http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&q=semantic%20data%20web&type=text&output=html
Kingsley Idehen's Blog Data Space
2024-03-28T21:59:33Z
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
About semantic data web
152
1
10
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1361
<p> <a href="http://blogs.talis.com/nodalities/2008/05/kingsley-idehen-talks-about-openlink-software-linked-data-and-the-semantic-web.php" id="link-id1036b118">My podcast interview</a> with <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/in/pau1mi11er" id="link-id1026ed10">Paul Miller</a> of <a href="http://www.talis.com" id="link-id12d210d8">Talis</a> is out. As I listened to the podcast (naturally awkward affair) I got a first hand sense of Paul's mastery of the art of interviewing, even when dealing with a fast talking <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data" id="link-id180e1208">data</a> blitzers like me. Personally, I think I still talk a little too fast (the Nigerian in me), especially when the subject matter hones right into the epicenter of my professional passions: Open <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data" id="link-id1737a258">Data</a> Access and Heterogeneous <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data" id="link-id180f0668">Data</a> Integration (aka. <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Virtual_Database" id="link-id10c62348">Virtual Database</a> Technology) -- so you may need to rewind every now and then during the interview :-)</p> <p>During this particular podcast interview, I deliberately wanted to have an conversation about the practical value of <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id180c9f88">Linked Data</a>, rather than the technical innards. The fundamental utility of <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id17387618">Linked Data</a> remains somewhat mercurial, and I am certainly hoping to do my bit at the upcoming <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id183ec288">Linked Data</a> Planet conference re. demonstrating and articulating <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id1401f250">linked data</a> value across the blurring realms of "the individual" and "the enterprise".</p> <p> <strong>Note to my old schoolmates on Facebook</strong>: when you listen to this podcast you will at least reconcile "Uyi Idehen" with "<a href="http://myopenlink.net/dataspace/person/kidehen#this" id="link-id180a7060">Kingsley Idehen</a>". Unfortunately, Facebook refuses to let me Identify myself in the manner I choose. Ideally, I would like to have the name: "Kingsley (Uyi) Idehen" associated with my Facebook ID since this is the Identifier known to my personal network of friends, family, and old schoolmates. This Identity predicament is a long running Identity case study in the making.</p>
My Talis Podcast re. Semantic Web, Linked Data, and OpenLink Software
2008-05-16T16:53:49Z
2008-05-16T12:53:49.000002-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1123
<p> <a href="http://fgiasson.com">Frederick Giasson</a> provides compelling data that supports the view that the <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/blog/~kidehen/?id=1122">Semantic Web bootstrap is a global Data Integration & Data Generation effort</a> that inevitably involves a variety of Data Sources such as: social networks, blogs, wikis etc.</p> <p> The Data in Fred's post is based on <a href="http://fgiasson.com/blog/index.php/2007/01/21/reaching_at_least_600_000_people_with_19">FOAF Ontology instance data generated from a myriad of Data Sources</a>.</p>
Semantic Web Data Generation Activity: FOAF Crawling
2007-01-22T19:25:48Z
2007-01-22T14:25:48-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/992
<p>Important bookmark reference to note as the Web 2.0->[Data Web|Semantic Web] fusion's inflection takes shape: <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syndication_format_family_tree">Syndication Format Family Tree.</a> </p> <p>This particular inflection and, ultimately, transistion is going to occur at Warp Speed!</p>
Syndication Format Family Tree
2006-06-28T17:02:39Z
2006-06-28T13:02:39.000001-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1237
<p>I now have the first cut of a Facebook application called: Dynamic Linked Data Pages. </p> <h3>What is a Dynamic Linked Data Page (DLD)?</h3> <p>A dynamically generated Web Page comprised of Semantic Data Web style data links (formally typed links) and traditional Document Web links (generic links lacking type specificity).</p> <p>Linked Data Pages will ultimately enable Facebook users to inject their public data into the Semantic Data Web as RDF based Linked Data. For instance, my Facebook Profile & Photo albums data is now available as RDF, without paying a cent of RDF handcrafting tax, thanks to the Virtuoso Sponger (middleware for producing RDF from non RDF data sources) which is now equipped with a new RDFizer Cartridger for the Facebook Query Language (FQL) and RESTful Web Service.</p> <p>Demo Notes:</p> <p>When you click on a link in DLD pages, you will be presented with a lookup that exposes the different interaction options associated with a given URI. Examples include:</p> <ol> <li> Explore - find attributes and relationships that apply to the clicked URI</li> <li>Dereference (get the attributes of the clicked URI)</li> <li>Bookmark - store the URI for subsequent use e.g meshing with other URIs from across the Web</li> <li>(X)HTML Page Open - traditional Document Web link (i.e. just opens another Web document as per usual)</li> </ol> <p>Remember, the facebook URLs (links to web pages) are being converted, on the fly, into RDF based Structured Data ( graph model database) i.e Entity Sets that possess formally defined characteristics (attributes) and associations (relationships).</p> <h3>Dynamic Linked Data Pages</h3> <ol> <li> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/home/demo/Public/Queries/DataWeb/Explore_Facebook_Profile.isparql">My facebook Profile</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/home/demo/Public/Queries/DataWeb/Explore_Facebook_Photo_Album.isparql">My facebook Photo Album</a> </li> </ol> <h3>Saved RDF Browser Sessions</h3> <ol> <li> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/home/demo/Public/Queries/DataWeb/Exploring_Facebook_Profile.wqx">My facebook Profile</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/home/demo/Public/Queries/DataWeb/Exploring_Facebook_Photo_Gallery.wqx">My facebook Photo Album</a> </li> </ol> <h3>Saved SPARQL Query Definitions</h3> <ol> <li> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/home/demo/Public/Queries/DataWeb/Explore_Facebook_Profile.rq">My facebook Profile Query</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/home/demo/Public/Queries/DataWeb/Exploring_Facebook_Photo_Album.rq">My facebook Photo Album Query</a> </li> </ol>
Injecting Facebook Data into the Semantic Data Web
2009-02-11T12:40:11Z
2009-02-11T07:40:11-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1189
<p>Introducing the XBRL Ontology Project.</p> <p>The <a href="http://groups.google.com/group/xbrl-ontology-specification-group/msg/a4172167a42bab6e">XBRL Ontology Project</a> seeks to address the obvious need to bring structured financial data into the emerging Semantic Data Web as articulated in this excerpt from the inaugural mailing list post:</p> <blockquote> <p>The parallel evolution of <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XBRL">XBRL</a> and the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Semantic_Web">Semantic Web</a> is one of the more puzzling current day technology misnomers: </p> <cite>The Semantic Web expresses a vision about a Web of Data connected by formal meaning (Context). Congruently, XBRL espouses a vision whereby by formally defined Financial Data is accessible via the Web (and other networks). Sadly, we have an abundance of XBRL Taxonomies, pretty wide adoption of the XBRL standard globally, but not a single RDFS Schema or OWL Ontology, derived from said taxonomies, in sight!</cite> </blockquote> <a href="http://groups.google.com/group/xbrl-ontology-specification-group/msg/a4172167a42bab6e">Read on...</a>" <p>(Via <a href="http://groups.google.com/group/xbrl-ontology-specification-group">XBRL Ontology Specification Group Google Group</a>.)</p>
XBRL Ontology Project
2008-02-05T04:20:04Z
2008-02-04T23:20:04.000014-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1365
<p>Unfortunately a number of Linking Open <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data">Data</a> (<a href="http://community.linkeddata.org/dataspace/organization/lod#this" id="link-idffe3680">LOD</a>) community / <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id1017b420">Linked Data</a> tribe members (myself included) aren't at the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id10035c28">Semantic Web</a> Technologies conference in San Jose (we are in a busy period for <a href="http://idehen.net/dataspace/kidehen/calendar/MyCalendar" id="link-id10228c50">Semantic Web Technology related Conferences</a>). But all isn't lost as <a href="http://www.w3.org/People/Ivan/" id="link-id100be140">Ivan Herman</a> (W3C <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id10181b78">Semantic Web</a> Activity Lead) , <a href="http://community.linkeddata.org/dataspace/organization/lod#this" id="link-id1004a7e8">LOD</a> member, and SWEO colleague has carried the banner with aplomb.</p> <p>Ivan's presentation titled: <a href="http://www.w3.org/2008/Talks/0518-SanJose-IH/HTML/Overview.html" id="link-id11011990">State of the Semantic Web</a>, is a must view for those who need a quick update on where things are re. the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id101797b0">Semantic Web</a> in general.</p> <p>I also liked the fact that in proper "Lead by example" manner, his presentation isn't PDF or PPT based, it's a <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web">Web</a> Document :-)</p> <p>Hint: as per usual, this post contains a <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id100bdc28">Linked Data</a> demo nugget. This time around, it's in the form of a shared calendar covering a large number of <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id1002dd00">Semantic Web</a> Technology events. All I had to do was subscribe to a number of WebDAV accessible iCal files from my <a href="http://idehen.net/dataspace/kidehen/calendar/MyCalendar" id="link-id10f90900">Calendar Data Space</a> and the platform did the rest i.e. produce <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id10044188">Linked Data</a> Objects for events associated with a plethora of conferences.</p> <p>If you assimilate Ivan's presentation properly, you will note I've just generated, and shared, a large number of URIs covering a range of conference events. Thus, you can extend my contributions (thereby enriching the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Giant_Global_Graph" id="link-id1018ea80">GGG</a>) by simply associating additional data from your <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id10180538">Linked</a> <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_Spaces" id="link-id10103330">Data Space</a> with mine. All you have to do is use my calendar data objects URIs in your statements.</p>
State of the Semantic Web Presentation
2008-05-23T10:53:08Z
2008-05-23T06:53:08-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1035
<p>I just spotted a nice <a href="http://www.johnbreslin.com/blog/wp-content/20051015a.gif">Semantic Desktop animation</a> Courtesy of <a href="http://www.johnbreslin.com/">John Breslin</a>.</p> <p>This is fundamentally an animation demonstrating Semantic Web exploitation in the classic: picture speaks a thousand words manner. It also illustrates (yet again) the important <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&q=%27data%20spaces%27&type=text&output=html">Data Space(s)</a> aspect of creating Semantic Web presence.</p> <p>Finally, the Web 2.0 usage pattern tries to espouse what's demonstrated in this animation via data-context-challenged interactions (due to its <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&q=connundrum&type=text&output=html">"Walled Garden" and "Data Silo" approach to Data Access</a> etc..). The <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&q=%27semantic%20web%27&type=text&output=html">Semantic Web</a> (as per numerous posts on the subject) on the other hand achieves this via data-context-aware interactions (as will be exemplified via meshups).</p>
Data Spaces and Semantic Web Animation
2006-09-05T20:00:17Z
2006-09-05T16:00:17.000001-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1300
<p>In 2006, I stumbled across <a href="http://www.jasonkolb.com" id="link-id17165b98">Jason Kolb</a> (online) via a 4-part series of posts titled: <a href="http://www.jasonkolb.com/weblog/2006/08/reinventing_the_1.html" id="link-id14204cf8">Reinventing the Internet</a>. At the time, I realized that Jason was postulating about what is popularly known today as "<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_portability" id="link-id1412b280">Data Portability</a>", so I made contact with him (blogosphere style) via a post of my own titled: <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1033" id="link-id13b1cb20">Data Spaces, Internet Reinvention, and the Semantic Web</a>. Naturally, I tried to unveil to Jason the connection between his vision and the essence of the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id143117f0">Semantic Web</a>. Of course, he was skeptical :-)</p> <p>Jason recently moved to <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Massachusetts" id="link-id13c4a470">Massachusetts</a> which lead to me pinging him about our earlier blogosphere encounter and the emergence of a <a href="http://dataportability.org/" id="link-id17395c60">Data Portability Community</a>. I also informed him about the fact that <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Tim_Berners-Lee" id="link-id105507f0">TimBL</a>, myself, and a number of other Semantic Web technology enthusiasts, frequently meet on the 2nd Tuesday of each month at the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Massachusetts_Institute_of_Technology" id="link-id1719f798">MIT</a> hosted <a href="http://esw.w3.org/topic/CambridgeSemanticWebGatherings" id="link-id1734d460">Cambridge Semantic Web Gatherings</a>, to discuss, demonstrate, debate all aspects of the Semantic Web. Luckily (for both of us), Jason attended the last event, and we got to meet each other in person.</p> <p>Following our face to face meeting in Cambridge, a number of follow-on conversations ensued covering, Linked Data and practical applications of the Semantic Web vision. Jason writes about our exchanges a recent post titled: <a href="http://www.jasonkolb.com/weblog/2008/01/the-semantic-we.html" id="link-id13be6280">The Semantic Web</a>. His passion for Data Portability enabled me to use <a href="http://esw.w3.org/topic/FoafOpenid" id="link-id141516a8">OpenID and FOAF integration</a> to connect the Semantic Web and Data Portability via the Linked Data concept.</p> <p>During our conversations, Jason also eluded to the fact that he had already encountered <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenLink_Software" id="link-id17038218">OpenLink Software</a> while working with our <a href="http://data.openlinksw.com/oplweb/product_category/odbc#this" id="link-id14325f08">ODBC Drivers</a> (part of or <a href="http://data.openlinksw.com/oplweb/product_family/uda#this" id="link-id11ab1008">UDA product family</a>) for <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Informix" id="link-id125858d0">IBM Informix</a> (<a href="http://data.openlinksw.com/oplweb/product/odbc-informix-st#this" id="link-id13b85e30">Single-Tier</a> or <a href="http://data.openlinksw.com/oplweb/product/odbc-informix-mt#this" id="link-id13edceb0">Multi-Tier</a> Editions) a few years ago (interesting random connection).</p> <p>As I've stated in the past, I've always felt that the Semantic Web vision will materialize by way of a global epiphany. The count down to this inevitable event started at the birth of the blogosphere, ironically. And accelerated more recently, through the emergence of <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Web_2.0" id="link-id171d4ec8">Web 2.0</a> and <a href="http://dbpedia.org/page/Social_network" id="link-id140da830">Social Networking</a>, even more ironically :-)</p> <p>The blogosphere started the process of Data Space coalescence via RSS/Atom based semi-strucutured data enclaves, Web 2.0 RDFpropagated Web Service usage en route to creating service provider controlled, data and information silosRDF, Social NetworkingRDF brought attention to the fact that User Generated Data wasn't actually owned or controlled by the Data Creators etc.</p> <p>The emergence of "Data Portability" has created a palatable moniker for a clearly defined, and slightly easier to understand, problem: the meshing of Data and Identity in cyberspace i.e. individual points of presence in cyberspace, in the form of "Personal Data Spaces in the Clouds" (think: doing really powerful stuff with .name domains). In a sense, this is the critical inflection point between the document centric "Web of Linked Documents" and the data centric "Web or Linked Data". There is absolutely no other way solve this problem in a manner that alleviates the imminent challenges presented by information overload -- resulting from the exponential growth of user generated data across the Internet and enterprise Intranets.</p>
Semantic Data Web Epiphanies: One Node at a Time
2008-01-18T07:27:27Z
2008-01-18T02:27:27.000004-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1205
<p>The recently released <a href="http://www.w3.org/2001/sw/SW-FAQ">Semantic Web FAQ</a> (authored by <a href="http://www.w3.org/People/Ivan/">Ivan Herman</a>) has some neat Rich Internet and <a href="http://www.w3.org/2001/sw/">Semantic Data Web</a> embellishments contributed by Ivan and <a href="http://thefigtrees.net/lee/blog/">Lee Feigenbaum</a>. As a result, we not only have a great Semantic Web FAQ document, we also inherit a coherent piece of "demo fodder" that aids the general (S)emantic (W)eb (E)ducation and (O)reach (<a href="http://www.w3.org/2001/sw/sweo/">SWEO</a>) that is clearly in full swing.</p> <p>Of course, this also enables me to provide yet another Semantic Data Web demo in the form of additional viewing perspectives for the aforementioned FAQ (just click to see):</p> <ol> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.openlinksw.com:8890/DAV/home/demo/dataweb/linked_data_pages/semantic_web_faq_overview.isparql">Semantic Web FAQ via Dynamic Data Page</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.openlinksw.com:8890/DAV/home/demo/dataweb/browser_sessions/exploring_semantic_web_faq.wqx">Semantic Web FAQ via OpenLink Browser</a> </li> </ol> <p>Lee also embarked on a similar embellishment effort re. the<a href="http://thefigtrees.net/lee/sw/sparql-faq"> SPARQL Query Language FAQ</a> thereby enabling me to also offer alternative viewing perspectives along similar lines:</p> <ol> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.openlinksw.com:8890/DAV/home/demo/dataweb/linked_data_pages/sparql_faq_overview.isparql">SPARQL FAQ via Dynamic Data Page</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.openlinksw.com:8890/DAV/home/demo/dataweb/browser_sessions/exploring_sparql_faq.wqx">SPARQL FAQ via OpenLink Browser</a> </li> </ol>
Exploring The Semantic Web & SPARQL FAQs, Linked Data Style!
2007-05-31T21:43:47Z
2007-05-31T17:43:47.000001-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/677
<p>The net effect of <a href="http://answers.com/main/ntquery?s=web+services&gwp=8">Web Services</a> and Web Data (soon to be Semantic Content) is the ability obtain and analyze <a href="http://www.alexa.com/data/details/traffic_details?&range=6m&size=large&y=t&url=answers.com#top">this kind of data</a> .</p> <p><a href="http://answers.com/">Answers.com</a> was launched a month ago, and its stock is practically on fire! Does this graph tell you anything about subject searches vs keyword searches? </p> <p><img align="baseline" alt="" border="0" hspace="0" src="http://traffic.alexa.com/graph?w=640&h=480&r=6m&y=t&u=answers.com/&u=ask.com&u=google.com" /></p> <p>The burgeoning <a href="http://answers.com/main/ntquery?s=semantic+web">Semantic Web</a> will disrupt the search market in a big way (and for the better <a href="http://answers.com/main/ntquery?s=imho">IMHO</a>).</p> <p> </p>
Traffic Analysis: Google vs Answers.com vs Ask.com
2006-06-22T12:56:58Z
2006-06-22T08:56:58-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1530
<p>If you are still grappling with the "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id15cfb138">Semantic Web</a> Project" and one of its more distinguished deliverables: <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id15340548">Linked Data</a> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Giant_Global_Graph" id="link-id141f88b8">Web</a>, then please make time to watch and digest the imminence of this <a href="http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=7190175107515525470" id="link-id15394f88">1990 documentary</a> about <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Hyperland" id="link-id153951e0">Hypermedia</a> titled: <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Hyperland" id="link-id153f7998">Hyperland</a>, by the late <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Douglas_Adams" id="link-id15d2ac88">Douglas Adams</a>.</p> <h3>Related</h3> <ul> <li> <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rOsPKjbMvxY" id="link-id117ab018">Hyperland Documentary</a> -- Youtube </li> <li> <a href="http://hyperworlds.org/" id="link-id152dd5d0">Hyperworlds</a> - Ted Nelson Presentation</li> <li> <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1IQFjTnDozo" id="link-id1533dba0">The Invention of the World Wide Web</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zAvNlh2Z0GI" id="link-id117a0238">The Web's Secret Stories</a> - TED Presentation (basically about using the Web reveal [connections] commonality via [dots] individuality pre. Twitter</li> <li> <a href="http://www.ted.com/index.php/talks/pattie_maes_demos_the_sixth_sense.html" id="link-id154b32f0">Pattie Mae demonstrates 6th sense</a> - an example of what will be done with Linked Data re. user interaction.</li> <li> <a href="http://conferences.ted.com/TED2009/" id="link-id11ea40c8">TimBL's TED 2009 Linked Data Presentation</a> </li> </ul>
Important Movie and Ultimate Linked Data Documentary (Update 3)
2009-03-15T14:35:49Z
2009-03-15T10:35:49.000003-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1324
<p>These days I increasingly qualify myself and my Semantic Web advocacy as falling under the realm Linked Data. Thus, I tend to use the following introduction: I am <a href="http://kidehen.idehen.net/dataspace/person/kidehen%23this" id="link-idfd257f0">Kingsley Idehen</a>, of the Tribe <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-idfec62f8">Linked Data</a>.</p> <p>The aforementioned qualification is increasingly necessary for the following reasons:</p> <ol> <li>The Semantic Web vision is broad and comprised of many layers</li> <li>A new era of confusion is taking shape just as we thought we had quelled the prior AI dominated realm of confusion</li> <li>None of the Semantic Web vision layers are comprehensible in practical ways without a basic foundation</li> <li>Open Data Access is the foundation of the Semantic Web (in prior post I used the term: <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1037" id="link-idfe71640">Semantic Web Layer 1</a>)</li> <li>URIs units of Open Data Access in Semantic Web parlance i.e.. each datum on the Web must have an ID (minted by the host Data Space).</li> </ol> <p>The terms <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Giant_Global_Graph" id="link-id1224e020">GGG</a>, Linked Data, Data Web, Web of Data, and Web 3.0 (when I use this term) all imply URI driven Open Data Access for the Web Database (maybe call this <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Open_Database_Connectivity" id="link-idfeb86e8">ODBC</a> for the Web) -- ability to point to records across data spaces without any adverse effect to the remote data spaces. It's really important to note that none of the aforementioned terms have nothing to do with the "Linguistic Meaning of blurb". Building a smarter document exposed via a URL without exposing descriptive data links doesn't provide open access to information data sources. </p> <p>As human beings we are all endowed with reasoning capability. But we can't reason without access to data. Dearth of openly accessible structured data is the source of many ills in cyberspace and across society in general. Today we still have Subjectivity reigning over Objectivity due to the prohibitive costs of open data access.</p> <p>We can't cost-effectively pursue objectivity without cost-effective infrastructure for creating alternative views of the data behind information sources (e.g. Web Pages). More Objectivity and less Subjectivity is what the next Web Frontier is about. At OpenLink we simply use the moniker: Analysis for All! Everyone becomes a data analyst in some form, and even better, the analysis are easily accessible to anyone connected to the Web. Of course, you will be able to share special analysis with your private network of friends and family, or if you so choose, not at all :-)</p> <p>Recap, it's important to note that Linked Data is the foundation layer of the Semantic Web vision. It's not only facilitates open data access, it also enables data integration (Meshing as opposed to Mashing) across disparate data schemas</p> <p>As demonstrated by <a href="http://dbpedia.org/about" id="link-idfe37fd8">DBpedia</a> and the <a href="http://richard.cyganiak.de/2007/10/lod/" id="link-idfeeef40">Linked Data Solar system</a> emerging around it, if you <a href="http://www.w3.org/Provider/Style/URI" id="link-idee98310">URI everything, then everything is Cool</a>.</p> <p>Linked Data and <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Information_silo" id="link-idfcae4a0">Information Silos</a> are mutually exclusive concepts. Thus, you cannot produce a web accessible Information Silo and then refer to it as "Semantic Web" technology. Of course, it might be very Semantic, but it's fundamentally devoid of critical "Semantic Web" essence (<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/DNA" id="link-id10dddd08">DNA</a>).</p> <p>My acid test for any Semantic Web solution is simply this (using a <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/User_agent" id="link-idff7b4e8">Web User Agent or Client</a>):</p> <ol> <li>go to the profile page of the service</li> <li>ask for an RDF representation of my profile (by this I mean "get me the raw data in structured form")</li> <li>attempt to traverse the structured data graph (RDF) that the service provides via live de-referncable URIs.</li> </ol> <p>Here is the Acid test against my Data Space:</p> <ol> <li> <a href="http://kidehen.idehen.net/dataspace/person/kidehen" id="link-idfd2e5c8">My Profile Page</a> (HTML representation dispatched via an instance of <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenLink_Data_Spaces" id="link-id10d3d0f8">OpenLink Data Spaces</a>)</li> <li>Click on the "Linked Data Tab" (HTML representation endowed with Data Links the link to information resources containing other structured descriptions of things).</li> </ol>
Semantic Web Advocate of Tribe Linked Data! (Updated)
2008-03-20T20:29:47Z
2008-03-20T16:29:47-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1319
<ol> <li>End to <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Buzzword" id="link-id17844268">Buzzword</a> Blur - how buzzwords are used to obscure comprehension of core concepts. Let <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SKOS" id="link-id17445960">SKOS</a>, <a href="http://moat-project.org/" id="link-id175e6d80">MOAT</a>, <a href="http://scot-project.org/2007/04/03/scot-ontology-model/" id="link-id17fb2440">SCOT</a> reign! </li> <li>End of Data Silos - you don't own me, my data, my data's mobility (import/export), or accessibility (by reference) just because I signed up for Yet Another Software as Service (ySaaS)</li> <li>End of <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Misinformation" id="link-id17fb02d0">Misinformation</a> - Sins of omission will no longer go unpunished the era of self induced amnesia due to competitive concerns is over, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Coopetition" id="link-id18f01838">Co-opetition</a> shall reign (<a href="http://dbpedia.org/page/Raymond_Noorda" id="link-id176cdb28">Ray Noorda</a> always envisoned this reality)</li> <li>Serendipitous information and data discovery gets cheaper by the second - you're only a link away for a universe of relevant and accessible data </li> <li>Rise of Quality - Contrary to historic president (due to all of the above) well engineered solutions will no longer be sure indicators of commercial failure</li> </ol> <p>BTW - <a href="http://bnode.org/about" id="link-id18d3eb20">Benjamin Nowack</a> penned an interesting post titled: <a href="http://bnode.org/blog/2008/03/04/semantic-web-aliases" id="link-id17fafc20">Semantic Web Aliases</a>, that covers a variety of labels used to describe the Semantic Web. The great thing about this post is that it provides yet another demonstration-in-the-making for the virtues of Linked Data :-)</p> <p>Labels are harmless when their sole purpose is the creation of routes of comprehension for concepts. Unfortunately, Labels aren't always constructed with concept comprehension in mind, most of the time they are artificial inflectors and deflectors servicing marketing communications goals.</p> <p>Anyway, irrespective of actual intent, I've endowed all of the labels from Bengee's post with URIs as my contribution important disambiguation effort re. the Semantic Web: </p> <ul> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id18e476d8">Semantic Web</a> (timbl) </li> <li> <a href="http://www.w3.org/1999/04/WebData" id="link-id17fb2ca0">Web of Data</a> (timbl) </li> <li> <a href="http://tantek.com/presentations/2004etech/realworldsemanticspres.html" id="link-id1bd0a110">lowercase semantic [wW]eb </a>(tantek) </li> <li> <a href="http://www.stefandecker.org/blog/archives/7-Semantic-Web-2.0....html" id="link-id1bd08808">Semantic Web 2.0</a> (by stefandecker, IIRC) </li> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Web_3.0" id="link-id175e7098">Web 3.0</a> (by <a href="http://novaspivack.typepad.com/about.html" id="link-id19202cb8">nova</a> and others) </li> <li> <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Semantic_network" id="link-id1bd097f8">Semantic Graph</a> (by nova and others) </li> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Hyperdata" id="link-id177a5b58">Hyperdata</a> (by <a href="http://dannyayers.com/" id="link-id178fdfc0">danja</a>) <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id17442ce8">Linked Data</a> (by timbl, and implemented by the <a href="http://www.wiwiss.fu-berlin.de/institute/pwo/suhl/mitarbeiter/BizerChristian.html" id="link-id174431f8">Chris Bizer</a> and <a href="http://richard.cyganiak.de/foaf.rdf%23cygri" id="link-id1c37a478">Richard Cyganiak</a> inspired, <a href="http://esw.w3.org/topic/SweoIG/TaskForces/CommunityProjects/LinkingOpenData" id="link-id1b93c368">Linking Open Data Community</a> and it's poster project <a href="http://dbpedia.org" id="link-id18d399f0">DBpedia</a>) </li> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&q=linked%20data%20web&type=text&output=html" id="link-id18e344f0">Linked Data Web</a> (by <a href="http://community.linkeddata.org/dataspace/person/kidehen2#this" id="link-id1c853578">kidehen</a>) </li> <li> <a href="http://www.mkbergman.com/?p=390" id="link-id16c0e998">Structured Web</a> (by <a href="http://www.mkbergman.com" id="link-id18f4bd28">mkbergman</a>)</li> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&q=semantic%20data%20web&type=text&output=html" id="link-id1a4284d8">Semantic Data Web</a> (by <a href="http://myopenlink.net/dataspace/person/kidehen%23this" id="link-id16ce8888">kidehen</a>) </li> <li>SemWeb (by the developer community) </li> <li>GGG - <a href="http://dig.csail.mit.edu/breadcrumbs/node/215" id="link-id17687f18">The Giant Global Graph</a> (by <a href="http://www.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee/card#i" id="link-id1916f8d0">timbl</a>) <a href="http://blogs.talis.com/nodalities/2008/03/web_3g.php" id="link-id198c2938">Web 3G</a> (by <a href="http://iandavis.com/id/me" id="link-id17fb3d78">iand</a>) </li> </ul> <p>As per usual this post is best appreciated when processed via an Linked Data aware user agent.</p>
My 5 Favorite Things about Linked Data on the Web
2008-03-09T15:48:35Z
2008-03-09T11:48:35.000004-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1238
<p> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com">OpenLink Software</a> are pleased to announce release 2.6 of the <a href="http://oat.openlinksw.com">OpenLink AJAX Toolkit</a> (OAT).</p> <p> New Semantic Data Web related features and enhancements include:</p> <ul> * A Javascript-based <a href="http://www.w3.org/2005/04/fresnel-info/">Fresnel</a> processor enabling declarative RDF-based display templates for RDF Data Sources</ul> <ul>* An XSLT template for generating HTML pages from the Fresnel processor's XML output</ul> <ul>* <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/JS/isparql/index.html">Interactive Query Builder for SPARQL</a> (iSPARQL). This version of the iSPARQL application includes support for INSERTs and DELETEs</ul> <ul>* Enhanced Javascript-based N3/Turtle parser</ul> <ul>* New Navigator viewer panel for <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/JS/rdfbrowser/index.html">RDF Browser</a>.</ul> Related Items: <ul>*<a href="http://sourceforge.net/projects/oat">Project Home Page</a> </ul> <ul>*<a href="http://sourceforge.net/projects/oat/files">Source Code</a> </ul> <ul>*<a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/JS/demo/index.html">Live Features Demonstrations</a>.</ul>
OpenLink Ajax Toolkit (OAT) 2.6 Released!
