in DVD Profiler:
A is in movie 1
A is in movie 2
A' is in movie 3
A" is in movie 4

Where A = the official, correct name of an actor, A' = said actor with a spelling error, A" = said actor but with first and last name reversed

When cross linking with A, I'll only get movies 1 & 2 as results, because the computer won't make the assumption that A = A' = A".



If you use the credited as feature, you could link up all these names, correct?
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DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorT!M
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Quoting Gerri Cole:
Quote:
If you use the credited as feature, you could link up all these names, correct?

Yes. The two problems are:

1. It's not always easy to determine what the "most-credited form" is. That's a common problem, of course, but it's even worse for these names. Because there's no consensus on how to enter them in the first place, the CLT results are even less trustworthy than for Western names.

2. For those of us who are more used to the "last name-first name" name ordering, it can be somewhat difficult to knowingly have to put a last name into the "first name" field and vice versa. If you see dozens of "last name-first name" entries on-screen, and that's the way names are generally presented to you, you'll have a hard time putting the last names in the "first name" fields and vice versa. Putting it into the "credited as" field is one thing ("proper" order ["reversed" order]), but there will be cases where the most-credited form is actually in the last name-first name order, and for a part of the userbase, that will just go right against what they've learned since kindergarten. IMHO, the problem is the field names. As long as the fields are called "first name" and "last name" and so forth, people are bound to want to put the actor's "first name" and "last name" into those fields.

Doing something about the field names may also help address parsing problems for Western names, as that's severely hampered by similar problems as well (for instance: if the country you grew up in doesn't have something like a "middle name", it's pretty hard to recognize what exactly qualifies as a "middle name" in other countries - especially since there are no hard and fast definitions anywhere). Here as well, users are bound to put the names they see on-screen in the fields they feel are the appropriate place they should go. If you recognize something as part of the last name, you'll put it in the "last name" field. But someone else might recognize it as a "middle name", and put it there. Without further guidance, these opposites will never meet, and we'll be stuck with multiple, non-linking entries for all affected names in the database.
 Last edited: by T!M
DVD Profiler Desktop and Mobile RegistrantStar ContributorTaro
Registered: February 23, 2009
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Quoting Gerri Cole:
Quote:
Quoting Taro:
Quote:



I'm trying to say. Here's what I mean, and what is currently happening in DVD Profiler:
A is in movie 1
A is in movie 2
A' is in movie 3
A" is in movie 4

Where A = the official, correct name of an actor, A' = said actor with a spelling error, A" = said actor but with first and last name reversed

When cross linking with A, I'll only get movies 1 & 2 as results, because the computer won't make the assumption that A = A' = A".



If you use the credited as feature, you could link up all these names, correct?

Technically speaking I suppose that would indeed work. Submitting them online as such (credited as feature) would also be in accordance to the rules or is it a solution valid only for the local database?

Although this is a technical solution, I still don't understand why for western actors we put the last name in the last field, regardless of the order in which their first and last name is credited, yet for Japanese actors we aren't allowed to do so. This is even more puzzling to me as, unlike Chinese and Korean names, Japanese names follow the exact same structure as western names, with the exception that they don't use middle names. If anything, it should make it even easier to input the family name in the last field, yet we're only allowed to do so for western names. Is there a particular reason for that?
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Invelos Software, Inc. RepresentativeGerri Cole
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Registered: March 10, 2007
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Quoting Taro:
Quote:

If you use the credited as feature, you could link up all these names, correct?
Technically speaking I suppose that would indeed work. Submitting them online as such (credited as feature) would also be in accordance to the rules or is it a solution valid only for the local database?

Although this is a technical solution, I still don't understand why for western actors we put the last name in the last field, regardless of the order in which their first and last name is credited, yet for Japanese actors we aren't allowed to do so. This is even more puzzling to me as, unlike Chinese and Korean names, Japanese names follow the exact same structure as western names, with the exception that they don't use middle names. If anything, it should make it even easier to input the family name in the last field, yet we're only allowed to do so for western names. Is there a particular reason for that?


You can use credited as for online as well as local.

As for your other question, to be honest, I am not sure that I follow. Can you give me an example? From my simple perspective, I am having trouble seeing what the issue is.
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 Last edited: by Gerri Cole
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorT!M
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Quoting Taro:
Quote:
I still don't understand why for western actors we put the last name in the last field, regardless of the order in which their first and last name is credited, yet for Japanese actors we aren't allowed to do so.

Like Gerri, I don't understand that. IMHO, it's just not true: we're not allowed to "put the last name in the last field, regardless of the order in which their first and last name is credited" on-screen for Western names either. Like someone said here earlier: if the credits would show "Cruise Tom", that's what we would enter. Hopefully in the credited as field, of course: it would be "Tom Cruise [Cruise Tom]", but still: we would retain the "Cruise Tom" way of entry as seen on-screen. In that regard, there really is no different treatment for Western names.
Invelos Software, Inc. RepresentativeGerri Cole
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Quoting T!M:
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Quoting Gerri Cole:
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If you use the credited as feature, you could link up all these names, correct?

