Practical RDF by Shelley Powers

Practical RDF



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Practical RDF Shelley Powers ebook
Page: 331
Publisher: O'Reilly Media
Format: chm
ISBN: 0596002637, 9780596002633


Every time I write about graphs, I am stuck with the same dilema. I pitched a Practical RDF Town Hall for XML 2003 in Philadelphia in the hopes that I could get a handful of folks up in front of an audience to talk about practical things that you can do today with RDF. The project was launched with a wholly practical approach to publishing data – about vending machines, catering halls, and other points of service – in RDF format by that school's web manager, Christopher Gutteridge. Yes, I did not mention RDF/LinkedData/etc. €� Practical RDF modelling and conversion. €� TEI for linking text and facsimiles. What this means is that one can refer to an RDF/XML, Excel, or a BibTex file instead of the JSON code, and Exhibit will convert it to RDF on the fly. Do I or do I not talk about the Semantic Web. RDF is defined as an abstract data model, plus a collection of practical notations for exchanging RDF descriptions (eg. Michael Hunger however informed me that the neo-rdf-sail component is no longer under Through Datablend, Davy aims at sharing his practical experience within a broader IT environment. Xmlhack: Practical RDF Town Hall Around 30 people attended the Practical RDF Town Hall at the XML 2003 conference this week, watching demos and asking questions. Although this book covers a small market, I believe that the combination of Common Lisp and the AllegroGraph RDF data store is a great combination for developing knowledge intensive software. If practical, we should be looking at backporting features from Perl 6 to Perl 5, not just because it has an awesome feature set, but to help ease transition. €� Publishing XML files using XSLT. €� RDF querying and visualization. Managing Digital Humanities Projects. So, to try it out, I put together a small example: the list of the W3C related talks of my buddies, ie, people whose Twitter feed. MTMH 2012 was a joint hackathon between the people working on p5-mop (a project to get a Moose-lite metaobject system into the Perl 5 core) and the Perl RDF toolkit, with a few Rakudo people thrown in too, ostensibly for convergence between the p5-mop and Perl 6 metaobject systems when possible. Regarding Kingsley's comment concerning EAV: I think we all get that EAV has historical precedence and is a more fundamental model than RDF, but for practical purposes why should adopters concern themselves with it? Personally I see nothing in the statement from Francis Maude that implies the mandating of RDF or Linked Data, only that “Where possible we will use recognised open standards including Linked Data standards”.