2007-08-01T18:49:17Z
2007-08-01T14:49:17-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1180
<p> <a href="http://scobleizer.com/2007/04/05/i-finally-get-semantic-web/">Scobleizer's had a Semantic Web Epiphany</a> but can't quite nail down what his discovered in laymans prose :-)</p> <p>Well, I'll have a crack at helping him out i.e. defining the Semantic Data Web in simple terms with linked examples :-) </p> <p>Tip: Watch the recent <a href="http://www.technologyreview.com/video/semantic">TimBL video interview re. the Semantic Data Web</a> before, during, or after reading this post.</p> <p>Here goes!</p> <p>The popular Web is a "Web of Documents". The Semantic Data Web is a "Web of Data". Going down a level, the popular web connects documents across the web via hyperlinks. The Semantic Data Web connects data on the web via hyperlinks. Next level, hyperlinks on the popular web have no inherent meaning (lack context beyond: "there is another document"). Hyperlinks on the Semantic Data Web have inherent meaning (they possess context: "there is a Book" or "there is a Person" or "this is a piece of Music" etc..).</p> <p>Very simple example:</p> <p>Click the traditional web document <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/URL">URL</a>s for <a href="http://www.w3.org/People/Connolly/">Dan Connolly</a> and <a href="http://www.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee/">Tim Berners-Lee</a>. Then attempt to discern how they are connected. Of course you will see some obvious connections by reading the text, but you won't easily discern other data driven connections. Basically, this is no different to reading about either individual in a print journal, bar the ability to click on hyperlinks that open up other pages. The Data Extraction process remains labour intensive :-(</p> <p>Repeat the exercise using the traditional web document URLs as Data Web <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uniform_Resource_Identifier">URI</a>s, this time around, paste the hyperlinks above into an RDF aware Browser (in this case the <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/JS/rdfbrowser/index.html">OpenLink RDF Browser</a>). Note, we are making a subtle but critical change i.e. the URLs are now being used as Semantic Data Web URIs (a small-big-deal kind of thing).</p> <p>If you're impatient or simply strapped for time (aren't we all these days), simply take a look at these links:</p> <ol> <li> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/JS/rdfbrowser/index.html?uri=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.w3.org%2FPeople%2FConnolly%2F">Dan Connolly (DanC) RDF Browser Session permalink</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/JS/rdfbrowser/index.html?uri=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.w3.org%2FPeople%2FBerners-Lee%2F">Tim Berners-Lee (TimBL) RDF Browser Session permalink</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/JS/rdfbrowser/index.html?uri[]=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.w3.org%2FPeople%2FConnolly%2F&uri[]=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.w3.org%2FPeople%2FBerners-Lee%2F&">TimBL and DanC combined RDF Browser Session permalink</a> </li> </ol> <p>Note: There are other RDF Browsers out there such as: </p> <ol> <li> <a href="http://www.w3.org/2005/ajar/tab">Tabulator</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://sites.wiwiss.fu-berlin.de/suhl/bizer/ng4j/disco/">DISCO</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://objectviewer.semwebcentral.org/">Objectviewer</a> </li> </ol> <p>All of these RDF Browsers (or User Agents) demonstrate the same core concepts in subtly different ways.</p> <p>If I haven't lost you, proceed to a post I wrote a few weeks ago titled: <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/blog/~kidehen/?id=1144">Hello Data Web (Take 3 - Feel the "RDF" Force)</a>.</p> <p>If you've made it this far, simply head over to <a href="http://dbpedia.org">DBpedia</a> for a lot of fun :-) </p> <p> <b>Note Re. my demos</b>: we make use of SVG in our RDF Browser which makes them incompatible with IE (6 or 7) and Safari. That said, Firefox (1.5+), Opera 9.x, WebKit (Open Source Safari), and Camino work fine.</p> <p>Note to Scoble: </p> <p>All the Blogs, Wikis, Shared Bookmarks, Image Galleries, Discussion Forums and the like are Semantic Web Data Spaces. The great thing about all of this is that through RSS 2.0's wild popularity, Blogosphere has done what I postulated about a while back: <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/blog/~kidehen/?id=887">The Semantic Web would be self-annotating</a>, and so it has come to be :-) </p> <p>To prove the point above: paste your blog's URL into the OpenLink RDF Browser and see it morph into a Semantic Data Web URI (a pointer to Web Data that's you've created) once you click the "Query" button (click on the TimeLine tab for full effect). The same applies to del.icio.us, Flickr, Googlebase, and basically any REST style Web Service as per my <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/blog/~kidehen/index.vspx?page=&id=1172">RDF Middleware</a> post. </p> <p> <a href="http://www.snee.com/bobdc.blog/2007/04/semantic_web_project_ideas_num.html">Lazy Semantic Web</a> Callout:</p> <p>If you're a good animator (pro or hobbyist), please produce an animation of a document going through a shredder. The strips that emerge from the shredder represent the granular data that was once the whole document. The same thing is happening on the Web right now, we are putting photocopies of (X)HTML documents through the shredder (in a good way) en route to producing granular items of data that remain connected to the original copy while developing new and valuable connections to other items of Web Data. </p> <p>That's it!</p>
Describing the Semantic Data Web (Take 3)
2007-04-13T21:15:42Z
2007-04-13T17:15:42-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1167
<p> <a href="http://www.ivan-herman.net">Ivan Herman</a> has published another great Semantic Web presentation titled: <a href="http://www.w3.org/2007/Talks/0223-Bangalore-IH/Slides.html#(1)">State of the Semantic Web</a>. I have placed links to some key points below; primarily for those who are new to the Semantic Web vision or somewhat confused about it thus far:</p> <ol> <li> <a href="http://www.w3.org/2007/Talks/0223-Bangalore-IH/Slides.html#(47)">Messaging Issues</a> - <a href="http://www.w3.org/2007/Talks/0223-Bangalore-IH/Slides.html#(49)">misconceptions</a> and <a href="http://www.w3.org/2007/Talks/0223-Bangalore-IH/Slides.html#(51)">misrepresentations</a> (e.g <a href="http://www.w3.org/2007/Talks/0223-Bangalore-IH/Slides.html#(48)">intermingling or RDF the Data Model and RDF/XML one of several serialization formats</a>)</li> <li> <a href="http://www.w3.org/2007/Talks/0223-Bangalore-IH/Slides.html#(5)">RDF Data Availability</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.w3.org/2007/Talks/0223-Bangalore-IH/Slides.html#(25)">Generating RDF from non RDF Data</a> ("RDF Tax" eradication)</li> <li> <a href="http://www.w3.org/2007/Talks/0223-Bangalore-IH/Slides.html#(11)">Querying RDF Data Sources</a> </li> </ol>
Semantic Web: State of Affairs Presentation
2007-03-26T17:02:53Z
2007-03-26T13:02:53-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1152
<p>Courtesy of <a href="http://blogs.sun.com/bblfish/">Henry Story</a>'s post: <a href="http://blogs.sun.com/bblfish/entry/metaweb_a_semantic_wiki">O'Reilly groks the Semantic Web</a>.</p> <p> Web 2.0 commentators such as <a href="http://www.techcrunch.com/2007/03/09/this-is-cool-unless-it-achieves-consciousness-and-kills-us-all">Mike Arrington</a>, and as mentioned above,<a href="http://radar.oreilly.com/archives/2007/03/freebase_will_p_1.html">Tim O'Reilly</a>, both blogged about the imminent release of <a href="http://www.freebase.com">Freebase</a> earlier today. Although I haven't looked at this database yet, it is crystal clear to me that it is one of many Web Databases to come. Others that I am personally familiar with, and involved in, include: <a href="http://dbpedia.org">DBpedia</a> (Wikipedia as a true Database) and Zitgist (soon to be unveiled).</p> <p>All of these databases mark the crystallization of the "<a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&q='data%20web'&type=text&output=html">Data Web</a>" and the imminence of what is increasingly referred to as Web 3.0.</p> <p>I certainly hope that all web 3.0 Database Providers keep the data Open, adhere to <a href="http://esw.w3.org/topic/SweoIG/TaskForces/CommunityProjects/LinkingOpenData">Web Best Practice recipes for sharing and publishing data</a>, and generally make the process of data, information, and knowledge discovery via the Web much easier.</p>
Web Databases on the rise
2007-03-09T17:56:01Z
2007-03-09T12:56:01-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1090
<p>This post is part contribution to the general Web 3.0 / Data-Web / Semantic Web discourse, and part experiment / demonstration of the Data Web.</p> <p>I came across a pretty deep comments trail about the aforementioned items on <a href="http://avc.blogs.com">Fred Wilson's blog</a> (aptly titled: A VC) under the subject heading: <a href="http://avc.blogs.com/a_vc/2006/11/web_30_is_the_s.html">Web 3.0 Is The Semantic Web.</a> </p> <p>Contributions to the general Semantic Web discourse by way of responses to valuable questions and commentary contributed by a Semantic Web skeptic (Ed Addison who may be this <a href="http://www.csee.umbc.edu/cikm/1998/addison-abstract.html">Ed Addison according to Google</a>):</p> <p></p> <blockquote>Ed, Responses to your points re. Semantic Web Matrialization: <ul> << 1) ontologies can be created and maintained by text extractors and crawlers" >> <p>Ontologies will be developed by Humans. This process has already commenced and far more landscape has been covered that you may be aware of. For instance, there is an Ontology for Online Communities with Semantics factored in. More importantly, most Blogs, Wikis, and other "points of presence" on the Web are already capable of generating Instance Data for this Ontology by way of the underlying platforms that drive these things. The Ontology is called: SIOC (<a href="http://sioc-project.org">Semantically-Interlinked Online Communities</a>).</p> </ul> <ul> << 2) the entire web can be marked up, semantically indexed, and maintained by spiders without human assistance >> <p>Most of it can, and already is :-) Human assistance should, and would, be on an "exception basis" a preferred use of human time (IMHO). We do not need to annotate the Web manually when this labor intensive process can be automated (see my earlier comments).</p> </ul> <ul> << 3) inference over the semantic web does not require an extremely deep heuristic search down multiple, redundant, cyclical pathways with many islands that are disconnected >> <p>When you have a foundation layer of RDF Data (generated in the manner I've discussed above), you then have a substrate that's far more palatable to Intelligent Reasoning. Note, the Semantic Web is made of many layers. The critical layer at this juncture is the Data-Web (Web of RDF Data). Note, when I refer to RDF I am not referring to RDF/XML the serialization format, I am referring to the Data Model (a Graph).</p> </ul> <ul> << 4) the web becomes smart enough to eliminate websites or data elements that are incorrect, misleading, false, or just plain lousy >> <p>The Semantic Web vision is not about eliminating Web Sites (The Hypertext-Document-Web). It is simply about adding another dimension of interaction to the Web. This is just like the Services-Web dimension as delivered by Web 2.0.</p> We are simply evolving within an innovation continuum. There is no mutual exclusivity about any of the Web Dimensions since they collectively provide us with a more powerful infrastructure for building and exploiting "collective wisdom". </ul> </blockquote> <p>As for the Data-Web experiment part of this post, I would expect to see this post exposed as another contribution to the Data-Web via the <a href="http://pingthesemanticweb.com">PingTheSemanticWeb</a> notification service :-) Implying, that all the relevant parts of this conversation are in a format (Instance Data for the <a href="http://rdfs.org/sioc/spec/">SIOC Ontology</a>) that is available for further use in a myriad of forms.</p>
Contd: Web 3.0 Commentary etc..