Yes. The two problems are:

1. It's not always easy to determine what the "most-credited form" is. That's a common problem, of course, but it's even worse for these names. Because there's no consensus on how to enter them in the first place, the CLT results are even less trustworthy than for Western names.

2. For those of us who are more used to the "last name-first name" name ordering, it can be somewhat difficult to knowingly have to put a last name into the "first name" field and vice versa. If you see dozens of "last name-first name" entries on-screen, and that's the way names are generally presented to you, you'll have a hard time putting the last names in the "first name" fields and vice versa. Putting it into the "credited as" field is one thing ("proper" order ["reversed" order]), but there will be cases where the most-credited form is actually in the last name-first name order, and for a part of the userbase, that will just go right against what they've learned since kindergarten. IMHO, the problem is the field names. As long as the fields are called "first name" and "last name" and so forth, people are bound to want to put the actor's "first name" and "last name" into those fields.

Doing something about the field names may also help address parsing problems for Western names, as that's severely hampered by similar problems as well (for instance: if the country you grew up in doesn't have something like a "middle name", it's pretty hard to recognize what exactly qualifies as a "middle name" in other countries - especially since there are no hard and fast definitions anywhere). Here as well, users are bound to put the names they see on-screen in the fields they feel are the appropriate place they should go. If you recognize something as part of the last name, you'll put it in the "last name" field. But someone else might recognize it as a "middle name", and put it there. Without further guidance, these opposites will never meet, and we'll be stuck with multiple, non-linking entries for all affected names in the database.


For #1, I really don't see this as an issue. If there is no linking at all today, then taking your best guess at what the common name is should suffice.  (but maybe I don't know what you are referring to as common name)
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DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorT!M
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Quoting Gerri Cole:
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For #1, I really don't see this as an issue. If there is no linking at all today, then taking your best guess at what the common name is should suffice.

Which is fine, of course. As I said: that's a common problem for ALL names, not just any specific group of them. The key is in #2: if you're used to names being presented in last name-first name order, if that's the normal way names are generally presented to you, you're going to have a hard time putting the last name into the "first name" field. It just goes against everything you've ever learned. Lots of users, most of which don't even visit the forums, will just instinctively put the last name into the "last name" field. As long as the field is labelled like this, and the rules don't specifically explain to the users the cases when this can/should not be done, we're going to have many, many users putting the last names they see on-screen into the "last name" field, simply because that's what their instinct tells them to do. Again: if last name-first name ordering is what you're used to, you wouldn't even think about it for a second until some Western user voted against it. You see a bunch of first names and last names on-screen, and you put them into the appropriately labelled fields. As long as you don't specifically inform them to do otherwise, that's how the majority will do it.
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorDanae Cassandra
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As it stands currently what you should do is try to establish the most commonly credited name, then use that with the credited as feature for the name as it appears on screen.  This is how you can and should submit them to the online.  The only problem with this is that different releases of the same film may have different credits (between countries here) so it may be difficult to establish the common name.

OPINION ON LAST NAME=SURNAME:

I would prefer to use the first name/last name fields as positional fields, but that preference is built on the fact that if we use them as last name=surname, a Japanese name would not display properly in the database.  I do not wish to see a ruling saying that we should enter Yamadera Koichi as Koichi Yamadera since last name=surname and Yamadera is his last name.  I would much rather see a ruling that says enter Koichi Yamadera as Yamadera Koichi since this is how his name is actually placed positionally and would therefore display as such next to actors like Tom Cruise.  (Yes, I know I can reorient how my profiler displays names so that last name would be first, but it isn't Yamadera, Koichi where as it would be Cruise, Tom.)

However, I would not mind using last name=surname if there was a tic box to say it is a reverse-order name.  Therefore entering Koichi/Yamadera and clicking the box would get you a display of Yamadera Koichi.

OPINION ON LINKING PROBLEM:

It seems to me that we could use the credited-as option to accommodate both the desires of those of us who wish to preserve correct name ordering and those who wish to preserve on-screen data. 

It's just not possible the way the rules are currently set up.  Right now what one has to do is to use whatever CLT results one obtains for the cast member and use that name [credited as you see him/her on screen]. 

I think that the better solution in the long run would be to use each actor/crew member's true name as the name with [credited as you see them on screen].  Exceptions here being for people who changed their name for show business (John Wayne) or generally use a pseudonym (a lot of wrestlers and rappers).  For people who have used a pseudonym and later begin being credited under their actual name, that name would take precedence (therefore getting us Dwayne Johnson [The Rock] rather than The Rock [Dwayne Johnson].)

An aside - like Taro, I am using Japanese names as the example, since these names are what I understand and know about.  I do not know much about any other Asian names, except that surname is placed first in many Asian cultures.  My background is in anime, as opposed to Taro's more scholarly Japanese, but roughly a third of my collection is anime, so this is definitely a concern for me.