2006-11-24T18:30:08Z
2006-11-24T13:30:08.000001-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1033
<p> In the last week I've dispatch some thoughts about a number of issues (<a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/blog/%7Ekidehen/index.vspx?page=&id=1030">Data Spaces</a> and <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/blog/%7Ekidehen/index.vspx?page=&id=1032">Web 2.0's Open Data Access Paradox</a>) that basically equate to the identification of the Web 2.0 to Semantic Web (Data Web, Web of Databases, Web.next etc..) inflection. </p> <p> One of the great things about the moderate “open data access” that we have today (courtesy of the blogosphere) is the fact that you can observe the crystallization of new thinking, and/or new appreciation of emerging ideas, in near real-time. Of course, when we really hit the tracks with the Semantic Web this will be in “conditional real-time” (i.e. you choose and control your scope and sensitivity to data changes etc..). </p> <p> For instance, by way of feed subscriptions, I stumbled upon a series of posts by <a href="http://www.jasonkolb.com/weblog/">Jason Kolb</a> that basically articulate what I (and others who believe in the Semantic Web vision) have been attempting to convey in a myriad of ways via posts and commentary etc.. </p> <p> Here are the links to the 4 part series by Jason: </p> <ol> <li> <a href="http://www.jasonkolb.com/weblog/2006/08/reinventing_the.html">Reinventing the Internet part 1</a> (appreciating “Presence” over traditional “Web Sites”)</li> <li> <a href="http://www.jasonkolb.com/weblog/2006/08/reinventing_the_1.html">Reinventing the Internet part 2</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.jasonkolb.com/weblog/2006/08/reinventing_the_2.html">Reinventing the Internet part 3</a> (appreciating and comprehending URIs)</li> <li> <a href="http://www.jasonkolb.com/weblog/2006/08/reinventing_the_3.html">Reinventing the Internet part 4</a> (nice visualization of what “<a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/blog/%7Ekidehen/index.vspx?page=&id=1030">Data Spaces</a>”)</li> <li> <a href="http://www.jasonkolb.com/weblog/2006/09/reinventing_the.html">Reinventing the Internet part 5</a> (everyone will have a Data Space in due course becuase the Internet is really a Federation of Data Spaces)<br /> </li> </ol>
Data Spaces, Internet Reinvention, and Semantic Web
2007-01-25T21:50:40Z
2007-01-25T16:50:40.000001-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/850
<div align="left">I just found this interesting Semantic Web effort via '<a href="http://dannyayers.com/">Danny Ayers</a>' blog. Here is the synopsis from his post:</div> <blockquote style="margin-right: 0px;" dir="ltr"> <p><a href="http://dannyayers.com/archives/2005/05/24/piggy-bank-20-beta/">Piggy Bank 2.0 Beta</a> </p> <p>New release of <a href="http://simile.mit.edu/piggy-bank/">Piggy Bank</a>, the Semantic Web extension for Firefox. It harvests data as you browse (when you click a status bar indicator), which can later be searched and viewed in a facetted browser. </p> <p>The docs have come along some too -</p> <blockquote> <p>Piggy Bank can collect pure information in the following cases:</p> <p>1. The web page has invisible link(s) to RDF data (encoded in RDF/XML or N3 formats).<br />2. The web page exports an RSS feeds.<br />3. The address of the web page is a file:/ URL pointing to a directory.<br />4. Piggy Bank has a "screen scraper" <em>[XSLT or Javascript]</em> that can re-structure the web page HTML code into RDF data. </p></blockquote> <p>There's a <a href="http://simile.mit.edu/piggy-bank/screen-scrapers-howto.html">tutorial</a> on writing Javascript screenscrapers on the site, nice touch.</p></blockquote> <p dir="ltr" align="left">I have also added an architecture diagram to accelerate comprehension (a picture speaks a thousand words...):</p> <p dir="ltr" align="left"><img alt="" src="http://simile.mit.edu/piggy-bank/images/architecture.png" align="bottom" border="0" hspace="0" /></p> <div align="left">The infrastructure for tier-3 is an aspect of <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com">Virtuoso's</a> functionality pool; combining Database & Web Application Server functionality amongst other things, as a single product offering.<br /> </div>
FireFox Semantic Web Extension: Piggy Bank 2.0 Beta
2006-07-21T11:25:03Z
2006-07-21T07:25:03.000001-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1655
<h3>What?</h3> <p>A simple guide usable by any <a class="auto-href" href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Perl" id="link-id0x1bdcab80">Perl</a> developer seeking to exploit <a class="auto-href" href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SPARQL" id="link-id0x17b447e8">SPARQL</a> without hassles.</p> <h3>Why?</h3> <p>SPARQL is a powerful query language, results serialization format, and an HTTP based <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data">data</a> access protocol from the W3C. It provides a mechanism for accessing and integrating data across <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deductive_database" id="link-id0x1cc76540">Deductive Database Systems</a> (colloquially referred to as triple or quad stores in <a class="auto-href" href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id0x1d944d78">Semantic Web</a> and <a class="auto-href" href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id0x1c7a87c8">Linked Data</a> circles) -- database systems (or data spaces) that manage proposition oriented records in 3-tuple (triples) or 4-tuple (quads) form. </p> <h3>How?</h3> <p>SPARQL queries are actually HTTP payloads (typically). Thus, using a RESTful client-server interaction pattern, you can dispatch calls to a SPARQL compliant data server and receive a payload for local processing.</p> <h4>Steps:</h4> <ol> <li>Determine which SPARQL endpoint you want to access e.g. <a href="http://dbpedia.org/sparql" id="link-id0x1d476520">DBpedia</a> or a local <a class="auto-href" href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com" id="link-id0x1bcfe140">Virtuoso</a> instance (typically: http://localhost:8890/sparql). </li> <li>If using Virtuoso, and you want to populate its quad store using SPARQL, assign "<a href="http://docs.openlinksw.com/virtuoso/rdfsparql.html#rdfsupportedprotocolendpointuri" id="link-id0x1c7630b8">SPARQL_SPONGE</a>" privileges to user "SPARQL" (this is basic control, more sophisticated WebID based ACLs are available for controlling SPARQL access).</li> </ol> <h4>Script:</h4> <pre> # # Demonstrating use of a single query to populate a # Virtuoso Quad Store via Perl. # # # HTTP <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uniform_Resource_Locator" id="link-id0x1d6465e8">URL</a> is constructed accordingly with CSV query results format as the default via mime type. # use CGI qw/:standard/; use LWP::UserAgent; use Data::Dumper; use Text::CSV_XS; sub sparqlQuery(@args) { my $query=shift; my $baseURL=shift; my $format=shift; %params=( "default-graph" => "", "should-sponge" => "soft", "query" => $query, "debug" => "on", "timeout" => "", "format" => $format, "save" => "display", "fname" => "" ); @fragments=(); foreach $k (keys %params) { $fragment="$k=".CGI::escape($params{$k}); push(@fragments,$fragment); } $query=join("&", @fragments); $sparqlURL="${baseURL}?$query"; my $ua = LWP::UserAgent->new; $ua->agent("MyApp/0.1 "); my $req = HTTP::Request->new(GET => $sparqlURL); my $res = $ua->request($req); $str=$res->content; $csv = Text::CSV_XS->new(); foreach $line ( split(/^/, $str) ) { $csv->parse($line); @bits=$csv->fields(); push(@rows, [ @bits ] ); } return \@rows; } # Setting Data Source Name (DSN) $dsn="http://dbpedia.org/resource/DBpedia"; # Virtuoso pragmas for instructing SPARQL engine to perform an HTTP GET using the IRI in # FROM clause as Data Source URL en route to DBMS # record Inserts. $query="DEFINE get:soft \"replace\"\n # Generic (non Virtuoso specific SPARQL # Note: this will not add records to the # DBMS SELECT DISTINCT * FROM <$dsn> WHERE {?s ?p ?o}"; $data=sparqlQuery($query, "http://localhost:8890/sparql/", "text/csv"); print "Retrieved data:\n"; print Dumper($data); </pre> <h4>Output</h4> <pre> Retrieved data: $VAR1 = [ [ 's', 'p', 'o' ], [ 'http://dbpedia.org/resource/DBpedia', 'http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#type', 'http://www.w3.org/2002/07/owl#Thing' ], [ 'http://dbpedia.org/resource/DBpedia', 'http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#type', 'http://dbpedia.org/ontology/Work' ], [ 'http://dbpedia.org/resource/DBpedia', 'http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#type', 'http://dbpedia.org/class/yago/Software106566077' ], ... </pre> <h3>Conclusion</h3> <p> CSV was chosen over XML (re. output format) since this is about a "no-brainer installation and utilization" guide for a Perl developer that already knows how to use Perl for HTTP based data access within HTML. SPARQL just provides an added bonus to URL dexterity (delivered via <a class="auto-href" href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uniform_Resource_Identifier" id="link-id0x1d29da98">URI</a> abstraction) with regards to constructing Data Source Names or Addresses.</p> <h3>Related</h3> <ul> <li> <a href="http://cpansearch.perl.org/src/TOBYINK/RDF-Query-Client-0.103/README" id="link-id0x1c279130">RDF::Query::Client Guide</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1653" id="link-id0x1cf307f0">SPARQL Guide for the Perl Developer</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1652" id="link-id0x1b0ffb28">SPARQL Guide for the PHP Developer</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1651" id="link-id0x1a8c5ae0">SPARQL Guide for the Python Developer</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1648" id="link-id0x1b86ad28">SPARQL Guide for the Ruby Developer</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1646" id="link-id0x1c7af188">Simple Guide for using SPARQL with Virtuoso</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.delicious.com/kidehen/sparql_tutorial" id="link-id0x1ac1ba48">General SPARQL Tutorial Collection</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.delicious.com/kidehen/virtuoso_sparql_tutorial" id="link-id0x1c7be660">Virtuoso Specific SPARQL Tutorial Collection</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1567" id="link-id0x1c52b438">The URI, URL, and Linked Data Meme's Generic HTTP URI</a>. </li> </ul>
SPARQL Guide for the Perl Developer
2011-01-26T23:11:13Z
2011-01-26T18:11:13-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1653
<h3>What?</h3> <p>A simple guide usable by any Javascript developer seeking to exploit <a class="auto-href" href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SPARQL" id="link-id0x17b447e8">SPARQL</a> without hassles.</p> <h3>Why?</h3> <p>SPARQL is a powerful query language, results serialization format, and an HTTP based <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data">data</a> access protocol from the W3C. It provides a mechanism for accessing and integrating data across <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deductive_database" id="link-id0x1cc76540">Deductive Database Systems</a> (colloquially referred to as triple or quad stores in <a class="auto-href" href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id0x1d944d78">Semantic Web</a> and <a class="auto-href" href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id0x1c7a87c8">Linked Data</a> circles) -- database systems (or data spaces) that manage proposition oriented records in 3-tuple (triples) or 4-tuple (quads) form. </p> <h3>How?</h3> <p>SPARQL queries are actually HTTP payloads (typically). Thus, using a RESTful client-server interaction pattern, you can dispatch calls to a SPARQL compliant data server and receive a payload for local processing.</p> <h4>Steps:</h4> <ol> <li>Determine which SPARQL endpoint you want to access e.g. <a href="http://dbpedia.org/sparql" id="link-id0x1d476520">DBpedia</a> or a local <a class="auto-href" href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com" id="link-id0x1bcfe140">Virtuoso</a> instance (typically: http://localhost:8890/sparql). </li> <li>If using Virtuoso, and you want to populate its quad store using SPARQL, assign "<a href="http://docs.openlinksw.com/virtuoso/rdfsparql.html#rdfsupportedprotocolendpointuri" id="link-id0x1c7630b8">SPARQL_SPONGE</a>" privileges to user "SPARQL" (this is basic control, more sophisticated WebID based ACLs are available for controlling SPARQL access).</li> </ol> <h4>Script:</h4> <pre> /* Demonstrating use of a single query to populate a # Virtuoso Quad Store via Javascript. */ /* HTTP <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uniform_Resource_Locator" id="link-id0x1bc27a18">URL</a> is constructed accordingly with JSON query results format as the default via mime type. */ function sparqlQuery(query, baseURL, format) { if(!format) format="application/json"; var params={ "default-graph": "", "should-sponge": "soft", "query": query, "debug": "on", "timeout": "", "format": format, "save": "display", "fname": "" }; var querypart=""; for(var k in params) { querypart+=k+"="+encodeURIComponent(params[k])+"&"; } var queryURL=baseURL + '?' + querypart; if (window.XMLHttpRequest) { xmlhttp=new XMLHttpRequest(); } else { xmlhttp=new ActiveXObject("Microsoft.XMLHTTP"); } xmlhttp.open("GET",queryURL,false); xmlhttp.send(); return JSON.parse(xmlhttp.responseText); } /* setting Data Source Name (DSN) */ var dsn="http://dbpedia.org/resource/DBpedia"; /* Virtuoso pragma "DEFINE get:soft "replace" instructs Virtuoso SPARQL engine to perform an HTTP GET using the IRI in FROM clause as Data Source URL with regards to DBMS record inserts */ var query="DEFINE get:soft \"replace\"\nSELECT DISTINCT * FROM <"+dsn+"> WHERE {?s ?p ?o}"; var data=sparqlQuery(query, "/sparql/"); </pre> <h4>Output</h4> <p> Place the snippet above into the <script/> section of an HTML document to see the <a href="http://twitpic.com/3s2vs3/full" id="link-id0x1cff2288">query result</a>. </p> <h3>Conclusion</h3> <p> JSON was chosen over XML (re. output format) since this is about a "no-brainer installation and utilization" guide for a Javascript developer that already knows how to use Javascript for HTTP based data access within HTML. SPARQL just provides an added bonus to URL dexterity (delivered via <a class="auto-href" href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uniform_Resource_Identifier" id="link-id0x1d29da98">URI</a> abstraction) with regards to constructing Data Source Names or Addresses.</p> <h3>Related</h3> <ul> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1652" id="link-id0x1b0ffb28">SPARQL Guide for the PHP Developer</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1651" id="link-id0x1a8c5ae0">SPARQL Guide for the Python Developer</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1648" id="link-id0x1b86ad28">SPARQL Guide for the Ruby Developer</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1646" id="link-id0x1c7af188">Simple Guide for using SPARQL with Virtuoso</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.delicious.com/kidehen/sparql_tutorial" id="link-id0x1ac1ba48">General SPARQL Tutorial Collection</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.delicious.com/kidehen/virtuoso_sparql_tutorial" id="link-id0x1c7be660">Virtuoso Specific SPARQL Tutorial Collection</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1567" id="link-id0x1c52b438">The URI, URL, and Linked Data Meme's Generic HTTP URI</a>. </li> </ul>
SPARQL Guide for the Javascript Developer
2011-01-26T23:10:28Z
2011-01-26T18:10:28-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1652
<h3>What?</h3> <p>A simple guide usable by any <a class="auto-href" href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/PHP_programming_language" id="link-id0x1bdca7b8">PHP</a> developer seeking to exploit <a class="auto-href" href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SPARQL" id="link-id0x1c894338">SPARQL</a> without hassles.</p> <h3>Why?</h3> <p>SPARQL is a powerful query language, results serialization format, and an HTTP based <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data">data</a> access protocol from the W3C. It provides a mechanism for accessing and integrating data across <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deductive_database" id="link-id0x1c319af0">Deductive Database Systems</a> (colloquially referred to as triple or quad stores in <a class="auto-href" href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id0x1d944d78">Semantic Web</a> and <a class="auto-href" href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id0x1c7a87c8">Linked Data</a> circles) -- database systems (or data spaces) that manage proposition oriented records in 3-tuple (triples) or 4-tuple (quads) form. </p> <h3>How?</h3> <p>SPARQL queries are actually HTTP payloads (typically). Thus, using a RESTful client-server interaction pattern, you can dispatch calls to a SPARQL compliant data server and receive a payload for local processing e.g. local object binding re. PHP.</p> <h4>Steps:</h4> <ol> <li> From your command line execute: aptitude search '^PHP26', to verify PHP is in place </li> <li>Determine which SPARQL endpoint you want to access e.g. <a href="http://dbpedia.org/sparql" id="link-id0x1d476520">DBpedia</a> or a local <a class="auto-href" href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com" id="link-id0x1bcfe140">Virtuoso</a> instance (typically: http://localhost:8890/sparql). </li> <li>If using Virtuoso, and you want to populate its quad store using SPARQL, assign "<a href="http://docs.openlinksw.com/virtuoso/rdfsparql.html#rdfsupportedprotocolendpointuri" id="link-id0x1c7630b8">SPARQL_SPONGE</a>" privileges to user "SPARQL" (this is basic control, more sophisticated WebID based ACLs are available for controlling SPARQL access).</li> </ol> <h4>Script:</h4> <pre> #!/usr/bin/env php <?php # # Demonstrating use of a single query to populate a # Virtuoso Quad Store via PHP. # # HTTP <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uniform_Resource_Locator" id="link-id0x1ce1d6d8">URL</a> is constructed accordingly with JSON query results format in mind. function sparqlQuery($query, $baseURL, $format="application/json") { $params=array( "default-graph" => "", "should-sponge" => "soft", "query" => $query, "debug" => "on", "timeout" => "", "format" => $format, "save" => "display", "fname" => "" ); $querypart="?"; foreach($params as $name => $value) { $querypart=$querypart . $name . '=' . urlencode($value) . "&"; } $sparqlURL=$baseURL . $querypart; return json_decode(file_get_contents($sparqlURL)); }; # Setting Data Source Name (DSN) $dsn="http://dbpedia.org/resource/DBpedia"; #Virtuoso pragmas for instructing SPARQL engine to perform an HTTP GET #using the IRI in FROM clause as Data Source URL $query="DEFINE get:soft \"replace\" SELECT DISTINCT * FROM <$dsn> WHERE {?s ?p ?o}"; $data=sparqlQuery($query, "http://localhost:8890/sparql/"); print "Retrieved data:\n" . json_encode($data); ?> </pre> <h4>Output</h4> <pre> Retrieved data: {"head": {"link":[],"vars":["s","p","o"]}, "results": {"distinct":false,"ordered":true, "bindings":[ {"s": {"type":"<a class="auto-href" href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uniform_Resource_Identifier" id="link-id0x1ca44a98">uri</a>","value":"http:\/\/dbpedia.org\/resource\/DBpedia"},"p": {"type":"uri","value":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/1999\/02\/22-rdf-syntax-ns#type"},"o": {"type":"uri","value":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2002\/07\/owl#Thing"}}, {"s": {"type":"uri","value":"http:\/\/dbpedia.org\/resource\/DBpedia"},"p": {"type":"uri","value":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/1999\/02\/22-rdf-syntax-ns#type"},"o": {"type":"uri","value":"http:\/\/dbpedia.org\/ontology\/Work"}}, {"s": {"type":"uri","value":"http:\/\/dbpedia.org\/resource\/DBpedia"},"p": {"type":"uri","value":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/1999\/02\/22-rdf-syntax-ns#type"},"o": {"type":"uri","value":"http:\/\/dbpedia.org\/class\/yago\/Software106566077"}}, ... </pre> <h3>Conclusion</h3> <p> JSON was chosen over XML (re. output format) since this is about a "no-brainer installation and utilization" guide for a PHP developer that already knows how to use PHP for HTTP based data access. SPARQL just provides an added bonus to URL dexterity (delivered via URI abstraction) with regards to constructing Data Source Names or Addresses.</p> <h3>Related</h3> <ul> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1651" id="link-id0x1a8c5ae0">SPARQL Guide for the Python Developer</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1648" id="link-id0x1b86ad28">SPARQL Guide for the Ruby Developer</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1646" id="link-id0x1c7af188">Simple Guide for using SPARQL with Virtuoso</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.delicious.com/kidehen/sparql_tutorial" id="link-id0x1ac1ba48">General SPARQL Tutorial Collection</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.delicious.com/kidehen/virtuoso_sparql_tutorial" id="link-id0x1c7be660">Virtuoso Specific SPARQL Tutorial Collection</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1567" id="link-id0x1c52b438">The URI, URL, and Linked Data Meme's Generic HTTP URI</a>. </li> </ul>
SPARQL Guide for the PHP Developer
2011-01-25T15:36:58Z
2011-01-25T10:36:58-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1651
<h3>What?</h3> <p>A simple guide usable by any <a class="auto-href" href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Python_programming_language" id="link-id0x1bdca7b8">Python</a> developer seeking to exploit <a class="auto-href" href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SPARQL" id="link-id0x1c894338">SPARQL</a> without hassles.</p> <h3>Why?</h3> <p>SPARQL is a powerful query language, results serialization format, and an HTTP based <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data">data</a> access protocol from the W3C. It provides a mechanism for accessing and integrating data across <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deductive_database" id="link-id0x1c319af0">Deductive Database Systems</a> (colloquially referred to as triple or quad stores in <a class="auto-href" href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id0x1d944d78">Semantic Web</a> and <a class="auto-href" href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id0x1c7a87c8">Linked Data</a> circles) -- database systems (or data spaces) that manage proposition oriented records in 3-tuple (triples) or 4-tuple (quads) form. </p> <h3>How?</h3> <p>SPARQL queries are actually HTTP payloads (typically). Thus, using a RESTful client-server interaction pattern, you can dispatch calls to a SPARQL compliant data server and receive a payload for local processing e.g. local object binding re. Python.</p> <h4>Steps:</h4> <ol> <li> From your command line execute: aptitude search '^python26', to verify Python is in place </li> <li>Determine which SPARQL endpoint you want to access e.g. <a href="http://dbpedia.org/sparql" id="link-id0x1d476520">DBpedia</a> or a local <a class="auto-href" href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com" id="link-id0x1bcfe140">Virtuoso</a> instance (typically: http://localhost:8890/sparql). </li> <li>If using Virtuoso, and you want to populate its quad store using SPARQL, assign "<a href="http://docs.openlinksw.com/virtuoso/rdfsparql.html#rdfsupportedprotocolendpointuri" id="link-id0x1c7630b8">SPARQL_SPONGE</a>" privileges to user "SPARQL" (this is basic control, more sophisticated WebID based ACLs are available for controlling SPARQL access).</li> </ol> <h4>Script:</h4> <pre> #!/usr/bin/env python # # Demonstrating use of a single query to populate a # Virtuoso Quad Store via Python. # import urllib, json # HTTP <a class="auto-href" href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uniform_Resource_Locator" id="link-id0x1bd91cf0">URL</a> is constructed accordingly with JSON query results format in mind. def sparqlQuery(query, baseURL, format="application/json"): params={ "default-graph": "", "should-sponge": "soft", "query": query, "debug": "on", "timeout": "", "format": format, "save": "display", "fname": "" } querypart=urllib.urlencode(params) response = urllib.urlopen(baseURL,querypart).read() return json.loads(response) # Setting Data Source Name (DSN) dsn="http://dbpedia.org/resource/DBpedia" # Virtuoso pragmas for instructing SPARQL engine to perform an HTTP GET # using the IRI in FROM clause as Data Source URL query="""DEFINE get:soft "replace" SELECT DISTINCT * FROM <%s> WHERE {?s ?p ?o}""" % dsn data=sparqlQuery(query, "http://localhost:8890/sparql/") print "Retrieved data:\n" + json.dumps(data, sort_keys=True, indent=4) # # End </pre> <h4>Output</h4> <pre> Retrieved data: { "head": { "link": [], "vars": [ "s", "p", "o" ] }, "results": { "bindings": [ { "o": { "type": "<a class="auto-href" href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uniform_Resource_Identifier" id="link-id0x1b1470b8">uri</a>", "value": "http://www.w3.org/2002/07/owl#Thing" }, "p": { "type": "uri", "value": "http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#type" }, "s": { "type": "uri", "value": "http://dbpedia.org/resource/DBpedia" } }, ... </pre> <h3>Conclusion</h3> <p> JSON was chosen over XML (re. output format) since this is about a "no-brainer installation and utilization" guide for a Python developer that already knows how to use Python for HTTP based data access. SPARQL just provides an added bonus to URL dexterity (delivered via URI abstraction) with regards to constructing Data Source Names or Addresses.</p> <h3>Related</h3> <ul> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1648" id="link-id0x1c9e26b0">SPARQL Guide for the Ruby Developer</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1646" id="link-id0x1c7af188">Simple Guide for using SPARQL with Virtuoso</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.delicious.com/kidehen/sparql_tutorial" id="link-id0x1ac1ba48">General SPARQL Tutorial Collection</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.delicious.com/kidehen/virtuoso_sparql_tutorial" id="link-id0x1c7be660">Virtuoso Specific SPARQL Tutorial Collection</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1567" id="link-id0x1c52b438">The URI, URL, and Linked Data Meme's Generic HTTP URI</a>. </li> </ul>
SPARQL Guide for Python Developer
2011-01-25T15:35:46Z
2011-01-25T10:35:46-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1648
<h3>What?</h3> <p>A simple guide usable by any <a class="auto-href" href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Ruby_programming_language" id="link-id0x1bb88908">Ruby</a> developer seeking to exploit <a class="auto-href" href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SPARQL" id="link-id0x1ae67500">SPARQL</a> without hassles.</p> <h3>Why?</h3> <p>SPARQL is a powerful query language, results serialization format, and an HTTP based <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data">data</a> access protocol from the W3C. It provides a mechanism for accessing and integrating data across <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deductive_database" id="link-id0x1bc61d88">Deductive Database Systems</a> (colloquially referred to as triple or quad stores in <a class="auto-href" href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id0x1cc11420">Semantic Web</a> and <a class="auto-href" href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id0x1b2e7780">Linked Data</a> circles) -- database systems (or data spaces) that manage proposition oriented records in 3-tuple (triples) or 4-tuple (quads) form. </p> <h3>How?</h3> <p>SPARQL queries are actually HTTP payloads (typically). Thus, using a RESTful client-server interaction pattern, you can dispatch calls to a SPARQL compliant data server and receive a payload for local processing e.g. local object binding re. Ruby. </p> <h4>Steps:</h4> <ol> <li> From your command line execute: aptitude search '^ruby', to verify Ruby is in place </li> <li>Determine which SPARQL endpoint you want to access e.g. <a href="http://dbpedia.org/sparql" id="link-id0x1d476520">DBpedia</a> or a local <a class="auto-href" href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com" id="link-id0x1bcfe140">Virtuoso</a> instance (typically: http://localhost:8890/sparql). </li> <li>If using Virtuoso, and you want to populate its quad store using SPARQL, assign "<a href="http://docs.openlinksw.com/virtuoso/rdfsparql.html#rdfsupportedprotocolendpointuri" id="link-id0x1c7630b8">SPARQL_SPONGE</a>" privileges to user "SPARQL" (this is basic control, more sophisticated WebID based ACLs are available for controlling SPARQL access).</li> </ol> <h4>Script:</h4> <pre> #!/usr/bin/env ruby # # Demonstrating use of a single query to populate a # Virtuoso Quad Store. # require 'net/http' require 'cgi' require 'csv' # # We opt for CSV based output since handling this format is straightforward in Ruby, by default. # HTTP <a class="auto-href" href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uniform_Resource_Locator" id="link-id0x1acee348">URL</a> is constructed accordingly with CSV as query results format in mind. def sparqlQuery(query, baseURL, format="text/csv") params={ "default-graph" => "", "should-sponge" => "soft", "query" => query, "debug" => "on", "timeout" => "", "format" => format, "save" => "display", "fname" => "" } querypart="" params.each { |k,v| querypart+="#{k}=#{CGI.escape(v)}&" } sparqlURL=baseURL+"?#{querypart}" response = Net::HTTP.get_response(<a class="auto-href" href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uniform_Resource_Identifier" id="link-id0x1d24dfd8">URI</a>.parse(sparqlURL)) return CSV::parse(response.body) end # Setting Data Source Name (DSN) dsn="http://dbpedia.org/resource/DBpedia" #Virtuoso pragmas for instructing SPARQL engine to perform an HTTP GET #using the IRI in FROM clause as Data Source URL query="DEFINE get:soft \"replace\" SELECT DISTINCT * FROM <#{dsn}> WHERE {?s ?p ?o} " #Assume use of local installation of Virtuoso #otherwise you can change URL to that of a public endpoint #for example DBpedia: http://dbpedia.org/sparql data=sparqlQuery(query, "http://localhost:8890/sparql/") puts "Got data:" p data # # End </pre><h4>Output</h4> <pre> Got data: [["s", "p", "o"], ["http://dbpedia.org/resource/DBpedia", "http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#type", "http://www.w3.org/2002/07/owl#Thing"], ["http://dbpedia.org/resource/DBpedia", "http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#type", "http://dbpedia.org/ontology/Work"], ["http://dbpedia.org/resource/DBpedia", "http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#type", "http://dbpedia.org/class/yago/Software106566077"], ... </pre> <h3>Conclusion</h3> <p> <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comma-separated_values" id="link-id0x1cac8420">CSV</a> was chosen over XML (re. output format) since this is about a "no-brainer installation and utilization" guide for a Ruby developer that already knows how to use Ruby for HTTP based data access. SPARQL just provides an added bonus to URL dexterity (delivered via URI abstraction) with regards to constructing Data Source Names or Addresses.</p> <h3>Related</h3> <ul> <li> <a href="http://www.taxonconcept.org/how-to/ruby-code-examples/how-do-i-use-ruby-to-query-a-sparql-endpoint.html" id="link-id0x1aa83678">SPARQL and Ruby SPARQL Client Library Example</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1646" id="link-id0x1c7af188">Simple Guide for using SPARQL with Virtuoso</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.delicious.com/kidehen/sparql_tutorial" id="link-id0x1ac1ba48">General SPARQL Tutorial Collection</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.delicious.com/kidehen/virtuoso_sparql_tutorial" id="link-id0x1c7be660">Virtuoso Specific SPARQL Tutorial Collection</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1567" id="link-id0x1c52b438">The URI, URL, and Linked Data Meme's Generic HTTP URI</a>. </li> </ul>
SPARQL for the Ruby Developer
2011-01-25T15:17:12Z
2011-01-25T10:17:12.000002-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1513
<p>As indicated in posts from Fred Giasson and <a href="http://community.linkeddata.org/dataspace/person/mkbergman#this" id="link-id152486c0">Mike Bergman</a>, the <a href="http://zitgist.com/about/" id="link-id1163fb28">Zitgist</a> incubation effort that contributed to the delivery of vital <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id1163ff68">Linked Data</a> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Giant_Global_Graph" id="link-id112a1338">Web</a> infrastructure components such as <a href="http://www.talkdigger.com/" id="link-id11938fe8">TalkDigger</a> (discourse discovery and participation), <a href="http://www.pingthesemanticweb.com/about/" id="link-id15da46f0">PingTheSemanticWeb</a> (ground-zero <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data">data</a> source for most <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id15ff68f0">Semantic Web</a> search engines), <a href="http://umbel.org/about/" id="link-id112fddb0">UMBEL</a> (binding layer for Upper and Lower Ontologies amongst other things), <a href="http://musicontology.com" id="link-id157ff9e0">Music Ontology</a> (enabling meaningful description of Music), and <a href="http://bibliontology.com/" id="link-id11459180">Bibliographic Ontology</a> (enabling meaningful description of Bibliographic content), is now ready to continue its business development and technology growth as a going concern known as <a href="http://www.structureddynamics.com/" id="link-id110c3b50">Structured Dynamics</a>.</p> <p>With great joy and pride, I wish Structured Dynamics all the success they deserve. Naturally, the collaborations and close relationship between <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/organization/openlink#this" id="link-id11849528">OpenLink Software</a> and its latest technology partner will continue -- especially as we collectively work towards a more comprehendible and pragmatic Web of Linked Data for developers (across Web 1.0, 2.0, 3.0, and beyond), end-users (<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Information" id="link-id15246af8">information</a>- and <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Knowledge" id="link-id15d27888">knowledge</a>-workers), and entrepreneurs (driven by quality and tangible value contribution).</p> <h3>Related</h3> <ul> <li> <a href="http://fgiasson.com/blog/index.php/2009/01/02/structured-dynamics-for-the-new-year/" id="link-id13bf7fd0">Structured Dynamics for the New Year</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.mkbergman.com/?p=468" id="link-id111e9e88">A New Year, a New Beginning and a New Venture</a> </li> </ul>
Linked Data Web Collaborators: Introducing Structured Dynamics
2009-01-03T04:27:26Z
2009-01-02T23:27:26-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1438
<p>Unfortunately our fixation with "Labels" and the artificial link that exist between "Labels" and so-called "first mover advantage" continue to impede our progress to clarity about matters such as a fully functional <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web">Web</a> of interlinked <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data">data</a>.</p> <p> A while back I watched <a href="http://www.ted.com/index.php/talks/kevin_kelly_on_the_next_5_000_days_of_the_web.html" id="link-id14c2c740">Kevin Kelly's 5,000 days presentation at TED</a>. During the presentation, I kept on scratching my head, wondering why phrases like "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id0xb154550">Linked Data</a>", "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id0xb5927b8">Semantic Web</a>", "Web of Data", "Data Web" where so unnaturally disconnected from his session narrative.</p> <p>Yesterday I watched <a href="http://www.techcrunch50.com/2008/conference/presenter.php?presenter=63#video" id="link-id14f6e1a8">IMINDI's TechCrunch 50 presentation</a>, and once again I saw the aforementioned pattern repeat itself. This time around, the poor founders of this "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data">Linked Data</a> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Giant_Global_Graph" id="link-id0xae767f0">Web</a>" oriented company (which is what they are in reality) took a totally undeserved pasting from a bunch of panelist incapable of seeing beyond today (Web 2.0) and yesterday (initial Web bootstrap).</p> <p>Anyway, thanks to the Web, this post will make a small contribution towards re-connecting the missing phrases to these "Linked Data Web" presentations.</p>
The Trouble with Labels
2008-09-16T14:07:49Z
2008-09-16T10:07:49.000015-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1408
<p>At OpenLink, we've been investigating <a href="http://code.google.com/p/linqtordf/" id="link-id1296eb18">LinqToRdf</a>, an exciting project from <a href="http://aabs.wordpress.com/" id="link-id13e860a8">Andrew Matthews</a> that seeks to expose the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id105d84f8">Semantic Web</a> technology space to the large community of .NET developers. </p> <p>The LinqToRdf project is about binding LINQ to RDF. It sits atop <a href="http://razor.occams.info/" id="link-id102e3b10">Joshua Tauberer</a>'s <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/C_(programming_language)" id="link-id1471b0d0">C</a># based <a href="http://razor.occams.info/code/semweb/" id="link-id14cb9030">Semantic Web/RDF library</a> which has been out there for a while and works across Microsoft .NET and it's open source variant "Mono".</p> <p>Historically, the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id13ee9f40">Semantic Web</a> realm has been dominated by RDF frameworks such as <a href="http://www.openrdf.org/" id="link-id109f8a68">Sesame</a>, <a href="http://jena.sourceforge.net/" id="link-id144c3210">Jena</a> and <a href="http://librdf.org/" id="link-id10600228">Redland</a>; which by their Open Source orientation, predominantly favor non-Windows platforms (Java and Linux). Conversely, Microsoft's .NET frameworks have sought to offer Conceptualization technology for heterogeneous Logical <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data">Data</a> Sources via .NET's <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ADO.NET_Entity_Framework" id="link-id10726628">Entity Frameworks</a> and <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/ADO.NET" id="link-id13e7edd8">ADO.NET</a>, but without any actual bindings to RDF. </p> <p>Interestingly, believe it or not, .NET already has a data query language that shares a number of similarities with <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SPARQL" id="link-id1042f480">SPARQL</a>, called <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Entity" id="link-id105a46b0">Entity</a>-<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SQL" id="link-id1041d2e8">SQL</a>, and a very innovative programming language called LINQ; that offers a blend of constructs for natural data access and manipulation across relational (<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SQL" id="link-id139f5848">SQL</a>), hierarchical (XML), and graph (Object) models without the traditional object language->database impedance tensions of the past.</p> <p>With regards to all of the above, we've just released a mini white paper that covers the exploitation of <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/Whitepapers/html/linqtordf/linqtordf1.htm" id="link-id14b2f138">RDF-based Linked Data using .NET via LINQ</a>. The paper offers a an overview of LinqToRdf, plus enhancements we've contributed to the project (available in <a href="http://aabs.wordpress.com/2008/08/01/announcing-linqtordf-v08/" id="link-id101defa8">LinqToRdf v0.8</a>.). The paper includes real-world examples that tap into a MusicBrainz powered <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id101ffd18">Linked Data</a> <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_Spaces" id="link-id105cb858">Space</a>, the Music Ontology, the <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com" id="link-id13f55860">Virtuoso</a> RDF Quad Store, <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com" id="link-id12826718">Virtuoso</a> <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/Whitepapers/html/VirtSpongerWhitePaper.html" id="link-id1030cb60">Sponger</a> Middleware, and our RDfization Cartridges for Musicbrainz. </p> Enjoy!
.NET, LINQ, and RDF based Linked Data (Update 2)
2008-08-08T12:54:01Z
2008-08-08T08:54:01.000002-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1373
<p>I just stumbled across a post titled: <a href="http://clarkparsia.com/weblog/2008/06/06/why-reasoning-matters-consistency-checking/" id="link-id11003f00">Why Reasoning Matters: Consistency Checking</a> from <a href="http://clarkparsia.com/about" id="link-id137e8bc0">Clark and Parsia</a> </p> <p>As you can see from my recent post about how we've started the process of <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1372" id="link-id100b7d20">inoculating DBpedia against the potential dangers of "contextual incoherence"</a>, we are entering a newer era in the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id106c35e0">Semantic Web</a>'s evolution. My post and the one from Clark & Parsia both touch different aspects of the "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data">Data</a> Dictionary" for the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id0x9d80080">Semantic Web</a> issue.</p> <p>Note: in my universe of discourse, a Data Dictionary manifests when the constraints and class hierarchies defined in an ontology (e.g. a <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web">web</a> accessible shared ontology) are functionally bound to a data manager. Interestingly the binding can take the following forms:</p> <ul> <li>Engine Hosted - which is what you get with <a href="http://docs.openlinksw.com:80/virtuoso/rdfsparqlrule.html#rdfsparqlruleintro" id="link-id105c4408">Virtuoso's in-built Inference Engine</a> </li> <li>External - which is what you get when the Inference Engine is a distinct component from the data manager (example: <a href="http://pellet.owldl.org/owlgres" id="link-id13fa37f8">Owlgres</a> which can sit in front of 3rd party <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SPARQL" id="link-id107127e8">SPARQL</a> endpoints via ARQ)</li> </ul> <p>The classification terminology I use above is very much off-the-cuff, its sole purpose is architectural distinction.</p> <p>Anyway, it's really nice to see that we are entering an era re. the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web">Semantic Web</a> vision, where the virtues of reasoning are getting simpler to demonstrate and articulate.</p> <p>In a nutshell, the point-point data integration era is coming to an end! The era of intelligent ontology based enterprise data integration is nigh!</p> <p>Of course, there is much more to come on the practical utility front, so stay tuned as we work our way through the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/DBpedia" id="link-id10424078">DBpedia</a> inoculation program.</p>
Reasoning Matters Contd
2008-06-06T18:38:54Z
2008-06-06T14:38:54-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1363
<p>Unfortunately, I could only spend 4 days at the recent <a href="http://www2008.org/" id="link-id196acf60">WWW2008</a> event in <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Beijing" id="link-id1974fe28">Beijing</a> (I departed the morning following the <a href="http://events.linkeddata.org/ldow2008/" id="link-id1863f858">Linked Data Workshop</a>), so I couldn't take my slot on the "Commercializing the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id18990f90">Semantic Web</a> panel" etc.. Anyway, thanks to the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web" id="link-id0x18f29310">Web</a> I can still inject my points of view in the broad <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web">Web</a> based discourse. Well so I hoped, when I attempted to post a comment to Paul Miller's ZDNet domain hosted <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Blog" id="link-id180d6750">blog</a> thread titled: <a href="http://blogs.zdnet.com/semantic-web/?p=132" id="link-id12d206c0">Commercialising the Semantic Web</a>.</p> <p>Unfortunately, the cost of completing ZDNet's unwieldy signup process simply exceeded the benefits of dropping my comments in their particular space :-( Thus, I'll settle for a trackback ping instead.</p> <p>What follows is the cut and paste of my intended comment contributions to Paul's post.</p> <p>Paul,</p> <p> As discussed earlier this week during <a href="http://blogs.talis.com/nodalities/2008/05/kingsley-idehen-talks-about-openlink-software-linked-data-and-the-semantic-web.php" id="link-id1332fb48">our podcast session</a>, commercialization of <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id17382338">Semantic Web</a> technology shouldn't be a mercurial matter at this stage in the game :-) It's all about looking at how it provides value :-)</p> <p>From the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id10d4f4a8">Linked Data</a> angle, the ability to produce, dispatch, and exploit "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Context_%28language_use%29" id="link-id13bed160">Context</a>" across an array of "Perspectives" from a plethora of disparate <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data" id="link-id1731e5f0">data</a> sources on the Web and/or behind corporate firewalls, offers immense commercial value.</p> <p> <a href="http://developer.yahoo.com/searchmonkey/" id="link-id1975d248">Yahoo's Searchmonkey</a> effort will certainly bring clarity to some of the points I made during the podcast re. the role of URIs as "value consumption tickets" (<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data" id="link-id173eb7b0">Data</a> Services are exposed via URIs). There has to be a trigger (in user space) that compels Web users to seek broader, or simply varied, perspectives as a response to <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data" id="link-id0x1c7e7f60">data</a> encountered on the Web. Yahoo! is about to put this light on in a big way (imho).</p> <p>The "self annotating" nature of the Web is what ultimately drives the manifestation of the long awaited <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id0xa18a83e8">Semantic Web</a>. I believe I postulated about <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&q=self%20annotation&type=text&output=html" id="link-id173d7458">"Self Annotation & the Semantic Web" in a number of prior posts</a> which, by the way, should be <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&type=text&kwds=self%20annotation&OpenSearch" id="link-id10b12208">DataRSS compatible right now</a> due to Yahoo's support of OpenSearch <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data" id="link-id0x1b8412e8">Data</a> Providers (which this <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Blog" id="link-id170b8df8">Blog</a> Space has been for eons).</p> <p>Today, have many communities adding strucuture to the Web (via their respective tools of preference) without explicitly realizing what they are contributing. Every RSS/Atom feed, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Tag" id="link-id183d5178">Tag</a>, Weblog, Shared Bookmark, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/WikiWord" id="link-id10c5e758">Wikiword</a>, Microformat, Microformat++ (<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Embedded_RDF" id="link-id16d8ee40">eRDF</a> or <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/RDFa" id="link-id1059a688">RDFa</a>), <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/GRDDL" id="link-id1090ae10">GRDDL</a> stylesheet, and RDFizer etc.. is a piece of structured <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data">data</a>.</p> <p>Finally, the different communities are all finding ways to work together (thank heavens!) and the results are going to be cataclysmic when it all plays out :-)</p> <p>Data, Structure, and Extraction are the keys to the Semantic Life! First you get the Data in a container (<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Information" id="link-id180e5648">information</a> resource), and then you add Structure to the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Information" id="link-id103801e0">information</a> resource (RSS, Atom, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Microformats" id="link-id17825e40">microformats</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/RDFa" id="link-id189a8738">RDFa</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Embedded_RDF" id="link-id1933d5c0">eRDF</a>, SIOC, FOAF, etc.), once you have Structure RDFization (i.e. transformation to <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id19744878">Linked Data</a>) is a synch thanks to <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Resource_Description_Framework" id="link-id180dde30">RDF</a> Middleware (as per <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&type=text&kwds=self%20annotation&OpenSearch" id="link-id16dc3130">earlier RDF middleware posts</a>).</p>
Commercializing the Semantic Web
2008-05-18T14:58:26Z
2008-05-18T10:58:26.000003-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1362
<p>Unfortunately, I could only spend 4 days at the recent <a href="http://www2008.org/" id="link-id196acf60">WWW2008</a> event in <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Beijing" id="link-id1974fe28">Beijing</a> (I departed the morning following the <a href="http://events.linkeddata.org/ldow2008/" id="link-id1863f858">Linked Data Workshop</a>), so I couldn't take my slot on the "Commercializing the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id18990f90">Semantic Web</a> panel" etc.. Anyway, thanks to the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web">Web</a> I can still inject my points of view in the broad Web based discourse. Well so I hoped, when I attempted to post a comment to Paul Miller's ZDNet domain hosted <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Blog" id="link-id180d6750">blog</a> thread titled: <a href="http://blogs.zdnet.com/semantic-web/?p=132" id="link-id12d206c0">Commercialising the Semantic Web</a>.</p> <p>Unfortunately, the cost of completing ZDNet's unwieldy signup process simply exceeded the benefits of dropping my comments in their particular space :-( Thus, I'll settle for a trackback ping instead.</p> <p>What follows is the cut and paste of my intended comment contributions to Paul's post.</p> <p>Paul,</p> <p> As discussed earlier this week during <a href="http://blogs.talis.com/nodalities/2008/05/kingsley-idehen-talks-about-openlink-software-linked-data-and-the-semantic-web.php" id="link-id1332fb48">our podcast session</a>, commercialization of <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id17382338">Semantic Web</a> technology shouldn't be a mercurial matter at this stage in the game :-) It's all about looking at how it provides value :-)</p> <p>From the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id10d4f4a8">Linked Data</a> angle, the ability to produce, dispatch, and exploit "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Context_%28language_use%29" id="link-id13bed160">Context</a>" across an array of "Perspectives" from a plethora of disparate <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data" id="link-id1731e5f0">data</a> sources on the Web and/or behind corporate firewalls, offers immense commercial value.</p> <p> <a href="http://developer.yahoo.com/searchmonkey/" id="link-id1975d248">Yahoo's Searchmonkey</a> effort will certainly bring clarity to some of the points I made during the podcast re. the role of URIs as "value consumption tickets" (<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data" id="link-id173eb7b0">Data</a> Services are exposed via URIs). There has to be a trigger (in user space) that compels Web users to seek broader, or simply varied, perspectives as a response to <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data" id="link-id0x1c7e7f60">data</a> encountered on the Web. Yahoo! is about to put this light on in a big way (imho).</p> <p>The "self annotating" nature of the Web is what ultimately drives the manifestation of the long awaited <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id0xa18a83e8">Semantic Web</a>. I believe I postulated about <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&q=self%20annotation&type=text&output=html" id="link-id173d7458">"Self Annotation & the Semantic Web" in a number of prior posts</a> which, by the way, should be <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&type=text&kwds=self%20annotation&OpenSearch" id="link-id10b12208">DataRSS compatible right now</a> due to Yahoo's support of OpenSearch <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data">Data</a> Providers (which this <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Blog" id="link-id170b8df8">Blog</a> Space has been for eons).</p> <p>Today, have many communities adding strucuture to the Web (via their respective tools of preference) without explicitly realizing what they are contributing. Every RSS/Atom feed, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Tag" id="link-id183d5178">Tag</a>, Weblog, Shared Bookmark, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/WikiWord" id="link-id10c5e758">Wikiword</a>, Microformat, Microformat++ (<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Embedded_RDF" id="link-id16d8ee40">eRDF</a> or <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/RDFa" id="link-id1059a688">RDFa</a>), <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/GRDDL" id="link-id1090ae10">GRDDL</a> stylesheet, and RDFizer etc.. is a piece of structured data.</p> <p>Finally, the different communities are all finding ways to work together (thank heavens!) and the results are going to be cataclysmic when it all plays out :-)</p> <p>Data, Structure, and Extraction are the keys to the Semantic Life! First you get the Data in a container (<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Information" id="link-id180e5648">information</a> resource), and then you add Structure to the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Information" id="link-id103801e0">information</a> resource (RSS, Atom, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Microformats" id="link-id17825e40">microformats</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/RDFa" id="link-id189a8738">RDFa</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Embedded_RDF" id="link-id1933d5c0">eRDF</a>, SIOC, FOAF, etc.), once you have Structure RDFization (i.e. transformation to <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id19744878">Linked Data</a>) is a synch thanks to <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Resource_Description_Framework" id="link-id180dde30">RDF</a> Middleware (as per <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&type=text&kwds=self%20annotation&OpenSearch" id="link-id16dc3130">earlier RDF middleware posts</a>).</p>
Commercializing the Semantic Web
2008-05-16T20:15:29Z
2008-05-16T16:15:29.000001-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1357
<p>After listening to the <a href="http://semanticgang.talis.com/2008/05/02/april-2008-the-semantic-web-gang-discuss-a-wikipedia-for-data/" id="link-id1089e218">latest Semantic Web Gang podcast</a>, I found myself agreeing with some of the points made by <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/in/iskold" id="link-id10b91e58">Alex Iskold</a>, specifically: </p> <ul>-- <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id106e24e0">Linked Data</a> does not implicitly imply making all your <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data" id="link-id17ab3d48">data</a> public</ul> <ul>-- <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id11fdcef0">Linked Data</a> principles benefit <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Intranet" id="link-id109756e8">Intranet</a> and <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Extranet" id="link-id1099cfd8">Extranet</a> style <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data" id="link-id10cd25b0">data</a> integration (trumps alternative <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/federated_database_system" id="link-id14f29940">distributed database</a> integration approaches any day)</ul> <ul>-- Business exploitation of <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id0xca51940">Linked Data</a> on the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web">Web</a> will certainly be driven by the correlation of opportunity costs (which is more than likely what Alex meant by "use cases") associated with the lack of URIs originating from the domain of a given business (Tom Heath: also effectively alluded to this via his <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/BBC" id="link-id16f33348">BBC</a> and <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uniform_Resource_Identifier" id="link-id10decf38">URI</a> land grab anecdotes; same applies Georgi's examples)</ul> <ul>-- History is a great tutor, answers to many of today's problems always lie somewhere in plain sight of the past.</ul> <p>Of course, I also believe that <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data">Linked Data</a> serves Web <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data" id="link-id0x1afebd58">Data</a> Integration across the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Internet" id="link-id10aa5668">Internet</a> very well too, and the fact that it will be beneficial to businesses in a big way. No individual or organization is an island, I think the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Internet" id="link-id0xb25fbd0">Internet</a> and Web have done a good job of demonstrating that thus far :-) We're all <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data">data</a> nodes in a <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Giant_Global_Graph" id="link-id5d8a3a8">Giant Global Graph</a>.</p> <p> <a href="http://myopenlink.net/dataspace/person/danieljohnlewis#this" id="link-id17cac8a0">Daniel lewis</a> did shed light on the read-write aspects of the Linked Data <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Giant_Global_Graph" id="link-id10be8590">Web</a>, which is actually very close to the callout for a Wikipedia for Data. <a href="http://www.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee/card#i" id="link-id10a810c0">TimBL</a> has been working on this via <a href="http://dig.csail.mit.edu/2005/ajar/release/tabulator/0.8/tab.html" id="link-id184b7108">Tabulator</a> (see <a href="http://dig.csail.mit.edu/2007/tab/tutorial/editing.mov" id="link-id1416f1e8">Tabulator Editing Screencast</a>), <a href="http://bnode.org/about" id="link-id17e33750">Bengamin Nowack</a> also added <a href="http://arc.semsol.org/download/plugins/data_wiki" id="link-id1688cc40">similar functionality to ARC</a>, and of course we support the same <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SPARQL" id="link-id10bff7c8">SPARQL</a> UPDATE into an <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Resource_Description_Framework" id="link-id168ace08">RDF</a> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Information" id="link-id10641878">information</a> resource via the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Resource_Description_Framework" id="link-id0xddb5240">RDF</a> Sink feature of our WebDAV and <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/dataspace/dav/wiki/Main/OdsBriefcase" id="link-id0x11199310">ODS</a>-Briefcase implementations.</p>
Comments about recent Semantic Gang Podcast
2008-05-06T00:06:42Z
2008-05-05T20:06:42.000004-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1356
<p>I've always been of the opinion that concise value proposition articulation shouldn't be the achilles of the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id158efe90">Semantic Web</a>. As the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id13a2db40">Linked Data</a> wave climbs up the "value Appreciation and Comprehension chain", it's getting clearer by the second that "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Context_%28language_use%29" id="link-id109316f0">Context</a>" is a point of confluence for <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id108daa60">Semantic Web</a> Technologies and easy to comprehend value, from the perspectives of those outside the core community.</p> <p>In today's primarily Document centric <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web">Web</a>, the pursuit of <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Context_%28language_use%29" id="link-id14edadd0">Context</a> is akin to pursuing a mirage in a desert of user generated content. The quest is labor intensive, and you ultimaely end up without water at the end of the pursuit :-)</p> <p>Listening to the <a href="http://blogs.talis.com/nodalities/2008/05/christine-connors-talks-about-semantic-technologies-at-dow-jones.php" id="link-id12d5e1c0">Christine Connor's podcast interview with Talis</a> simply reinforces my strong belief that "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Context_%28language_use%29" id="link-id0x1ec69518">Context</a>, Context, Context" is the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id0xa279438">Semantic Web</a>'s equivalent of Real Estate's "Location, Location, Location" (ignore the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Subprime_lending" id="link-id140b8098">subprime</a> loans mess for now). The critical thing to note is that you cannot unravel "Context" from existing Web content without incorporating powerful disambiguation technology into an "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Entity" id="link-id15a2f380">Entity</a> Extraction" process. Of course, you cannot even consider seriously pursing any <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Entity" id="link-id10868a18">entity</a> extraction and disambiguation endeavor without a lookup backbone that exposes "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Named_entity_recognition" id="link-id168dc230">Named Entities</a>" and their relationships to "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Topic" id="link-id17cb1950">Subject matter Concepts</a>" (BTW - this is what <a href="http://umbel.org/about/" id="link-id14f406a0">UMBEL</a> is all about). Thus, when looking at the broad subject of the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web">Semantic Web</a>, we can also look at "Context" as the vital point of confluence for the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data" id="link-id12d67e38">Data</a> oriented (<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id14f8daf0">Linked Data</a>) and the "Linguistic Meaning" oriented perspectives.</p> <p>I am even inclined to state publicly that "Context" may ultimately be the foundation for <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&q=dimension%20web%204.0%20&type=text&output=html" id="link-id17cb0708">4th "Web Interaction Dimension"</a> where practical use of <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Artificial_intelligence" id="link-id10b15088">AI</a> leverages a <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id0x1ebf9310">Linked Data</a> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Giant_Global_Graph" id="link-id10b27018">Web</a> substrate en route to exposing new kinds of value :-)</p> <p>"Context" may also be the focal point of concise value proposition articulation to <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Venture_Capital" id="link-id10837578">VCs</a> as in: "My solution offers the ability to discover and exploit "Context" iteratively, at the rate of $X.XX per iteration, across a variety of market segments :-)</p>
In Perpetual Pursuit of Context
2008-05-03T19:07:32Z
2008-05-03T15:07:32-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1280
<p>I've been a little busier than usual, of late. So busy, that even minimal blog based discourse participation has been a challenge. Anyway, during this quiet period, a number of interesting data streams have come my way that relate to <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/wiki/main/Main/OdsIndex" id="link-id142b7e40">OpenLink Data Spaces</a> (ODS). Thus, in typical fashion, I'll use this post (via <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uniform_Resource_Identifier" id="link-id1474d810">URI</a>s) to contribute a few nodes to the <a href="http://dig.csail.mit.edu/breadcrumbs/node/215" id="link-id149d8210">Giant Global Graph </a>that is the Web of Structured <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id139f9190">Linked Data</a>, also known as the <a href="http:dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id1470e588">Data Web, Semantic Data Web, or Web of Data</a> (also see <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&q='data%20web'&type=text&output=html" id="link-id13a4f828">prior Data Web posts</a>).</p> <p>Here goes:</p> <ol> <li> <a href="http://bizcast.typepad.com/" id="link-id14769268">Alan Wilensky</a> recalls his <a href="http://bizcast.typepad.com/clients/2007/11/social-networks.html" id="link-id14478c48">early encounters with OpenLink Data Spaces</a> (circa. 2004)</li> <li> <a href="http://www.vanirsystems.co.uk/foaf.rdf" id="link-id14516938">Daniel Lewis</a> shares his "<a href="http://vanirsystems.com/danielsblog/2007/11/29/where-is-the-semantic-web-well-it-is-here-already/" id="link-id149e2518">state of the Semantic Data Web"</a> findings</li> <li> <a href="http://vanirsystems.com/danielsblog/2007/11/30/openlink-data-spaces/" id="link-id14cddaf0">Daniel Lewis experiences OpenLink Data Space first hand</a> en route to creating Data Spaces in the Clouds (the <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1261" id="link-id146c35c8">Fourth Platform</a>).</li> </ol> <p>In addition, in one week, courtesy of the Web, UK Semnantic Web Gatherings in <a href="http://blogs.talis.com/nodalities/2007/11/cindy_che_and_other_interestin.php" id="link-id14304738">Bristol</a> and <a href="http://oxford.geeknights.net/2007/nov-28th/" id="link-id145589d8">Oxford</a>, I <a href="http://vanirsystems.com/danielsblog/2007/11/21/wanted-job/" id="link-id1399de08">discover</a>, interview, and employ Daniel :-) Imagine how long this would have taken to pull off via the Document Web, assuming I would even discover Daniel.</p> <p>As with all things these days, the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web" id="link-id1477a7e0">Web</a> and <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Internet" id="link-id14c3f428">Internet</a> change everything, which includes talent discovery and recruitment.</p> <p>A Global Social graph that is a mesh of Linked Data enables the process of recruitment, marketing, and other elements of busines management to be condensed down to a sending powerful beams across the aforementioned Graph :-) The only variable pieces are the traversal paths exposed to your beam via the beam's entry point URI. In my case, <a href="http://kidehen.idehen.net/dataspace/person/kidehen#this" id="link-id1395e5f0">I have a single URI</a> that exposes a Graph of critical paths for the Blogosphere (i.e data spaces of RSS Atom Feeds). Thus, I can discover if your profile matches the requirements associated with an opening at OpenLink Software (most of the time) before you do :-)</p> <p>BTW - I just noticed that John Breslin described ODS as social-graph++ in his recent post, titled: <a href="http://www.johnbreslin.com/blog/2007/11/30/tales-from-the-sioc-o-sphere-part-6/" id="link-id14c82bc8">Tales from the SIOC-o-sphere, part 6</a>. In a funny way, this reminds of a post from the early blogosphere days about <a href="http://www.cadenhead.org/workbench/news/1427/commercial-server-supports-four-weblog-apis" id="link-id14a24c58">platforms and Weblog APIs </a>(circa. 2003) about ODS (then exposed via the Blog Platform realm of <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Virtuoso_Universal_Server" id="link-id14745100">Virtuoso</a>).</p>
Discussion: OpenLink Data Spaces
2007-12-01T20:26:12Z
2007-12-01T15:26:12-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1254