If we had a system where a person (cast or crew) was assigned their actual, true name (or commonly held pseudonym) we could then use the credited-as feature to represent the data on-screen.  Thus, we would get Yamadera Koichi [Koichi Yamadera] for the US releases of his films (preserving the on-screen data for them) and still linking to Japanese releases.

However, given the rules as they stand right now, one cannot do this in the online.  I also believe it would be hard to implement, because the common person may not know that these names should be given in what will look like reversed order to them.  Someone who is not a hardcore Asian film or anime fan will see these names given in correct form and may go 'WTF, that was entered wrong' and this would result in potentially a lot of ping-pong contributions.

Locally, you can do whatever the heck you want.  What I'm going to do when I get to auditing the anime part of my collection is audit for the rules, submit, then throw that out and correct them as I want them locally and lock those fields.

(late to the discussion because of having to get the computer fixed, sorry - and also sorry for being so long-winded)
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 Last edited: by Danae Cassandra
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorLewis_Prothero
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Registered: May 19, 2007
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Quoting Taro:
Quote:
Cruise (a family name) needs to be put in that Last name field, per those rules
Nakamura (also a family name) can be put in both fields, simply because it's an asian name?

Not quite correct:
If the onscreen credit for Tom Cruise would be Cruise Tom you can use the "Common Name"-feature so it would be:
Tom // Cruise [Cruise Tom], because and only because "Tom Cruise" is highly likely to be the most credited variant in this hypothetical case (use CLT to verify this thesis).

The same goes for Mr. Nakamura:
The current common name for Mr. Nakamura would be "Shidou // Nakamura" not "Nakamura // Shidou" (CLT result: 15 : 8 titles).
So if the actual credit is Nakamura Shidou he should be parsed as Shidou // Nakamura [Nakamura Shidou].
The common name has nothing to do with the conventions of naming in any given locality it is just supposed to mirror the most credited variant of a name. Means: in the (quite unlikely) case that one day there are more credits for "Cruise Tom" the common name will change to this variant.

That some people (me included) use the "credited as"-function (aka as "common name") to europeanize the asian naming-standards doesn't change too much here, because the feature should be used any time that the name in the database differs from the actual credit, and by this wouldn't even spoil the CLT-results.
It all seems so stupid, it makes me want to give up!
But why should I give up, when it all seems so stupid?


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 Last edited: by Lewis_Prothero
DVD Profiler Unlimited Registrantxradman
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Quoting Gerri Cole:
Quote:
Quoting Taro:
Quote:



I'm trying to say. Here's what I mean, and what is currently happening in DVD Profiler:
A is in movie 1
A is in movie 2
A' is in movie 3
A" is in movie 4

Where A = the official, correct name of an actor, A' = said actor with a spelling error, A" = said actor but with first and last name reversed

When cross linking with A, I'll only get movies 1 & 2 as results, because the computer won't make the assumption that A = A' = A".



If you use the credited as feature, you could link up all these names, correct?

Gerri, that is correct.  However, Ken has stated that Asian names are excluded from the parsing rule of Last name = family name for now.  The reason for this is that so many Asian names are so messed up in the current online database that some vocal users have threatened to boycott the program if things are changed from the status quo.

Taro,  I don't know why you want to separate out Japanese name from Korean/Chinese names.  Korean/Chinese names are also surname/given name with 1 or 2 syllables for each name.  If you say Korean/Chinese names have 3 parts, that's like saying most Japanese names have 4 parts.
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DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorWinston Smith
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Quoting xradman:
Quote:
Quoting Gerri Cole:
Quote:
Quoting Taro:
Quote:



I'm trying to say. Here's what I mean, and what is currently happening in DVD Profiler:
A is in movie 1
A is in movie 2
A' is in movie 3
A" is in movie 4

Where A = the official, correct name of an actor, A' = said actor with a spelling error, A" = said actor but with first and last name reversed

When cross linking with A, I'll only get movies 1 & 2 as results, because the computer won't make the assumption that A = A' = A".



If you use the credited as feature, you could link up all these names, correct?

Gerri, that is correct.  However, Ken has stated that Asian names are excluded from the parsing rule of Last name = family name for now.  The reason for this is that so many Asian names are so messed up in the current online database that some vocal users have threatened to boycott the program if things are changed from the status quo.

Taro,  I don't know why you want to separate out Japanese name from Korean/Chinese names.  Korean/Chinese names are also surname/given name with 1 or 2 syllables for each name.  If you say Korean/Chinese names have 3 parts, that's like saying most Japanese names have 4 parts.

**editted***

The foundation of the Rules is AS CREDITED, What YOU SEE is What you Type, WSIWYT.  I want to somehow maintain AS Credited, while allowing for the use of the Cutural issue. I think the best way currently would be by expanding the use of the Common Name to include using a "REAL" name, of course such use would absolutely require docu,mentation, not simply well this is a Chinese Name therefore it is parsed this way.

Skip
ASSUME NOTHING!!!!!!
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Outta here

Billy Video
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