<p>The motivation behind this post is a response to the <a href="http://www.readwriteweb.com">Read/WriteWeb</a> post titled: <a href="http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/semantic_web_difficulties_with_classic_approach.php">Semantic Web: Difficulties with the Classic Approach</a>.</p> <p>First off, I am going to focus on the Semantic Data Web aspect of the overall Semantic Web vision (a continuum) as this is what we have now. I am also writing this post as a deliberate contribution to the discourse swirling around the real topic: Semantic Web Value Proposition.</p> <h2>Situation Analysis</h2> <p>We are in the early stages of the long anticipated<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Knowledge_economy"> Knowledge Economy</a>. That being the case, it would be safe to assume that information access, processing, and dissemination are of utmost importance to individuals and organizations alike. You don't produce knowledge in a vacum! Likewise, you can produce Information in a vacum, you need Data.</p> <h2>The Semantic Data Web's value to Individuals</h2> <b>Problem:</b> <p>Increasingly, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Blog">Blogs</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Wiki">Wikis</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Social_bookmarking">Shared Bookmarks</a>, Photo Galleries, Discussion Forums, Shared Calendars and the like, have become invaluable tools for individual and organizational participation in Web enabled global discourse (where a lot of knowledge is discovered). These tools, are typically associated with <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Web_2">Web 2.0</a>, implying Read-Write access via <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Web_service">Web Services</a>, centralized application hosting, and data lock-in (silos).</p> <p>The reality expressed above is a recipe for "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Information_overload">Information Overload</a>" and complete annihilation of ones effective pursuit and exploitation of knowledge due "Time Scarcity" (note: disconnecting is not an option). Information abundance is inversely related to available processing time (for humans in particular). In my case for instance, I was actively subscribed to over 500+ RSS feeds in 2003. As of today, I've simply stopped counting, and that's just my Weblog Data Space. Then add to that, all of the Discussions I track across Blogs, wikis, message boards, mailing lists, traditional usnet discussion forumns, and the like, and I think you get the picture. </p> <p>Beyond information overload, Web 2.0 data is "Semi-Structured" by way of it's dominant data containers ((X)HTML, RSS, Atom documents and data streams etc.) lacking semantics that formally expose individual data items as distinct entities, endowed with unambiguous naming / identification, descriptive attributes (a type of property/predicate), and relationships (a type of property/predicate).</p> <b>Solution:</b> <p>Devise a standard for Structured Data Semantics that is compatible with the <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1231">Web Information BUS</a>.</p> <p>Produce <a href="http://www.mkbergman.com/?p=153">structured data</a> (entities, entity types, entity relationships) from Web 1.0 and Web 2.0 resources that already exists on the Web such that individual entities, their attributes, and relationships are accessible and discernible to software agents (machines).</p> <p>Once the entities are individually exposed, the next requirement is a mechanism for selective access to these entities i.e. a query language. </p> <p> Semantic Data Web Technologies that facilitate the solution described above include:</p> <b>Structured Data Standards:</b> <ul> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/RDF">RDF</a> - Data Model for structured data</ul> <ul>RDF/XML - A serialization format for RDF based structured data</ul> <ul> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Notation_3">N3</a> / <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Turtle_%28syntax%29">Turtle</a> - more human friendly serialization formats for RDF based structured data</ul> <b>Entity Exposure & Generation:</b> <ul> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/GRDDL">GRDDL</a> - enables association between XHTML pages and XSLT stylesheets that facilitates loosely coupled "on the fly" extraction of RDF from non RDF documents</ul> <ul> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/RDFa">RDFa</a> - enables document publishers or viewers (i.e those repurposing or annotating) to embed structured data into existing XHTML documents</ul> <ul> <a href="http://research.talis.com/2005/erdf/wiki/Main/RdfInHtml">eRDF</a> - another option for embedding structured RDF data within (X)HTML documents</ul> <ul> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/blog/%7Ekidehen/?id=1172">RDF Middleware</a> - typically incorporating GRDDL, RDFa, eRDF, and custom extraction and mapping as part of a structured data production pipeline</ul>. <b>Entity Naming & Identification:</b> <p>Use of URIs or IRIs for uniquely identifying physical (HTML Documents, Image Files, Multimedia Files etc..) and abstract (People, Places, Music, and other abstract things). </p> <b>Entity Access & Querying:</b> <ul> <p> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SPARQL">SPARQL</a> Query Language - the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SQL">SQL</a> analog of the Semantic Data Web that enables query constructs that target named entities, entity attributes, and entity relationships</p> </ul> <ul> <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/rdf-sparql-protocol/">SPARQL Protocol</a> - a <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Representational_State_Transfer">REST</a> or <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SOAP">SOAP</a> style Web Service for transporting SPARQL Queries to Structured Data Sources.</ul> <ul> <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/rdf-sparql-XMLres/">SPARQL Results Serialization Formats</a> - query results serialization formats that includes XML(sparql+xml) and JSON.</ul> <h2>The Semantic Data Web's value to Organizations</h2> <b>Problem:</b> <p>Organizations are rife with a plethora of business systems that are built atop a myriad of database engines, sourced from a variety of DBMS vendors. A typical organization would have a different database engine, from a specific DBMS vendor, underlying critical business applications such as: Human Resource Management (HR), Customer Relationship Management (CRM), Accounting, Supply Chain Management etc. In a nutshell, you have DBMS Engines, and DBMS Schema heterogeneity permeating the IT infrastructure of organizations on a global scale, making Data & Information Integration the biggest headache across all IT driven organizations.</p> <b>Solution:</b> <p>Alleviation of the pain (costs) associated with Data & Information Integration. </p> <b>Semantic Data Web offerings:</b> <p>A dexterous data model (RDF) that enables the construction of conceptual views of disparate data sources across an organization based on existing web architecture components such as HTTP and URIs.</p> <p>Existing middleware solutions that facilitate the exposure of SQL DBMS data as RDF based Structured Data include:</p> <ul> <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/wiki/main/Main/VOSSQLRDF">Virtuoso's Meta Schema Language for RDF Views of SQL Data</a> (also see the <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/Whitepapers/pdf/Virtuoso_SQL_to_RDF_Mapping.pdf">Virtuoso SQL-RDF Technical White Paper</a>)</ul> <ul> <a href="http://sites.wiwiss.fu-berlin.de/suhl/bizer/D2RQ/">D2RQ</a> </ul> <ul> <a href="http://ccnt.zju.edu.cn/projects/dartgrid">DataGrid</a> </ul> <ul> <a href="http://esw.w3.org/topic/RdfAndSql">Others</a> </ul> <p> BTW - There is an upcoming <a href="http://www.w3.org/2007/03/RdfRDB/">W3C Workshop covering the integration of SQL and RDF data</a>.</p> <h2>Conclusion</h2> <p>The Semantic Data Web is here, it's value delivery vehicle is the URI. The URI is a conduit to Interlinked Structured Data (RDF based Linked Data) derived from existing data sources on the World Wide Web alongside data continuously injected into the Web by organizations world wide. Ironically, the Semantic Data Web only platform that crystallizes the: Information at Your Fingertips vision, without development environment, operating system, application, or database lock-in. You simply click on a <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data">Linked Data URI</a> and the serendipitous exploration and discovery of data commences.</p> <p>The unobtrusive emergence of the Semantic Data Web is a reflection of the soundness of the underlying Semantic Web vision.</p> <p>If you are excited about <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Mashup_%28web_application_hybrid%29">Mash-ups</a> then your are a Semantic Web enthusiast and benefactor in the making, because you only "Mash" (brute force data extraction and interlinking) because you can't "Mesh" (natural data extraction and interlinking). Likewise, if you are a social-networking, open social-graph, or portable social-network enthusiast, then you are also a Semantic Data Web benefactor and enthusiasts, because your "values" (yes, the values associated with the properties that define you e.g your interests etc) are the fundamental basis for portable, open, social-networking, which is what the Semantic Data Web hands to you on a platter without compromise (i.e. data lock-in or loss of data ownership).</p> <b>Some practical examples of Semantic Data Web prowess:</b> <ul> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/JS/rdfbrowser/index.html?uri=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.readwriteweb.com%2Farchives%2Fsemantic_web_difficulties_with_classic_approach.php">Read/WriteWeb via the OpenLink Data Web Browser</a> (click on the different viewing tabs to see what structured data exploitation in action)</ul> <ul> <a href="http://browser.zitgist.com/?uri=http%3A//www.readwriteweb.com/archives/semantic_web_difficulties_with_classic_approach.php">Read/WriteWeb via the Zitgist Data Web Browser</a> </ul> <ul> <a href="http:/dbpedia.org">DBpedia</a> (*note: I deliberately use DBpedia URIs in my posts where I would otherwise have used a Wikipedia article URI*)</ul> <ul> <a href="http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/zitgist-browser-linker/">Zitgist zLinks</a> - <a href="http://www.mkbergman.com/?p=400">Mike Bergman's Blog Post also demonstrating zLinks</a> </ul>
Semantic Web Value Proposition
2007-09-21T12:05:07Z
2007-09-21T08:05:07.000009-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1252
<p>I've just read the extensive post by <a href="http://novaspivack.typepad.com/nova_spivacks_weblog/">Nova Spivack</a> titled: <a href="http://novaspivack.typepad.com/nova_spivacks_weblog/2007/09/a-bottle-that-p.html">The Semantic Web, Collective Intelligence and Hyperdata</a>, courtesy of a post by <a href="http://dannyayers.com/me">Danny Ayres</a> titled: <a href="http://dannyayers.com/2007/09/19/confused-about-the">Confused about the Semantic Web</a> , in response to a post by <a href="http://radar.oreilly.com/tim">Tim O'Reilly</a> titled: <a href="http://radar.oreilly.com/archives/2007/09/economist_confu.html">Economist Confused About the Semantic Web?</a> .</p> <p>My Comments:</p> <p>Hyperdata is short for HyperLinked Data :-) The same applies to <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data">Linked Data</a>. Thus, we have two literal labels for the same core Concept. <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HTTP">HTTP</a> is the enabling protocol for "Hyper-linking" Documents and associated Structured Data via the World Wide Web (Web for short). Data Links associated with Structured Data contained in, or hosted by, Documents on the Web.</p> <p> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/RDFa">RDFa</a>, eRDF, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/GRDDL">GRDDL</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SPARQL">SPARQL</a> Query Language, SPARQL Protocol (<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SOAP">SOAP</a> or <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Representational_State_Transfer">REST</a> service), SPARQL Results Serializations (<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/XML">XML</a> or <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/JSON">JSON</a>) collectively provide a myriad of unobtrusive routes to structured data embedded within, or associated with, existing Web Documents.</p> <p>As Danny already states, ontologies are not prerequisites for producing structured data using the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Resource_Description_Framework">RDF</a> Data Model. They simply aid the ability to express one's self clearly (i.e. no repetition or ambiguity) across a broad audience of machines (directly) and their human masters (indirectly).</p> <p>Using the crux of this post as the anecdote: The <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web">Semantic Data Web</a> would simplify the process of claiming and/or proving that Linked Data and Hyperdata describe the same concept. It achieves this by using Triples (Subject, Predicate, Object) expressed in various forms (<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Notation_3">N3</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Turtle_(syntax)">Turtle</a>, RDF/XML etc.) to formalize claims in a form palatable to electronic agents (machines) operating on behalf of Humans. In a nutshell, this increases human productive by completely obliterates the erstwhile exponential costs of discovering data, information, and knowledge.</p> <p>BTW - for full effect, view this post (i.e. cut and paste the Permalink URI of this post, below) into an RDF Browser such as:</p> <ul>- <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/rdfbrowser/">OpenLink RDF Browser</a> </ul> <ul>- <a href="http://browser.zitgist.com/">Zitgist Browser</a> </ul> <ul>- <a href="http://www4.wiwiss.fu-berlin.de/rdf_browser/">DISCO</a> </ul> <ul>- <a href="http://www.w3.org/2005/ajar/tab">Tabulator</a> </ul>
Web of Linked Data & Hyperdata
2008-02-05T01:43:55Z
2008-02-04T20:43:55.000003-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1239
<p>There are two upcoming keynotes that I will be giving in the months of September and October in relation to the burgeoning <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&q=Semantic%20Data%20Web&type=text&output=html">Semantic Data Web</a>. The events are: <a href="http://aksw.org/SocialSemanticWebConference">SABRE Conference about the Social Semantic Web</a> and <a href="http://www.semanticwebstrategies.com/conference/keynotes.php">Jupiter's Semantic Web Strategies Fall Event</a>.</p> <p> The abstract of my Semantic Web Strategies keynote contains a reference to the acronym MLD but it doesn't really expose what MLD is (i.e. initial acronym source isn't clearly identified in the abstract's opening paragraph). Thus, I am attempting to fix the aforementioned anomally via this blog post :-)</p> <p>Market Leadership Discipline (MLD) is defined as follows: A strategy adopted by a company for attaining leadership in a given marketplace.</p> <p>MLD strategies usually take one of the following forms:</p> <ol> <li> Product Innovation - common amongst most startup and perpetual startup mode companies </li> <li>Customer Intimacy - common amongst large and established market leaders </li> <li>Operational Excellence - common amongst companies (established or startup) that use Information Technology to enhance operations behind the deliver of products and services.</li> </ol> <p>MLD is a critical component of Enterprise Agility.</p>
Market Leadership Discipline (MLD) & Upcoming Keynotes
2008-02-05T01:45:26Z
2008-02-04T20:45:26.000005-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1174
<p> <a href="http://dannyayers.com/">Danny Ayers</a> responds, via his post titled: <a href="http://dannyayers.com/2007/03/30/sampling">Sampling</a>, to "Stefano Mazzochi's post about <a href="http://www.betaversion.org/~stefano/linotype/news/101/">Data Integration using Semantic Web Technologies</a>.</p> <blockquote> <p>"There is a potential problem with republication of transformed data, in that right away there may be inconsistency with the original source data. Here provenance tracking (probably via named graphs) becomes a must-have. The web data space itself can support very granular separation. Whatever, data integration is a hard problem. But if you have a uniform language for describing resources, at least it can be possible."<br /> </p> <p>Alex James also chimes in with valuable insights in his post: <a href="http://www.base4.net">Sampling the global data model</a>, where he concludes:</p> <blockquote>"Exactly we need to use projected views, or conceptual models. ' <p> See a projected view can be thought of as a conceptual model that has some mapping to a *sampling* of the global data model.</p> <p>The benefits of introducing this extra layer are many and varied: Simplicity, URI predictability, Domain Specificity and the ability to separate semantics from lower level details like data mapping.</p> <p>Unfortunately if you look at today’s ORMs you will quickly notice that they simply map directly from Object Model to Data Model in one step.</p> <p>This naïve approach provides no place to manage the mapping to a conceptual model that sampling the world’s data requires.</p> <p>What we need to solve the problems Stefano sees is to bring together the world of mapping and semantics. And the place they will meet is simply the Conceptual Model."</p> </blockquote> <p>Data Integration challenges arise because the following facts hold true all of the time (whether we like it or not):</p> <ol> <li>Data Heterogeneity is a fact of life at the intranet and internet levels </li> <li>Data is rarely clean</li> <li>Data Integration prowess are ultimately measured by pain alleviation</li> <li>A some point human participation is required, but the trick is to move human activity up the value chain</li> <li>Glue code size and Data Integration success are inversely related</li> <li>Data Integration is best addressed via "M" rather than "C" (if we use the MVC pattern as a guide. "V" is dead on arrival for the scrappers out there)</li> </ol> <p>In 1997 we commenced the <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/virtuoso/">Virtuoso</a> Virtual DBMS Project that morphed into the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virtuoso_Universal_Server">Virtuoso Universal Server</a>; A fusion of DBMS functionality and Middleware functionality in a single product. The goal of this undertaking remains alleviation of the costs associated with Data Integration Challenges by Virtualizing Data at the Logical and Conceptual Layers.</p> <p>The Logical Data Layer has been concrete for a while (e.g Relational DBMS Engines), what hasn't reached the mainstream is the <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&q=conceptual%20data%20model&type=text&output=html">Concrete Conceptual Model</a>, but this is changing fast courtesy of the activity taking place in the realm of RDF.</p> <p>RDF provides an Open and Standards compliant vehicle for developing and exploiting Concrete Conceptual Data Models that ultimately move the Human aspect of the "Data Integration alleviation quest" higher up the value chain. </p> </blockquote>
RDF based Integration Challenges (update)
2007-03-30T23:35:35Z
2007-03-30T19:35:35-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1172
<p> <a href="http://fgiasson.com/blog">Frederick Giasson</a> penned an interesting post earlier today that highlighted the RDF Middleware services offered by <a href="http://fgiasson.com/blog/index.php/2007/03/28/making-the-bridge-between-the-web-and-the-semantic-web/#comments">Triplr and the Virtuoso Sponger</a> </p> <p>Some Definitions (as per usual):</p> <p>RDF Middleware (as defined in this context) is about producing RDF from non RDF Data Sources. This implies that you can use non RDF Data Sources (e.g. (X)HTML Web Pages, (X)HTML Web Pages hosting Microformats, and even Web Services such as those from Google, Del.icio.us, Flickr etc..) as Semantic Web Data Source URIs (pointers to RDF Data).</p> <p>In this post I would like to provide a similar perspective on this ability to treat non RDF as RDF from RDF Browser perspective.</p> <p>First off, what's an RDF Browser?</p> <p>An RDF Browser is a piece of technology that enables you to Browse <a href="http://esw.w3.org/topic/SweoIG/TaskForces/CommunityProjects/LinkingOpenData">RDF Data Sources</a> by way of Data Link Traversal. The key difference between this approach and traditional browsing is that Data Links are typed (they possess inherent meaning and context) whereas traditional links are untyped (although universally we have been trained to type them as links to Blurb in the form of (X)HTML pages or what is popularly called "Web Content".).</p> <p>There are a number of RDF Browsers that I am aware off (note: pop me a message directly of by way of a comment to this post if you have a browser that I am unaware of), and they include (in order of creation and availability):</p> <ol> <li> <a href="http://www.w3.org/2005/ajar/tab">Tabulator</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://sites.wiwiss.fu-berlin.de/suhl/bizer/ng4j/disco/">DISCO - Hyperdata Browser</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/JS/rdfbrowser/index.html">OpenLink Ajax Toolkit's RDF Browser</a> (a component of the <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/JS/demo/index.html">OAT Javascript Toolkit</a>)</li> </ol> <p>Each of the browsers above can consume the services of Triplr or the Virtuoso Sponger en route to unveiling a RDF Data that is traversable via <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/2004/REC-webarch-20041215/#dereference-uri">URI dereferencing</a> (HTTP GETing the data exposed by the Data Pointer). Thus you can cut&paste the following into each of the aforementioned RDF Browsers:</p> <ol> <li> <a href="http://triplr.org/rdf/http://www.w3.org/People/Connolly/">Triplr's RDF Data (Triples) extractions from Dan Connolly's Home Page</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/proxy?url=http://www.w3.org/People/Connolly/&force=rdf">The Virtuoso Sponger's RDF Data (Triples) extractions from Dan Connolly's Home Page</a> </li> </ol> <p>Since we are all time challenged (naturally!) you can also just click on these permalinks for the OAT RDF Browser demos:</p> <ol> <li> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/JS/rdfbrowser/index.html?uri[]=http%3A%2F%2Ftriplr.org%2Frdf%2Fhttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.w3.org%2FPeople%2FConnolly%2F&"">Permalink for Triplr's RDF Data (Triples) extractions from Dan Connolly's Home Page</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/JS/rdfbrowser/index.html?uri=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.w3.org%2FPeople%2FConnolly%2F%23me">Permalink for the Virtuoso Sponger's RDF Data (Triples) extractions from Dan Connolly's Home Page</a> </li> </ol>
RDF Browsers & RDF Data Middleware
2007-04-29T18:59:05Z
2007-04-29T14:59:05-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1122
<p> <a href="http://www.betaversion.org/~stefano/">Stefano Mazzocchi</a>, via his blog: <a href="http://www.betaversion.org/~stefano/linotype/">Stefano's Linotype</a>, delivers <a href="http://www.betaversion.org/~stefano/linotype/news/99/">insightful contribution</a> to the ongoing effort to recapture the essence of the original <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Semantic_Web">Semantic Web </a>vision.</p> <p>The Semantic Web is about granular exposure of the underlying web-of-data that fuels the World Wide Web. It models "<a href="http://www.w3.org/1999/04/WebData">Web Data</a>" using a <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graph_(mathematics)">Directed Graph</a> Data Model (back-to-the-future: <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Network_model">Network Model Database</a>) called <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/rdf-primer/">RDF</a>.</p> <p>In line with contemporary database technology thinking, the Semantic Web also seeks to expose Web Data to architects, developers, and users via a concrete <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conceptual_schema">Conceptual Layer</a> that is defined using <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/rdf-schema/">RDF Schema</a>.</p> <p>The abstract nature of Conceptual Models implies that actual instance data (<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Entity-relationship_diagrams">Entities, Attributes, and Relationships/Associations</a>) occurs by way of "Logical to Conceptual" schema mapping and data generation that can involve a myriad of logical data sources (SQL, XML, Object databases, traditional web content, <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rss_%28file_format%29">RSS</a>/<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atom_%28standard%29">Atom</a> feeds etc.). Thus, by implication, it is safe assume that the Semantic Web's construction is basically a <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_integration">Data Integration</a> and exposure effort. The point that Stefano alludes to in the blog post excerpts that follow: </p> <blockquote> <p>The semantic web is really just data integration at a global scale. Some of this data might end up being consistent, detailed and small enough to perform symbolic reasoning on, but even if this is the case, that would be such a small, expensive and fragile island of knowledge that it would have the same impact on the world as calculus had on deciding to invade Iraq.</p> <p>The biggest problem we face right now is a way to 'link' information that comes from different sources that can scale to hundreds of millions of statements (and hundreds of thousands of equivalences). Equivalences and subclasses are the only things that we have ever needed of <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/owl-features/">OWL</a> and RDFS, we want to 'connect' dots that otherwise would be unconnected. We want to suggest people to use whatever ontology pleases them and then think of just mapping it against existing ones later. This is easier to bootstrap than to force them to agree on a conceptualization before they even know how to start!</p> </blockquote> <p>Additional insightful material from Stefano:</p> <ol> <li> <a href="http://www.betaversion.org/~stefano/linotype/news/57/">A No-Nonsense Guide to Semantic Web Specs for XML People [Part I]</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.betaversion.org/~stefano/linotype/news/78/">A No-nonsense Guide to Semantic Web Specs for XML People [Part II]</a> </li> </ol> <p> <a href="http://bnode.org/blog/sw_en">Benjamin Nowack</a> also chimes into this conversation via his <a href="http://rdfer.com/swk/data-information-knowledge">simple guide to understanding Data, Information, and Knowledge</a> in relation so the Semantic Web.</p>
Semantic Web & Data Integration
2007-01-18T14:25:51Z
2007-01-18T09:25:51.000006-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1037
<p>I have just watched a pretty nifty presentation (courtesy of <a href="http://blogs.sun.com/bblfish/entry/the_10_dimensions_of_reality">Babelfish</a>) about <a href="http://www.tenthdimension.com/flash2.php">the 10 dimensions of our existence</a> (a 'la <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/String_theory">String Theory</a>) when it dawned on me that similar thinking can be applied to the Web :-)</p> <il> </il> <ol> Dimension 1 = Interactive Web (Visual Web of HTML based Sites aka Web 1.0) </ol> <ol> Dimension 2 = Services Web (Presence based Web of Services; a usage pattern commonly referred to as Web 2.0) </ol> <ol> Dimension 3 = Data Web (Presence and Open Data Access based Web of Databases aka Semantic Web layer 1) </ol> <ol> Dimension 4 = Ontology Web (Intelligent Agent palatable Web aka Semantic Web layer 2)</ol> <ol> .... </ol> <p>Hopefully, I can expand further :-)</p>
Dimensions of the Web
2006-11-12T23:55:54Z
2006-11-12T18:55:54.000001-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/670
<font size="2"> <p>By Jeremy J. Carroll, MultiLingual Computing and Technology</p> <p>The author gives a brief introduction to the Semantic Web and describes difficulties -- and occasionally solutions -- related to building multilingual Semantic Web sites and applications. The initial drivers for the Semantic Web came from metadata about web pages. Who wrote it?</p> <p>When? Who owns the copyright? And so on. Conveying such metadata requires agreement about the key terms such as author and date. This agreement has been reached by the Dublin Core community. For example, they have an agreed definition for the term creator, generalizing author for use in metadata records. The Semantic Web does not, however, draw a sharp distinction between metadata about the page and data contained within the page. In both cases, the idea is to provide sufficient structure around the data to turn it into information and to connect the concepts used to express such information with concepts used by others so that this information can become knowledge that can be acted upon.</p> <p><a href="http://tinyurl.com/3o2zm"><u><font color="#0000ff" size="2">http://tinyurl.com/3o2zm</font></u></a></p><font size="2"> <p>See also W3C Semantic Web: <a href="http://www.w3.org/2001/sw/"><u><font color="#0000ff" size="2">http://www.w3.org/2001/sw/</font></u></a></p><font size="2"></font></font></font>
An Introduction to the Semantic Web. Considerations for Building Multilingual Semantic Web Sites and Applications.
2006-06-22T12:56:58Z
2006-06-22T08:56:58-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1600
<p>I've created a new discussion space that's squarely focused on the business development and marketing aspects of "HTTP based <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id129e32d8">Linked Data" (Linked Data</a>). As its name indicates, It's a BOLD attempt to fill a VoiD. :-)</p> <h3>Background</h3> <p>A few months ago, <a href="http://blog.aldobucchi.com/#this" id="link-id1110eb30">Aldo Bucchi</a> posted a message to the <a href="http://esw.w3.org/topic/SweoIG/TaskForces/CommunityProjects/LinkingOpenData" id="link-id111d08a0">LOD</a> <a href="http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-lod/" id="link-id118b3778">mailing list</a> seeking a discussion space for more business and marketing oriented topic, in relation to Linked Data. At the time, my assumption was that the existing LOD mailing list served that purpose absolutely fine, but in due course I came to realize that Aldo's request had a much lager foundation than I initially suspected.</p> <h3>Historic Oversight</h3> <p>Linked Data, like its umbrella <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id16ceb618">Semantic Web</a> Project, has suffered from an inadvertent oversight on the parts of many of its enthusiasts (myself included): 100% of the discussion spaces are created by, geared towards, or dominated by researchers (from Academia primarily) and/or developers. Thus, at the very least, we've been operating in an echo chamber that only feed the existing void between the core community and those who are more interested in discussing business and marketing related topics.</p> <p>The new discussion space seeks to cover the following:</p> <ol> <li> Brainstorming Value Proposition Articulation</li> <li>War Story Exchanges</li> <li>Case Studies and Use-cases</li> <li>Market Research & Positioning (for instance Linked Data is killer technology that redefines <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data">Data</a> Integration, but none of the major research firms currently make that connection)</li>. </ol> <p>How Do I Join The Conversation? Simply sign up on the Google hosted <a href="http://groups.google.com/group/business-of-linked-data-bold" id="link-id129e4d08">BOLD mailing list</a>, introduce yourself (ideally), and then start conversing! :-)</p>
The Business Of Linked Data (BOLD) Discussion Space
2010-02-01T14:02:27Z
2010-02-01T09:02:27.000001-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1596
<p>I've created a new discussion space that's squarely focused on the business development and marketing aspects of "HTTP based <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id129e32d8">Linked Data" (Linked Data</a>). As its name indicates, It's a BOLD attempt to fill a VoiD. :-)</p> <h3>Background</h3> <p>A few months ago, <a href="http://blog.aldobucchi.com/#this" id="link-id1110eb30">Aldo Bucchi</a> posted a message to the <a href="http://esw.w3.org/topic/SweoIG/TaskForces/CommunityProjects/LinkingOpenData" id="link-id111d08a0">LOD</a> <a href="http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-lod/" id="link-id118b3778">mailing list</a> seeking a discussion space for more business and marketing oriented topic, in relation to Linked Data. At the time, my assumption was that the existing LOD mailing list served that purpose absolutely fine, but in due course I came to realize that Aldo's request had a much lager foundation than I initially suspected.</p> <h3>Historic Oversight</h3> <p>Linked Data, like its umbrella <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id16ceb618">Semantic Web</a> Project, has suffered from an inadvertent oversight on the parts of many of its enthusiasts (myself included): 100% of the discussion spaces are created by, geared towards, or dominated by researchers (from Academia primarily) and/or developers. Thus, at the very least, we've been operating in an echo chamber that only feed the existing void between the core community and those who are more interested in discussing business and marketing related topics.</p> <p>The new discussion space seeks to cover the following:</p> <ol> <li> Brainstorming Value Proposition Articulation</li> <li>War Story Exchanges</li> <li>Case Studies and Use-cases</li> <li>Market Research & Positioning (for instance Linked Data is killer technology that redefines <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data" id="link-id0x1d491e90">Data</a> Integration, but none of the major research firms currently make that connection)</li>. </ol> <p>How Do I Join The Conversation? Simply sign up on the Google hosted <a href="http://groups.google.com/group/business-of-linked-data-bold" id="link-id129e4d08">BOLD mailing list</a>, introduce yourself (ideally), and then start conversing! :-)</p>
The Business Of Linked Data (BOLD) Discussion Space
2010-01-31T22:48:48Z
2010-01-31T17:48:48-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1474
<p> The original <a href="http://www.w3.org/History/1989/proposal.html" id="link-id13b25ba8">design document</a> (by <a href="http://www.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee/card#i" id="link-id181e4c70">TimBL</a>) that lead to the WWW (*an important read*) was very clear about the need to create an "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Information" id="link-id10f23918">information</a> space" that connects heterogeneous <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data">data</a> sources. Unfortunately, in trying to create a moniker to distinguish one aspect of the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web">Web</a> (the Linked Document Web) from the part that was overlooked (the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id11096818">Linked Data</a> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Giant_Global_Graph" id="link-id1b9c6b98">Web</a>), we ended up with a project code name that's fundamentally a misnomer in the form of: "The <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id10ffe228">Semantic Web</a>".</p> <p> If we could just take "The Semantic Web" moniker for what it was -- a code name for an aspect of the Web -- and move on, things will get much clearer, fast!</p> <p> Basically, what is/was the "Semantic Web" should really have been code named: ("You" Oriented Data Access) as a play on: Yoda's appreciation of the FORCE (Fact ORiented Connected Entities) -- the power of inter galactic, interlinked, structured data, fashioned by the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web" id="link-id191b22e0">World Wide Web</a> courtesy of the HTTP protocol.</p> <div> <img src="http://motivationalspeaker1.files.wordpress.com/2008/03/yoda.jpg" /> </div> <p> As stated in a earlier post, the next phase of the Web is all about the magic of <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Entity" id="link-id1a7395f0">entity</a> "You". The single most important item of reference to every Web user would be the Person Entity <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Identity_%28object-oriented_programming%29" id="link-id16ab9308">ID</a> (<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uniform_Resource_Identifier" id="link-id1d403c88">URI</a>). Just by remembering your Entity ID, you will have intelligent pathways across, and into, the FORCE that the Linked Data Web delivers. The quality of the pathways and increased density of the FORCE are the keys to high <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1442" id="link-id1c549b28">SDQ</a> (tomorrows SEO). Thus, the SDQ of URIs will ultimately be the unit determinant of value to Web Users, along the following personal lines, hence the critical platform questions:</p> <ul> <li> Does your platform give <a href="http://myopenlink.net/dataspace/person/kidehen#this" id="link-id175afe00">me</a> Identity (a URI) with high SDQ?</li> <li> Do the Data Source Names (URIs) in your Data Spaces deliver high SDQ?</li> </ul> <p> While most industry commentators continue to ponder and pontificate about what "The Semantic Web" is (unfortunately), the real thing (the "FORCE") is already here, and self-enhancing rapidly.</p> <p> Assuming we now accept the FORCE is simply an RDF based Linked Data moniker, and that RDF Linked Data is all about the Web as a structured database, we should start to move our attention over to practical exploitation of this burgeoning global database, and in doing so we should not discard <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Knowledge" id="link-id19e2c6e0">knowledge</a> from the past such as the many great examples available gratis from the Relational Database realm. For instance, we should start paying attention to the discovery, development, and deployment of high level tools such as query builders, report writers, and intelligence oriented analytic tools, none of which should -- at first point of interaction -- expose raw RDF or the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SPARQL" id="link-id117921f0">SPARQL</a> query language. Along similar lines of thinking, we also need development environments and frameworks that are counterparts to Visual Studio, ACCESS, File Maker, and the like.</p> <h3> Related</h3> <ul> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1458" id="link-id1cec1a40">Numerati & The Magic of You!</a> </li> </ul>
YODA & the Data FORCE
2010-07-20T17:53:06Z
2010-07-20T13:53:06-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1462
<a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/oerling" id="link-id115d8420">Orri Erling</a> (Program Manager: OpenLink <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com" id="link-id111293d8">Virtuoso</a>) has dropped a well explained reiteration of the essence of the "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id115d85a0">Linked Data</a> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Giant_Global_Graph" id="link-id1161b138">Web</a>" or "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data">Data</a> Web" with an emphasis on the business value. His post is titled: <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/oerling/?id=1459" id="link-id1109d340">State of the Semantic Web (Part 1) - Sociology, Business, and Messaging</a>. <p>Typically, Orri's post are targeted at the hard core RDF and <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SQL" id="link-id115e2818">SQL</a> DBMS audiences, but in this particular post, he shoots straight at the business community revealing "Opportunity Cost" containment as the invisible driver behind the business aspects of any market inflection.</p> <p>Remember, the Web isn't ubiquitous because its users mastered the mechanics and virtues of HTML and/or HTTP. Web ubiquity is a function of the opportunity cost of not being on the Web, courtesy of the network effects of hyperlinked documents -- i.e., the instant gratification of traversing documents on the Web via a single click action. In similar fashion, the Linked Data Web's ubiquity will simply come down to the opportunity cost of not being "inside the Web", courtesy of the network effects of hyperlinked entities (documents, people, music, books, and other "Things"). </p> <p>Here are some excerpts from Orri's post:</p> <blockquote> <cite>Every time there is a major shift in technology, this shift needs to be motivated by addressing a new class of problem. This means doing something that could not be done before. The last time this happened was when the relational database became the dominant IT technology. At that time, the questions involved putting the enterprise in the database and building a cluster of line of business applications around the database. The argument for the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Relational_database_management_system" id="link-id113779e8">RDBMS</a> was that you did not have to constrain the set of queries that might later be made, when designing the database. In other words, it was making things more ad hoc. This was opposed then on grounds of being less efficient than the hierarchical and network databases which the relational eventually replaced.</cite> <cite>Today, the point of the Data Web is that you do not have to constrain what your data can join or integrate with, when you design your database. The counter-argument is that this is slow and geeky and not scalable. See the similarity?</cite> <cite>A difference is that we are not specifically aiming at replacing the RDBMS. In fact, if you know exactly what you will query and have a well defined workload, a relational representation optimized for the workload will give you about 10x the performance of the equivalent RDF warehouse. OLTP remains a relational-only domain. </cite> <cite>However, when we are talking about doing queries and analytics against the Web, or even against more than a handful of relational systems, the things which make RDBMS good become problematic.</cite> </blockquote> <p>If we think about Web 1.0 as a period where the distinguishing noun was: "Author", and Web 2.0 the noun: "Journalist", we should be able to see that what comes next is the noun: "Analyst". This new generation analyst would be equipped with de-referencable Web Identity courtesy of their Person <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Entity" id="link-id111ab7d0">Entity</a> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uniform_Resource_Identifier" id="link-id10f23220">URI</a>. The analyst's URI would also be the critical component of Web based low cost attribution ecosystem; one that ultimately turns the URI into the analyst's brand emblem / imprint.</p> <h3>Related</h3> <ul> <a href="http://blog.whatfettle.com/about/" id="link-id1120fb88">Paul Downey</a> - <a href="http://blog.whatfettle.com/2008/10/24/on-the-vanity-of-demanding-attribution/" id="link-id111590b8">Vanity of Demanding Attribution</a> </ul>
The Virtuous Web of Linked Data -- Business Perspective (Updated)
2008-10-24T18:49:18Z
2008-10-24T14:49:18-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1453
<p>RDF-ization is a term used by the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id14b4ebd0">Semantic Web</a> community to describe the process of generating RDF from non RDF <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data">Data</a> Sources such as (X)HTML, Weblogs, Shared Bookmark Collections, Photo Galleries, Calendars, Contact Managers, Feed Subscriptions, Wikis, and other <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Information" id="link-id13f2a2e0">information</a> resource collections. </p> <p>If the RDF generated, results in an <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Entity" id="link-id11281278">entity</a>-to-entity level network (graph) in which each entity is endowed with a de-referencable HTTP based ID (a <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uniform_Resource_Identifier" id="link-id148200f0">URI</a>), we end up with an enhancement to the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web">Web</a> that adds <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id112a5980">Hyperdata</a> linking across extracted entities, to the existing Hypertext based Web of linked documents (pages, images, and other information resource types). Thus, I can use the same <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uniform_Resource_Locator" id="link-id10ebc630">URL</a> linking mechanism to reference a broader range of "Things" i.e., documents, things that documents are about, or things loosely associated with documents.</p> <p>The <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com" id="link-id144304a8">Virtuoso</a> <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/Whitepapers/html/VirtSpongerWhitePaper.html" id="link-id14a96400">Sponger</a> is an example of an <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&q=rdf%20middleware&type=text&output=html" id="link-id14d36938">RDF Middleware</a> solution from <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/organization/openlink#this" id="link-id117e5c50">OpenLink Software</a>. It's an in-built component of the Virtuoso <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Virtuoso_Universal_Server" id="link-id14b4d0e0">Universal Server</a>, and deployable in many forms e.g., Software as Service (SaaS) or traditional software installation. It delivers RDF-ization services via a collection of Web information resource specific Cartridges/Providers/Drivers covering Wikipedia, Freebase, CrunchBase, WikiCompany, OpenLibrary, Digg, eBay, Amazon, RSS/Atom/OPML feed sources, XBRL, and many more.</p> <p>RDF-ization alone doesn't ensure valuable RDF based <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id14a75b48">Linked Data</a> on the Web. The process of producing RDF Linked Data is ultimately about the art of effectively describing resources with an eye for <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Context_%28language_use%29" id="link-id1442fea0">context</a>. </p> <h3>RDF-ization Processing Steps</h3> <ol> <li> Entity Extraction</li> <li> Vocabulary/Schema/Ontology (Data Dictionary) mapping</li> <li> HTTP based Proxy URI generation</li> <li>Linked Data Cloud Lookups (e.g., perform <a href="http://umbel.org/about/" id="link-id14432f00">UMBEL</a> lookup to add "isAbout" fidelity to graph and then lookup <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/DBpedia" id="link-id14485f40">DBpedia</a> and other <a href="http://community.linkeddata.org/dataspace/organization/lod#this" id="link-id115ea410">LOD</a> instance data enclaves for Identical individuals and connect via "owl:sameAs")</li> <li> RDF <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Resource_Description_Framework" id="link-id14ae31c0">Linked Data Graph</a> projection that uses the description of the container information resource to expose the URIs of the distilled entities.</li> </ol> <p>The animation that follows illustrates the process (5,000 feet view), from grabbing resources via HTTP GET, to injecting RDF Linked Data back into the Web cloud:</p> <div> <object> <embed src="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/screencasts/virtuoso-rdf-middleware.swf" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="800" height="600"></embed> </object> </div> <p>Note: the Shredder is a Generic Cartridge, so you would have one of these per data source type (information resource type).</p>
What is Linked Data oriented RDF-ization?
2008-10-07T21:35:24Z
2008-10-07T17:35:24-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1444
<h3>All about <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data">Data</a> Dictionary issues</h3> <p>Over emphasis on <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data_dictionary" id="link-id10e99460"><a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Description_logic" id="link-id0xa2800c0">Description Logics</a></a> (RDFS, OWL, Inference & Reasoning etc) matters without any actual real-world instance <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data" id="link-id0x9d3a838">data</a> (e.g., lot's of reasoning over RDF in zip files or local drives).</p> <img alt="Image" src="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/ldp_presentation/images/linked_data_people_schems_venn2_missing_lod.png" /> <h3>All about Linking Openly accessible RDF Data Sets</h3> <p>Over emphasis on Instance Data without Data Dictionary appreciation and utilization (e.g., <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id10ea0728">Linked Data</a> instance level linkage via "<a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/owl-ref/#sameAs-def" id="link-id10f2f650">owl:sameAs</a>"). </p> <img alt="Image" src="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/ldp_presentation/images/linked_data_people_schems_venn2_missing_dict.png" /> <h3>All about Applications & Frameworks</h3> <p>Here we are dealing with numerous applications and frameworks that inextricably bind Instance Data Management and Data Dictionaries. Basically, an all or nothing proposition, if you want to delve into the RDF <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id110b4970">Linked Data</a> solutions realm.</p> <img alt="Image" src="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/ldp_presentation/images/linked_data_people_schems_venn2_missing_modularity.png" /> <p>Often overlooked, is the fact that the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-ide398d40">Linked Data Web</a> - as an aspect of the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id19653440">Semantic Web</a> innovation continuum - is fundamentally about designing and constructing an "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Open_world_assumption" id="link-id19cac3a0">Open World</a>" compatible DBMS for the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Internet" id="link-id127fd198">Internet</a>. Thus, erstwhile "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Closed_world_assumption" id="link-id1252b338">Closed World</a>" DBMS components such as Data Dictionaries (handlers of Data Definition, Referential Integrity etc.) and actual Instance Data, are now distributed and loosely coupled. Thus, your data could be in one <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_Spaces" id="link-id12bf6338">Data Space</a> while the data dictionary resides in another. In actual fact, you could have several loosely bound data dictionaries that serve the specific Inference and Reasoning needs of a variety of applications, services, or agents. </p> <img alt="Image" src="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/ldp_presentation/images/linked_data_people_schems_venn2.png" />
Semantic Web: Travails to Harmony Illustrated (Updated)
2008-09-28T19:18:53Z
2008-09-28T15:18:53-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1442
<p>The sweet spot of <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web">Web</a> 3.0 (or any other Web.vNext moniker) is all about providing Web Users with a structured and interlinked <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data">data</a> substrate that facilitates serendipitous discovery of relevant "Things" i.e., a <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id10db3b48">Linked Data</a> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Giant_Global_Graph" id="link-id170db618">Web</a> -- a Web of Linkable Entities that goes beyond documents and other <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Information" id="link-id110a5d30">information</a> resource (data containers) types.</p> <p>Understanding potential <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id19e21c60">Linked Data</a> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Giant_Global_Graph" id="link-id16d008d0">Web</a> business models, relative to other Web based market segments, is best pursued via a<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/BCG_diagram" id="link-id14734148"> BCG Matrix</a> diagram, such as the one I've constructed below:</p> <br /> <img src="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/ldp_presentation/images/linked_data_sdq_quadarant.png" /> <br /> <h3>Notes:</h3> <h4>Link Density</h4> <ul> <li>Web 1.0's collection of "Web Sites" have relatively low link density relative to Web 2.0's user-activity driven generation of semi-structured <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id14c302d8">linked data</a> spaces (e.g., Blogs, Wikis, Shared Bookmarks, RSS/Atom Feeds, Photo Galleries, Discussion Forums etc..)</li> <li>Semantic Technologies (i.e. "<strong>Semantics Inside</strong> style solutions") which are primarily about "Semantic Meaning" culled from Web 1.0 Pages also have limited linked density relative to Web 2.0</li> <li>The <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id1286ab58">Linked Data</a> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Giant_Global_Graph" id="link-ide81ab20">Web</a>, courtesy of the open-ended linking capacity of URIs, matches and ultimately exceeds Web 2.0 link density.</li> </ul> <h4>Relevance</h4> <ul> <li>Web 1.0 and 2.0 are low relevance realms driven by hyperlinks to <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Information" id="link-id173db890">information</a> resources ((X)HTML, RSS, Atom, OPML, XML, Images, Audio files etc.) associated with Literal Labels and Tagging schemes devoid of explicit property based resource description thereby making the pursuit of relevance mercurial at best</li> <li>Semantic Technologies offer more relevance than Web 1.0 and 2.0 based on the increased <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Context_%28language_use%29" id="link-id124de510">context</a> that semantic analysis of Web pages accords</li> <li>The <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id111c4850">Linked Data</a> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Giant_Global_Graph" id="link-id16e4e4c0">Web</a>, courtesy of URIs that expose self-describing data entities, match the relevance levels attained by Semantic Technologies.</li> </ul> <h4>Serendipity Quotient (SDQ)</h4> <ul> <li>Web 1.0 has next to no serendipity, the closest thing is <a href="http://google.com" id="link-id16dceec8">Google's "I'm Feeling Lucky" button</a> </li> <li>Web 2.0 possess higher potential for serendipitous discovery than Web 1.0, but such potential is neutralized by inherent subjectivity due to its human-interaction-focused literal foundation (e.g., tags, voting schemes, wiki editors etc.)</li> <li>Semantic Technologies produce islands-of-relevance with little scope for serendipitous discovery due to <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uniform_Resource_Identifier" id="link-id18078e60">URI</a> invisibility, since the prime focus is delivering more <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Context_%28language_use%29" id="link-id1253cc38">context</a> to Web search relative to traditional Web 1.0 search engines.</li> <li>The <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id0x201d0ae8">Linked Data</a> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Giant_Global_Graph" id="link-id10c7fb70">Web</a>'s use of URIs as the naming and resolution mechanism for exposing structured and interlinked resources provides the highest potential for serendipitous discovery of relevant "Things"</li> </ul> <p>To conclude, the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data">Linked Data</a> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Giant_Global_Graph" id="link-id0x23ebbf90">Web</a>'s market opportunities are all about the evolution of the Web into a powerful substrate that offers a unique intersection of "Link Density" and "Relevance", exploitable across horizontal and vertical market segments to solutions providers. Put differently, SDQ is how you take "The Ad" out of "Advertising" when matching Web users to relevant things :-)</p>
The Linked Data Market via a BCG Matrix (Updated)
2008-09-26T16:36:56Z
2008-09-26T12:36:56-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1426
<p>Here is another "Linked Discourse" effort via a <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Blog" id="link-id13edcda8">blog</a> post that attempts to add perspective to a developing <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web">Web</a> based conversation. In this case, the conversation originates from <a href="http://geekaustin.org" id="link-id15a33728">Juan Sequeda</a>'s recent interview with <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/in/luxzia" id="link-id182a4a80">Jana Thompson</a> titled: <a href="http://geekaustin.org/2008/08/21/juan-sequeda-jana-thompson-necessity-semantic-web/" id="link-id146e1f40">Is the Semantic Web necessary (and feasible)?</a> </p> <blockquote> <cite>Jana: What are the benefits you see to the business community in adopting semantic technology? </cite> </blockquote> <p> <a href="http://myopenlink.net/dataspace/person/kidehen#this" id="link-id1941e3b0">Me</a>: Exposure, exploitation, of untapped treasure trove of interlinked <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data">data</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Information" id="link-id13593fc0">information</a>, and <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Knowledge" id="link-id1290c318">knowledge</a> across disparate IT infrastructure via conceptual entry points (<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Entity" id="link-id107bad60">Entity</a> IDs / URIs / Data Source Names) that refer to as "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Context_%28language_use%29" id="link-id15fab9f8">Context</a> Lenses".</p> <br /> <blockquote> <cite> Jana: Do you think these benefits are great enough for businesses to adopt the changes?</cite> </blockquote> <p> <a href="http://myopenlink.net/dataspace/person/kidehen#this" id="link-id0x584ffe0">Me</a>: Yes, infrastructural heterogeneity is a fact of corporate life (growth, mergers, acquisitions etc). Any technology that addresses these challenges is extremely important and valuable. Put differently, the opportunity costs associated with IT infrastructural heterogeneity remains high!</p> <br /> <blockquote> <cite>Jana: How large do you think this impact will actually be?</cite> </blockquote> <p>Me: Huge, enterprise have been aware of their data, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Information" id="link-id0x1b8057b0">information</a>, and <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Knowledge" id="link-id0x1b3e3760">knowledge</a> treasure troves etc. for eons. Tapping into these via a materialization of the "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Information">information</a> at your fingertips" vision is something they've simply been waiting to pursue without any platform lock-in, for as long as I've been in this industry.</p> <br /> <blockquote> <cite>Jana: I’ve heard, from contacts in the Bay Area, that they are skeptical of how large this impact of semantic technology will actually be on the web itself, but that the best uses of the technology are for fields such as medical information, or as you mentioned, geo-spatial data.</cite> </blockquote> <p>Me: Unfortunately, those people aren't connecting the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id10a337d8">Semantic Web</a> and open access to heterogeneous data sources, or the intrinsic value of holistic exploration location of <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Entity" id="link-id0xaa58c520">entity</a> based data networks (aka <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id188a1910">Linked Data</a>).</p> <br /> <blockquote> <cite> Jana: Are semantic technologies going to be part of the web because of people championing the cause or because it is actually a necessary step?</cite> </blockquote> <p>Me: <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id0x9eb9aca0">Linked Data</a> technology on the Web is a vital extension of the current Web. Semantic Technology without the "Web" component, or what I refer to as "Semantics Inside only" solutions, simply offer little or no value as Web enhancements based on their incongruence with the essence of the Web i.e., "Open Linkage" and no Silos! A nice looking Silo is still a Silo.</p> <br /> <blockquote> <cite>Jana: In the early days of the web, there was an explosion of new websites, due to the ease of learning HTML, from a business to a person to some crackpot talking about aliens. Even today, CSS and XHTML are not so difficult to learn that a determined person can’t learn them from W3C or other tutorials easily. If OWL becomes the norm for websites, what do you think the effects will be on the web? Do you think it is easy enough to learn that it will be readily adopted as part of the standard toolkit for web developers for businesses?</cite> </blockquote> <p>Me: Correction, learning HTML had nothing to do with the Web's success. The value proposition of the Web simply reached critical mass and you simply couldn't afford to not be part of it. The easiest route to joining the Web juggernaut was a Web Page hosted on a Web Site. The question right now is: what's the equivalent driver for the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data">Linked Data</a> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Giant_Global_Graph" id="link-id12e25c98">Web</a> bearing in mind the initial Web bootstrap. My answer is simply this: Open Data Access i.e., getting beyond the data silos that have inadvertently emerged from Web 2.0.</p> <br /> <blockquote> <cite> Jana: Following the same theme, do you think this will lead to an <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Internet" id="link-id17041398">internet</a> full of corporate-controlled websites, with sites only written by developers rather than individuals?</cite> </blockquote> <p> Me: Not at all, we will have an <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Internet" id="link-id0x16a4abe0">Internet</a> owned by it's participants i.e., You and the agents that work on your behalf.</p> <br /> <blockquote> <cite>Jana: So, you are imagining technologies such as <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Drupal" id="link-id107d1d70">Drupal</a> or <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/WordPress" id="link-id13f48db8">Wordpress</a>, that allow users to manage sites without a great deal of <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Knowledge">knowledge</a> of the nuts and bolts of current web technologies?</cite> </blockquote> <p>Me: Not at all! I envisage simple forms that provide conduits to powerful meshes of interlinked data spaces associated with Web users.</p> <br /> <blockquote> <cite>Jana: Given all of the buzz, and my own familiarity with ontology, I am just very curious if the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id0x1955d360">semantic web</a> is truly necessary? </cite> </blockquote> <p>Me:This question is no different than saying: I hear the Web is becoming a Database, and I wonder if a Data Dictionary is necessary, or even if access to structured data is necessary. It's also akin to saying: I accept "Search" as my only mechanism for Web interaction even though in reality, I really want to be able to "Find" and "Process" relevant things at a quicker rate than I do today, relative to the amount of information, and information processing time, at my disposal.</p> <br /> <blockquote> <cite>Jana: Will it be worth it to most people to go away from the web in its current form, with keyword searches on sites like Google, to a richer and more interconnected internet with potentially better search technology?</cite> </blockquote> <p>Me: As stated above, we need to add "Find" to the portfolio of functions we seek to perform against the Web. "Finding" and "Searching" are mutually inclusive pursuits at different ends of an activity spectrum.</p> <br /> <blockquote> <cite>Jana: For our more technical readers, I have a few additional questions: If no standardization comes about for mapping relational databases to domain ontologies, how do you see that as influencing the decisions about adoption of semantic technology by businesses? After all, the success of technology often lives or dies on its ease of adoption.</cite> </blockquote> <p>Me: Standardization of<a href="http://esw.w3.org/topic/Rdb2RdfXG/StateOfTheArt" id="link-id10abbc30"> RDBMS to RDF Mapping</a> is not the critical success factor here (of course it would be nice). As stated earlier, the issue of data integration that arises from IT infrastructural heterogeneity has been with decision makers in the enterprise for ever. The problem is now seeping into the broader consumer realm via Web ubiquity. The mistakes made in the enterprise realm are now playing out in the consumer Web realm. In both realms the critical success factors are:</p> <ol> <li> Scalable productivity relative to exponential growth of data generated across Intranets, Extranets, and the Internet</li> <li>Concept based <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Context_%28language_use%29" id="link-id0x114e6888">Context</a> Lenses that transcend logical and physical data heterogeneity by putting dereferencable URIs in front of the Line of Business Application Data and/or Web Data Spaces such as Blogs, Wikis, Discussion Forums etc.).</li> </ol>
Is the Semantic Web necessary (and feasible)?
2008-08-29T15:08:12Z
2008-08-29T11:08:12.000002-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1424
<p>After reading <a href="http://blog.crunchbase.com/2008/08/26/building-a-semantic-web-interview-with-benjamin-nowack/" id="link-id16b8e0e0">Bengee's interview with CrunchBase</a>, I decided to knock up a quick interview remix as part of my usual attempt to add to the developing discourse.</p> <blockquote> <cite><a href="http://www.crunchbase.com/" id="link-id17c8e7b8">CrunchBase</a>: When we released the <a href="http://www.crunchbase.com/help/api" id="link-id16681f68">CrunchBase API</a>, you were one of the first developers to step up and quickly released a <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com's%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1395" id="link-id1016d5f0">CrunchBase Sponger Cartridge</a>. Can you explain what a CrunchBase Sponger Cartridge is?</cite> </blockquote> <blockquote> <a href="http://myopenlink.net/dataspace/person/kidehen#this" id="link-id13243300">Me</a>: A Sponger Cartridge is a <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data">data</a> access driver for <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web">Web</a> Resources that plugs into our <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com" id="link-id17042f08">Virtuoso</a> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Virtuoso_Universal_Server" id="link-id1399b588">Universal Server</a> (DBMS and <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id137fd188">Linked Data</a> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Giant_Global_Graph" id="link-id100b23d8">Web</a> Server combo amongst other things). It uses the internal structure of a resource and/or a web service associated with a resource, to materialize an RDF based <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Resource_Description_Framework" id="link-id10418750">Linked Data graph</a> that essentially describes the resource via its properties (Attributes & Relationships). </blockquote> <br /> <img src="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/presentations/Creating_Deploying_Exploiting_Linked_Data2/images/ldp4.png" /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <blockquote> <cite>CrunchBase: And what inspired you to create it?</cite> </blockquote> <blockquote> <a href="http://myopenlink.net/dataspace/person/kidehen#this" id="link-id12fa60c0">Me</a>: Bengee built a new space with your data, and we've built a space on the fly from your data which still resides in your domain. Either solution extols the virtues of <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id101a8d28">Linked Data</a> i.e. the ability to explore relationships across data items with high degrees of serendipity (also colloquially known as: following-your-nose pattern in <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id14a3ff30">Semantic Web</a> circles).</blockquote> <blockquote> <a href="http://cb.semsol.org/" id="link-id182a0170">Bengee</a> posted a notice to the <a href="http://esw.w3.org/topic/SweoIG/TaskForces/CommunityProjects/LinkingOpenData" id="link-id131e8d10">Linking Open Data Community</a>'s public <a href="http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-lod/2008Jul/0110.html" id="link-id11dd0720">mailing list announcing his effort</a>. Bearing in mind the fact that we've been using <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/blog/~kidehen/?id=1144" id="link-id117cf6e8">middleware to mesh the realms of Web 2.0 and the Linked Data Web</a> for a while, it was a no-brainer to knock something up based on the conceptual similarities between <a href="http://wikicompany.org/wiki/Main_Page" id="link-id13b87a68">Wikicompany</a> and CrunchBase. In a sense, a quadrant of orthogonality is what immediately came to mind re. Wikicompany, CrunchBase, Bengee's RDFization efforts, and ours.</blockquote> <blockquote>Bengee created an RDF based <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id133c8fc8">Linked Data</a> warehouse based on the data exposed by your API, which is exposed via the <a href="http://cb.semsol.org/" id="link-id1826f928">Semantic CrunchBase</a> <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_Spaces" id="link-id102d8890">data space</a>. In our case we've taken the "RDFization on the fly" approach which produces a transient <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id16a0b8d0">Linked Data</a> View of the CrunchBase data exposed by your APIs. Our approach is in line with our world view: all resources on the Web are data sources, and the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id1668e6c8">Linked Data</a> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Giant_Global_Graph" id="link-id188e7da0">Web</a> is about incorporating HTTP into the naming scheme of these data sources so that the conventional <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uniform_Resource_Locator" id="link-id13490710">URL</a> based hyperlinking mechanism can be used to access a structured description of a resource, which is then transmitted using a range negotiable representation formats. In addition, based on the fact that we house and publish a lot of <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id169aa568">Linked Data</a> on the Web (e.g. <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/DBpedia" id="link-id10af10e8">DBpedia</a>, <a href="http://www.pingthesemanticweb.com/about/" id="link-id10a2b710">PingTheSemanticWeb</a>, and others), we've also automatically meshed Crunchbase data with related data in <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/DBpedia" id="link-id1403cd40">DBpedia</a> and Wikicompany data.</blockquote> <br /> <blockquote> <cite>CrunchBase: Do you know of any apps that are using CrunchBase Cartridge to enhance their functionality?</cite> </blockquote> <blockquote> <a href="http://myopenlink.net/dataspace/person/kidehen#this" id="link-id177d24c8">Me</a>: Yes, the <a href="http://ode.openlinksw.com" id="link-id10725ca0">OpenLink Data Explorer</a> which provides CrunchBase site visitors with the option to explore the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id17dedea8">Linked Data</a> in the CrunchBase <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_Spaces" id="link-id13f02a00">data space</a>. It also allows them to "Mesh" (rather than "Mash") CrunchBase data with other <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id11fb3ba0">Linked Data</a> sources on the Web without writing a single line of code. </blockquote> <br /> <blockquote> <cite>CrunchBase: You have been immersed in the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id12e18a00">Semantic Web</a> movement for a while now. How did you first get interested in the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id15132110">Semantic Web</a>?</cite> </blockquote> <blockquote> <a href="http://myopenlink.net/dataspace/person/kidehen#this" id="link-id0xddaa9c8">Me</a>: We saw the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id188b3330">Semantic Web</a> as a vehicle for standardizing conceptual views of heterogeneous data sources via <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Context_%28language_use%29" id="link-id10350978">context</a> lenses (URIs). In 1998 as part of our strategy to expand our business beyond the development and deployment of <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Open_Database_Connectivity" id="link-id171d6798">ODBC</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Java_Database_Connectivity" id="link-id138120a0">JDBC</a>, and OLE-DB data providers, we decided to build a <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Virtual_Database" id="link-id13ea6618">Virtual Database</a> Engine (see: <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/dataspace/dav/wiki/Main/VOSHistory" id="link-id11a4fa30">Virtuoso History</a>), and in doing so we sought a standards based mechanism for the conceptual output of the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Federated_database_system" id="link-id101a1248">data virtualization</a> effort. As of the time of the <a href="http://www.w3.org/DesignIssues/Semantic.html" id="link-id18882cf8">seminal unveiling of the Semantic Web in 1998</a> we were clear about two things, in relation to the effects of the Web and <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Internet" id="link-id12fa2c58">Internet</a> data management infrastructure inflections: 1) Existing DBMS technology had reached it limits 2) Web Servers would ultimately hit their functional limits. These fundamental realities compelled us to develop <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com" id="link-id102b09a0">Virtuoso</a> with an eye to leveraging the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id11984d98">Semantic Web</a> as a vehicle from completing its technical roadmap.</blockquote> <br /> <blockquote> <cite>CrunchBase: Can you put into layman’s terms exactly what RDF and <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SPARQL" id="link-id1066dcf0">SPARQL</a> are and why they are important? Do they only matter for developers or will they extend past developers at some point and be used by website visitors as well?</cite> </blockquote> <blockquote>Me: RDF (Resource Description Framework) is a Graph based Data Model that facilitates resource description using the <a href="http://www.eslincanada.com/englishlesson2.html" id="link-id178b94a8">Subject, Predicate, and Object principle</a>. Associated with the core data model, as part of the overall framework, are a number of markup languages for expressing your descriptions (just as you express presentation markup semantics in HTML or document structure semantics in XML) that include: <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/RDFa" id="link-id188db0a8">RDFa</a> (simple extension of HTML markup for embedding descriptions of things in a page), N3 (a human friendly markup for describing resources), RDF/XML (a machine friendly markup for describing resources).</blockquote> <blockquote> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SPARQL" id="link-id188c2030">SPARQL</a> is the query language associated with the RDF Data Model, just as <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SQL" id="link-id13f0ffe0">SQL</a> is a query language associated with the Relational Database Model. Thus, when you have RDF based structured and <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id166874d0">linked data</a> on the Web, you can query against Web using <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SPARQL" id="link-id1016cc98">SPARQL</a> just as you would against an <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Oracle_Database" id="link-id101c9708">Oracle</a>/<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SQL" id="link-id11cb0b18">SQL</a> Server/<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/IBM_DB2" id="link-id10760ec0">DB2</a>/<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/IBM_Informix" id="link-id1066c8c0">Informix</a>/<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Ingres" id="link-id18894f40">Ingres</a>/<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/MySQL" id="link-iddc9ebb0">MySQL</a>/etc.. DBMS using <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SQL" id="link-id1030d120">SQL</a>. That's it in a nutshell.</blockquote> <br /> <blockquote> <cite>CrunchBase: On your website you wrote that “RDF and <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SPARQL" id="link-id168e9ad0">SPARQL</a> as productivity boosters in everyday web development”. Can you elaborate on why you believe that to be true?</cite> </blockquote> <blockquote>Me: I think the ability to discern a formal description of anything via its discrete properties is of immense value re. productivity, especially when the capability in question results in a graph of <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id0x179f6328">Linked Data</a> that isn't confined to a specific host operating system, database engine, application or service, programming language, or development framework. RDF <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data">Linked Data</a> is about infrastructure for the true materialization of the "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Information" id="link-id13e475b8">Information</a> at Your Fingertips" vision of yore. Even though it's taken the emergence of RDF Linked Data to make the aforementioned vision tractable, the comprehension of the vision's intrinsic value have been clear for a very long time. Most organizations and/or individuals are quite familiar with the adage: <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Knowledge" id="link-id13e38a30">Knowledge</a> is Power, well there isn't any <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Knowledge" id="link-id188b7348">knowledge</a> without accessible <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Information" id="link-id140415d0">Information</a>, and there isn't any accessible <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Information" id="link-id11a976e8">Information</a> without accessible Data. The Web has always be grounded in accessibility to data (albeit via compound container documents called Web Pages).</blockquote> <blockquote>Bottom line, RDF based Linked Data is about Open <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Reference_(computer_science)" id="link-id1206bfb8">Data access by reference</a> using URIs (HTTP based <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Entity" id="link-idfaa6ce0">Entity</a> IDs / Data Object IDs / Data Source Names), and as I said earlier, the intrinsic value is pretty obvious bearing in mind the costs associated with integrating disparate and heterogeneous data sources -- across intranets, extranets, and the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Internet" id="link-id188ecc68">Internet</a>.</blockquote> <br /> <blockquote> <cite>CrunchBase: In his definition of Web 3.0, Nova Spivack proposes that the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id12e2d968">Semantic Web</a>, or Semanti<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/C_(programming_language)" id="link-id105744c0">c</a> Web technologies, will be force behind much of the innovation that will occur during Web 3.0. Do you agree with Nova Spivack? What role, if any, do you feel the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id13fa4218">Semantic Web</a> will play in Web 3.0?</cite> </blockquote> <blockquote>Me: I agree with Nova. But I see Web 3.0 as a phase within the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id188c9000">Semantic Web</a> innovation continuum. Web 3.0 exists because Web 2.0 exists. Both of these Web versions express usage and technology focus patterns. Web 2.0 is about the use of Open Source technologies to fashion Web Services that are ultimately used to drive proprietary Software as Service (SaaS) style solutions. Web 3.0 is about the use of "Smart Data Access" to fashion a new generation of Linked Data aware Web Services and solutions that exploit the federated nature of the Web to maximum effect; proprietary branding will simply be conveyed via quality of data (cleanliness, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Context_%28language_use%29" id="link-id188d2ef8">context</a> fidelity, and comprehension of privacy) exposed by URIs.</blockquote> <p>Here are some examples of the CrunchBase Linked Data <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_Spaces" id="link-id122756f8">Space</a>, as projected via our CruncBase Sponger Cartridge:</p> <ol> <li> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/rdfbrowser2/?uri=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.crunchbase.com%2Fcompany%2Famazon" id="link-id13e0fd18">Amazon.com</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/rdfbrowser2/?uri=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.crunchbase.com%2Fcompany%2Fmicrosoft" id="link-id13eef9e0">Microsoft</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/rdfbrowser2/?uri=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.crunchbase.com%2Fcompany%2Fgoogle" id="link-id13fe47a0">Google</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/rdfbrowser2/?uri=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.crunchbase.com%2Fcompany%2Fapple" id="link-id170c73b8">Apple</a> </li> </ol>
Crunchbase & Semantic Web Interview (Remix - Update 1)
2008-08-28T00:35:15Z
2008-08-27T20:35:15-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1385
<p>The build up to <a href="http://www.linkeddataplanet.com" id="link-id110a2350">Linked Data Planet</a> continues... Here is <a href="http://www.semanticweb.com" id="link-id11083a68">semanticweb.com</a>'s interview with <a href="http://www.cs.rpi.edu/~hendler/" id="link-id10c4e560">Jim Hendler</a> and *<a href="http://community.linkeddata.org/dataspace/person/kidehen2#this" id="link-id10e71dc8">I</a>* titled: <a href="http://www.semanticweb.com//article.php/3751731" id="link-id1071c688">Linked Data Leaders - The Semantic Web is Here</a>.</p>
Internet.com Interviews Jim Hendler & I
2008-06-12T00:55:15Z
2008-06-11T20:55:15-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1366
<p>Courtesy of <a href="http://novaspivack.typepad.com/about.html" id="link-id101d8750">Nova Spivack</a>'s post titled: <a href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/typepad/MindingThePlanet/~3/295624567/tagging-and-the.html" id="link-id11067248">Tagging and the Semantic Web: Tags as Objects</a>, I stumbled across a related post by <a href="http://www.designmills.com/" id="link-idffb9a38">John Clarke</a> titled: <a href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/DesignMills/~3/294554634/" id="link-id101d6138">Tagging and the Semantic Web</a>. Both of these posts use the common practice of tagging to shed light on the increasing realization that "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Context_%28language_use%29" id="link-id11011f98"><a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1356" id="link-id1003f248">The Pursuit of Context</a></a>" is the fusion point between the current <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web">Web</a> and its evolution into a structured Web of <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id101d6788">Linked Data</a>.</p> <h3>How Semantic Tagging Works (from a 1000 feet)</h3> <p>When tagging a document, the semantic tagging service passes the content of a target document through a processing pipeline (a distillation process of sorts) that results in automagic extraction of the following:</p> <ul> -- <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Named_entity_recognition" id="link-id1015fdd0">Named Entities</a> </ul> <ul>-- <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Topic" id="link-id100ccff8">Subject matter Entities</a> (<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Topic" id="link-idfe9a898">Subject matter Concepts</a> reflecting topics covered by the document</ul> <p>Once the extraction phase is completed, a user is presented with a list of "suggested tags" using a variety of user interaction techniques. The literal values of elected Tags are then associated with one or more <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Tag" id="link-idfed5eb0">Tag</a> and <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Tag" id="link-id101ae0c8">Tag</a> Meaning <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data">Data</a> Objects, with each Object type endowed with a unique Identifier.</p> <h3>Issues to Note</h3> <p>Broad acceptance that: "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Context_%28language_use%29" id="link-id100b9010">Context</a> is king", is gradually taking shape. That said, "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Context_%28language_use%29" id="link-id101d2670">Context</a>" landlocked within Literal values offers little over what we have right now (e.g. at <a href="http://del.icio.us" id="link-id1004be08">Del.icio.us</a> or <a href="http://www.technorati.com" id="link-id100421c8">Technorati</a>), long term. By this I mean: if the end product of semantically enhanced tagging leaves us with: Literal <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Tag" id="link-id101e5730">Tag</a> values only, Tags associated with <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Tag" id="link-id1004a890">Tag</a> Data Objects endowed with platform specific Identifiers, or <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Tag" id="link-id100364f8">Tag</a> Data Objects with any other Identity scheme that excludes <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Hypertext_Transfer_Protocol" id="link-id101e6630">HTTP</a>, the ability of Web users to discern or derive multiple perspectives from the base <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Context_%28language_use%29" id="link-id10180868">Context</a> (exposed by semantically enhanced Tags) will be lost, or severely impeded at best.</p> <p>The shape, form, and quality of the lookup substrate that underlies semantic tagging services, ultimately affects "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Context_%28language_use%29" id="link-id10160f28">context</a> fidelity" matters such as <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Entity" id="link-id100f2618">Entity</a> Disambiguation. The importance of quality lookup infrastructure on the burgeoning <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Giant_Global_Graph" id="link-id10044b10">Linked Data Web</a> is the reason why <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/organization/openlink#this" id="link-id10102360">OpenLink Software</a> is intimately involved with the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/DBpedia" id="link-id110760f8">DBpedia</a> and <a href="http://umbel.org/about/" id="link-id1015fc68">UMBEL</a> projects. </p> <h3>Conclusions</h3> <p>I am immensely happy to see that the Web 2.0 and <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-idffb8ca8">Semantic Web</a> communities are beginning to coalesce around the issue of "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Context_%28language_use%29" id="link-id101656b0">Context</a>". This was the case at the <a href="http://events.linkeddata.org/ldow2008/" id="link-id1017b878">WWW2008 Linked Data Workshop</a>, I am feeling a similar vibe emerging from the <a href="http://www.semantic-conference.com/" id="link-idffb9978">Semantic Web Technologies</a> conference currently nearing completion in San Jose. Of course, I will be talking about, and demonstrating practical utility of all of this, at the upcoming <a href="http://www.linkeddataplanet.com" id="link-id10042168">Linked Data Planet</a> conference.</p> <h3>Related</h3> <ul> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/tagcloud" id="link-id147a1848">My Data Space Tag Cloud</a> (*a <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id0x24756e98">Linked Data</a> <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_Spaces" id="link-id0x24c2bd20">Space</a>*) </ul> <ul> <a href="http://www.faviki.com/" id="link-id101ac668">Faviki</a> (note: this service needs to expose <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id1042cdc0">Linked Data</a> compliant <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Tag" id="link-id1038c2e0">Tag</a> URIs) </ul> <ul> <a href="http://moat-project.org/ontology" id="link-id10199770">MOAT Ontology</a> </ul>
Context, Tagging, Semantic Web, and Linked Data (Updated)
2008-05-27T22:36:37Z
2008-05-27T18:36:37-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1329
<p>For all the one-way feed consumers and aggregators, and readers of the original post, here is a variant equipped hyperlinked phrases as opposed to words. As I stated in the prior post, the post (like most of my posts) was part experiment / dog-fodding of automatic tagging and hyper-linking functionality in <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/OpenLink_Data_Spaces" id="link-id0x194f56f0">OpenLink Data Spaces</a>. </p> <p> <a href="http://www.readwriteweb.com" id="link-id0x1bddde00">ReadWriteWeb</a> via <a href="http://alexiskold.wordpress.com/" id="link-id154ae848">Alex Iskold's post</a> have delivered another iteration of their "Guide to Semantic Technologies". </p> <p>If you look at the title of this post (and <a href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/%7Er/readwriteweb/%7E3/257943334/semantic_web_patterns.php" id="link-id10a9a900">their article</a>) they seem to be accurately providing a guide to Semantic Technologies, so no qualms there. If on the other hand, this is supposed to he a guide to the "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id0x15ccef28">Semantic Web</a>" as prescribed by <a href="http://www.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee/card#i" id="link-id0xb94a2d40">TimBL</a> then they are completely missing the essence of the whole subject, and demonstrably so I may add, since the entities: "<a href="http://www.readwriteweb.com">ReadWriteWeb</a>" and "<a href="http://www.linkedin.com/in/iskold" id="link-id0x19960308">Alex Iskold</a>" are only describable today via the attributes of the documents they publish i.e their respective blogs and hosted <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Blog" id="link-id0x1a719968">blog</a> posts.</p> <blockquote> <p>Preoccupation with Literal objects as describe above, implies we can only take what "ReadWriteWeb" and "<a href="http://www.linkedin.com/in/iskold">Alex Iskold</a>" say "Literally" (<a href="http://dbpedia/resource/Grep" id="link-id0xbc8568f8">grep</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/regular_expression" id="link-id0x1d915e70">regex</a>, and <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/XPath" id="link-id0xbc617820">XPath</a>/<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/XQuery" id="link-id0x150e1c50">Xquery</a> are the only tools for searching deeper in this Literal realm), we have no sense of what makes them tick or where they come from, no history (bar "About Page" blurb), no <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data">data</a> connections beyond anchored text (more pointers to opaque data sources) in post and blogrolls. The only connection between this post and them is the my deliberate use of the same literal text in the Title of this post.</p> </blockquote> <p><a href="http://www.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee/card#i">TimBL</a>'s vision as espoused via the "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web">Semantic Web</a>" vision is about the production, consumption, and sharing of Data Objects via HTTP based Identifiers called URIs/IRIs (<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id0xb867ced0">Hyperdata</a> Links / <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id0x3c8f438">Linked Data</a>). It's how we use the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web">Web</a> as a <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/federated_database_system" id="link-id0xbcb04f20">Distributed Database</a> where (as <a href="http://www.cs.umd.edu/~hendler/2003/foaf.rdf#jhendler" id="link-id0xb8595f18">Jim Hendler</a> once stated with immense clarity): I can point to records (<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Entity" id="link-id0xbc9c8ab8">entity</a> instances) in your database (aka <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_Spaces" id="link-id0x3b911c0">Data Space</a>) from mine. Which is to say that if we can all point to data entities/objects (not just data entities of type "Document") using these Location, Value, and Structure independent Object Identifiers (courtesy of HTTP) we end up with a much more powerful Web, and one that is closer to the "Federated and Open" nature of the Web.</p> <p>As I stated in a prior post, if you or your platform of choice aren't producing de-referencable URIs for your data objects, you may be Semantic (this data model predates the Web), but there is no "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web" id="link-id0xbcb968b0">World Wide Web</a>" in what you are doing.</p> <h2>What are the Benefits of the Semantic Web?</h2> <ul> <strong>Consumer</strong> - "Discovery of relevant things" and be being "Discovered by relevant things" (people, places, events, and other things)</ul> <ul> <strong>Enterprise</strong> - ditto plus the addition of enterprise domain specific things such as market opportunities, product portfolios, human resources, partners, customers, competitors, co-opetitors, acquisition targets, new regulation etc..)</ul> <h2>Simple demo:</h2> <blockquote> <p>I am a <a href="http://myopenlink.net/dataspace/person/kidehen#this" id="link-id0x150661b0">Kingsley Idehen</a>, a Person who authors <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/blog/~kidehen" id="link-id0x3b956d0">this weblog</a>. I also share bookmarks gathered over the years across an array of subjects via <a href="http://myopenlink.net/dataspace/kidehen/bookmark/KingsleyBookmarks" id="link-id0x164fecb0">my bookmark data space</a>. I also subscribe to a number of RSS/Atom/RDF feeds, which I share via my feeds subscription data <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_Spaces">space</a>. Of course, all of these data sources have Tags which are collectively exposed via my <a href="http://myopenlink.net/dataspace/kidehen/weblog/MyBlogDataSpace/tagcloud" id="link-id0x15188c50">weblog tag-cloud</a>, feeds subscriptions <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Tag" id="link-id0x5f38b98">tag</a>-cloud, and <a href="http://myopenlink.net/dataspace/kidehen/bookmark/KingsleyBookmarks/tagcloud" id="link-id0xb93c2a50">bookmarks tag-cloud</a> data spaces.</p> <p>As I don't like repeating myself, and I hate wasting my time or the time of others, I simply share <a href="http://myopenlink.net/dataspace/kidehen" id="link-id0x3aeba98">my Data Space</a> (a collection of all of my purpose specific data spaces) via the Web so that others (friends, family, employees, partners, customers, project collaborators, competitors, co-opetitors etc.) can can intentionally or serendipitously discover relevant data en route to creating new <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Information" id="link-id0x14e35d78">information</a> (perspectives) that is hopefully exposed others via the Web.</p> </blockquote> <p>Bottom-line, the Semantic Web is about adding the missing "Open Data Access & Connectivity" feature to the current Document Web (we have to beyond <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/regular_expression">regex</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia/resource/Grep">grep</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/XPath">xpath</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/XQuery">xquery</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Full_text_search" id="link-id0x1c1bf9c8">full text search</a>, and other literal scrapping approaches). The <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data">Linked Data</a> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Giant_Global_Graph" id="link-id0x14c9e0e8">Web</a> of de-referencable data object URIs is the critical foundation layer that makes this feasible.</p> <p> Remember, It's not about "Applications" it's about Data and actually freeing Data from the "tyranny of Applications". Unfortunately, application inadvertently always create silos (esp. on the Web) since <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Entity">entity</a> data modeling, open data access, and other database technology realm matters, remain of secondary interest to many application developers.</p> <p>Final comment, RDF facilitates Linked Data on the Web, but all RDF isn't endowed with de-referencable URIs (a major source of confusion and misunderstanding). Thus, you can have RDF Data Source Providers that simply project RDF data silos via Web Services APIs if RDF output emanating from a Web Service doesn't provide out-bound pathways to other data via de-referencable URIs. Of course the same also applies to Widgets that present you with all the things they've discovered without exposing de-referencable URIs for each item.</p> <p>BTW - my final comments above aren't in anyway incongruent with devising successful business models for the Web. As you may or may not know, OpenLink is not only a major platform provider for the Semantic Web (expressed in our UDA, <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com" id="link-id0xb919b098">Virtuoso</a>, OpenLink Data Spaces, and OAT products), we are also actively seeding Semantic Web (tribe: Linked Data of course) startups. For instance, <a href="http://zitgist.com/about/" id="link-id0x1481b218">Zitgist</a>, which now has <a href="http://community.linkeddata.org/dataspace/person/mkbergman#this" id="link-id0xb869bb18">Mike Bergman</a> as it's CEO alongside <a href="http://fgiasson.com/me/" id="link-id0x1d18fe50">Frederick Giasson</a> as CTO. Of course, I cannot do <a href="http://zitgist.com/about/">Zitgist</a> justice via a footnote in a <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Blog">blog</a> post, so I will expand further in a separate post.</p> <h2>Additional <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Information">information</a> about this blog post: </h2> <ol> <li> I didn't spent hours looking for URIs used in my hyperlinks</li> <li> The post is best viewed via an RDF Linked Data aware user agents (<a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/rdfbrowser" id="link-id0x19af3468">OpenLink RDF Browser</a>, Zitgist <a href="http://dataviewer.zitgist.com" id="link-id0x13b17138">Data Viewer</a>, <a href="http://www4.wiwiss.fu-berlin.de/rdf_browser" id="link-id0xbc8579e0">DISCO Hyperdata Browser</a>, <a href="http://dig.csail.mit.edu/2005/ajar/release/tabulator/0.8/tab.html" id="link-id0x18ad0ec8">Tabulator</a>).</li> </ol>
Semantic Web Patterns: A Guide to Semantic Technologies (Update 2)
2008-07-17T01:43:36Z
2008-07-16T21:43:36-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1328
<p> <a href="http://www.readwriteweb.com" id="link-id11846528">ReadWriteWeb</a> via <a href="http://alexiskold.wordpress.com/" id="link-id154ae848">Alex Iskold</a> have delivered another iteration of their "Guide to Semantic Technologies". </p> <p>If you look at the title of this post (and <a href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/%7Er/readwriteweb/%7E3/257943334/semantic_web_patterns.php" id="link-id10a9a900">their article</a>) they seem to be accurately providing a guide to Semantic Technologies, so no qualms there. If on the other hand, this is supposed to he a guide to the "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id0xbcb19320">Semantic Web</a>" as prescribed by <a href="http://www.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee/card#i" id="link-id0xb8725878">TimBL</a> then they are completely missing the essence of the whole subject, and demonstrably so I may add, since the entities: "<a href="http://www.readwriteweb.com" id="link-id0x16804040">ReadWriteWeb</a>" and "<a href="http://www.linkedin.com/in/iskold" id="link-id0x13f08538">Alex Iskold</a>" are only describable today via the attributes of the documents they publish i.e their respective blogs and hosted <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Blog" id="link-id0x1850ca98">blog</a> posts. </p> <blockquote> <p>Preoccupation with Literal objects as describe above, implies we can only take what "<a href="http://www.readwriteweb.com">ReadWriteWeb</a>" and "<a href="http://www.linkedin.com/in/iskold">Alex Iskold</a>" say "Literally" (<a href="http://dbpedia/resource/Grep" id="link-id0xb95a6a40">grep</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/regular_expression" id="link-id0x1a719968">regex</a>, and <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/XPath" id="link-id0xb89d78b8">XPath</a>/<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/XQuery" id="link-id0x1bddde00">Xquery</a> are the only tools for searching deeper in this Literal realm), we have no sense of what makes them tick or where they come from, no history (bar "About Page" blurb), no <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data">data</a> connections beyond anchored text (more pointers to opaque data sources) in post and blogrolls. The only connection between this post and them is the my deliberate use of the same literal text in the Title of this post.</p> </blockquote> <p><a href="http://www.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee/card#i">TimBL</a>'s vision as espoused via the "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web">Semantic Web</a>" vision is about the production, consumption, and sharing of Data Objects via HTTP based Identifiers called URIs/IRIs (<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id0x150e7be0">Hyperdata</a> Links / <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id0x18e50818">Linked Data</a>). It's how we use the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web">Web</a> as a <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/federated_database_system" id="link-id0x194f56f0">Distributed Database</a> where (as <a href="http://www.cs.umd.edu/~hendler/2003/foaf.rdf#jhendler" id="link-id0x17043b38">Jim Hendler</a> once stated with immense clarity): I can point to records (<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Entity" id="link-id0x1476f788">entity</a> instances) in your database (aka <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_Spaces" id="link-id0x2621140">Data Space</a>) from mine. Which is to say that if we can all point to data entities/objects (not just data entities of type "Document") using these Location, Value, and Structure independent Object Identifiers (courtesy of HTTP) we end up with a much more powerful Web, and one that is closer to the "Federated and Open" nature of the Web.</p> <p>As I stated in a prior post, if you or your platform of choice aren't producing de-referencable URIs for your data objects, you may be Semantic (this data model predates the Web), but there is no "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web" id="link-id0xb860eec8">World Wide Web</a>" in what you are doing.</p> <h2>What are the Benefits of the Semantic Web?</h2> <ul> <strong>Consumer</strong> - "Discovery of relevant things" and be being "Discovered by relevant things" (people, places, events, and other things)</ul> <ul> <strong>Enterprise</strong> - ditto plus the addition of enterprise domain specific things such as market opportunities, product portfolios, human resources, partners, customers, competitors, co-opetitors, acquisition targets, new regulation etc..)</ul> <h2>Simple demo:</h2> <blockquote> <p>I am a <a href="http://myopenlink.net/dataspace/person/kidehen#this" id="link-id0x15394798">Kingsley Idehen</a>, a Person who authors <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/blog/~kidehen" id="link-id0x2556670">this weblog</a>. I also share bookmarks gathered over the years across an array of subjects via <a href="http://myopenlink.net/dataspace/kidehen/bookmark/KingsleyBookmarks" id="link-id0x142eaa10">my bookmark data space</a>. I also subscribe to a number of RSS/Atom/RDF feeds, which I share via my feeds subscription data <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_Spaces">space</a>. Of course, all of these data sources have Tags which are collectively exposed via my <a href="http://myopenlink.net/dataspace/kidehen/weblog/MyBlogDataSpace/tagcloud" id="link-id0x140b8050">weblog tag-cloud</a>, feeds subscriptions <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Tag" id="link-id0x15158d60">tag</a>-cloud, and <a href="http://myopenlink.net/dataspace/kidehen/bookmark/KingsleyBookmarks/tagcloud" id="link-id0xb8652490">bookmarks tag-cloud</a> data spaces.</p> <p>As I don't like repeating myself, and I hate wasting my time or the time of others, I simply share <a href="http://myopenlink.net/dataspace/kidehen" id="link-id0x13b63208">my Data Space</a> (a collection of all of my purpose specific data spaces) via the Web so that others (friends, family, employees, partners, customers, project collaborators, competitors, co-opetitors etc.) can can intentionally or serendipitously discover relevant data en route to creating new <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Information" id="link-id0x14365150">information</a> (perspectives) that is hopefully exposed others via the Web.</p> </blockquote> <p>Bottom-line, the Semantic Web is about adding the missing "Open Data Access & Connectivity" feature to the current Document Web (we have to beyond <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/regular_expression">regex</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia/resource/Grep">grep</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/XPath">xpath</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/XQuery">xquery</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Full_text_search" id="link-id0x15ccef28">full text search</a>, and other literal scrapping approaches). The <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data">Linked Data</a> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Giant_Global_Graph" id="link-id0x1a2810b8">Web</a> of de-referencable data object URIs is the critical foundation layer that makes this feasible.</p> <p> Remember, It's not about "Applications" it's about Data and actually freeing Data from the "tyranny of Applications". Unfortunately, application inadvertently always create silos (esp. on the Web) since <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Entity">entity</a> data modeling, open data access, and other database technology realm matters, remain of secondary interest to many application developers.</p> <p>Final comment, RDF facilitates Linked Data on the Web, but all RDF isn't endowed with de-referencable URIs (a major source of confusion and misunderstanding). Thus, you can have RDF Data Source Providers that simply project RDF data silos via Web Services APIs if RDF output emanating from a Web Service doesn't provide out-bound pathways to other data via de-referencable URIs. Of course the same also applies to Widgets that present you with all the things they've discovered without exposing de-referencable URIs for each item.</p> <p>BTW - my final comments above aren't in anyway incongruent with devising successful business models for the Web. As you may or may not know, OpenLink is not only a major platform provider for the Semantic Web (expressed in our UDA, <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com" id="link-id0x19e44e80">Virtuoso</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/OpenLink_Data_Spaces" id="link-id0xb8637720">OpenLink Data Spaces</a>, and OAT products), we are also actively seeding Semantic Web (tribe: Linked Data of course) startups. For instance, <a href="http://zitgist.com/about/" id="link-id0x397b940">Zitgist</a>, which now has <a href="http://community.linkeddata.org/dataspace/person/mkbergman#this" id="link-id0x5fabcf0">Mike Bergman</a> as it's CEO alongside <a href="http://fgiasson.com/me/" id="link-id0xb84720f8">Frederick Giasson</a> as CTO. Of course, I cannot do <a href="http://zitgist.com/about/">Zitgist</a> justice via a footnote in a <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Blog">blog</a> post, so I will expand further in a separate post.</p> <h2>Additional <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Information">information</a> about this blog post:</h2> <ol> <li> I didn't spent hours looking for URIs used in my hyperlinks </li> <li> The post is best viewed via an RDF Linked Data aware user agents (<a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/rdfbrowser" id="link-id0x3ac1b68">OpenLink RDF Browser</a>, Zitgist <a href="http://dataviewer.zitgist.com" id="link-id0x1d8e7ec0">Data Viewer</a>, <a href="http://www4.wiwiss.fu-berlin.de/rdf_browser" id="link-id0x19af3468">DISCO Hyperdata Browser</a>, <a href="http://dig.csail.mit.edu/2005/ajar/release/tabulator/0.8/tab.html" id="link-id0x1532e630">Tabulator</a>).</li> </ol>
Semantic Web Patterns: A Guide to Semantic Technologies (Update 1)
2008-07-17T01:43:04Z
2008-07-16T21:43:04-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1293
<p>In response to the <a href="http://www.readwriteweb.com" id="link-id0x1f562c28">ReadWriteWeb</a> piece titled: <a href="http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/semantic_web_what_is_the_killer_app.php" id="link-id0x16961368">Semantic Web: What is the Killer App.</a> by <a href="http://www.readwriteweb.com/about_alex.php" id="link-id0x16909678">Alex Iskold</a>:</p> <p>Information overload and Data Portability are two of the most pressing and imminent challenges affecting every individual connected to the global village exposed by the Internet and World Wide Web. I wrote an earlier post titled: <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1267" id="link-idfeb7718">Why We Need Linked Data</a> that shed light on frequently overlooked realities about the Document Web.</p> <p>The real Killer application of the Semantic Web (imho) is <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id10571ef0">Linked Data</a> (or Hyperdata), just as the killer application of the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web" id="link-id102be888">Document Web</a> was Linked Documents (Hyperlinks). Linked Data enables human users (indirectly) and software agents (directly in response to human instruction) to traverse Web Data Spaces (Linked Data enclaves within the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giant_Global_Graph" id="link-id10b6ba08">Giant Global Graph</a>).</p> <p>Semantic Web applications (conduits between humans and agents) that take advantage of Linked Data include:</p> <p> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/DBpedia" id="link-id10fcc8f8">DBpedia</a> - General Knowledge sourced from <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Wikipedia" id="link-id10570808">Wikipedia</a> and a host of other Linked Data Spaces.</p> <p>Various Linked Data Browsers: <a href="http://dataviewer.zitgist.com" id="link-id139a2300">Zitgist Data Viewer</a>, <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/rdfbrowser" id="link-id12fb46f0">OpenLink RDF Browser</a>, <a href="http://www4.wiwiss.fu-berlin.de/rdf_browser" id="link-idff652c0">DISCO Browser</a>, and TimBL's <a href="http://dig.csail.mit.edu/2005/ajar/ajaw/tab.html" id="link-idff63998">Tabulator</a>.</p> <p> <a href="http://zlinks.zitgist.com/" id="link-idff62b90">zLknks </a>- Linked Data Lookup technology for Web Content Publishing systems (note: more to come on this in a future post).</p> <p> <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenLink_Data_Spaces" id="link-id1054a708">OpenLink Data Spaces</a> - a solution for Data Portability via a Linked Data Junction Box for Web 1.0 ((X)HTML Document Webs), 2.0 (XML Web Services based Content Publishing, Content Syndication, and Aggregation), and 3.0 (Linked Data) Data Spaces. Thus, via my URI (when viewed through a Linked Data Browser/Viewer) you can traverse my Data Space (i.e my Linked Data Graph) generated by the following activities:</p> <ul>Blog Posts publishing</ul> <ul>My RSS & Atom Content Subscriptions (what used to be called a "Blogroll")</ul> <ul>My Bookmarks (from my Desktop and Del.icio.us)</ul> <ul>and other things I choose to share with the public via the Web</ul> <p> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Virtuoso_Universal_Server" id="link-idff89b08">Virtuoso</a> - a Universal Server Platform that includes <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/wiki/main/Main/VOSRDF" id="link-id12ff8810">RDF Data Management</a>, <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/presentations/Virtuoso_Sponger_1/Virtuoso_Sponger_1.html" id="link-idf7739b8">RDFization Middleware</a>, <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/presentations/RDF_Mapping_Presentation_W3C_workshop3/RDF_Mapping_Presentation_W3C_workshop3.html" id="link-id1025ca28">SQL-RDF Mapping</a>, <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/presentations/Virtuoso_Deploying_Linked_Data/Virtuoso_Deploying_Linked_Data.html" id="link-id1324db10">RDF Linked Data Deployment</a>, alongside a hybrid/multi-model, virtual/federated data service in a single product offering.</p> <p></p>BTW - There is a <a href="http://events.linkeddata.org/ldow2008/" id="link-id117a0190">Linked Data Workshop</a> at this years <a href="http://www2008.org/" id="link-id102abe28">World Wide Web conference</a>. Also note the <a href="http://esw.w3.org/topic/HCLS/WWW2008" id="link-id100c3a88">Healthcare & Life Science Workshop</a> which is a related Linked Data technology and Semantic Web best practices realm.
Semantic Web Killer Application?
2008-02-05T01:32:42Z
2008-02-04T20:32:42.000003-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1203
<p>As the <a href="http://blogs.talis.com/nodalities/2007/05/linked_data_the_real_semantic.php">Linked Data meme</a> beams across the Web, it is important to note that Ontology / Schema sharing and reuse is critical to the overall vitality of the burgeoning Semantic Data Web.</p> <p>The items that follow attempt to demonstrate the point by way of SIOC (<a href="http://rdfs.org/sioc/spec/">Semantically-Interlinked Online Communities Ontology</a>) and MO (<a href="http://musicontology.com/">Music Ontology</a>) domain exploration:</p> <p> <b>Linked Data or Dynamic Data Web Pages</b>:</p> <ol> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.openlinksw.com:8890/DAV/home/demo/dataweb/linked_data_pages/music_ontology_overview.isparql">Music Ontology Overview</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.openlinksw.com:8890/DAV/home/demo/dataweb/linked_data_pages/sioc_ontology_overview.isparql">SIOC Ontology Overview</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.openlinksw.com:8890/DAV/home/demo/dataweb/linked_data_pages/sioc_types_ontology_module.isparql">SIOC Type Ontology Module</a> (how you extend SIOC Concepts unobtrusively)</li> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.openlinksw.com:8890/DAV/home/demo/dataweb/linked_data_pages/sioc_services_ontology_overview.isparql">SIOC Services Ontology Module</a> (how you extend SIOC in relation to Services Modeling).</li> </ol> <p> <b>Semantic Web Browser Sessions</b>:</p> <ol> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.openlinksw.com:8890/DAV/home/demo/dataweb/browser_sessions/exploring_music_the_ontology.wqx">Music Ontology Overview via OpenLink RDF Browser</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.openlinksw.com:8890/DAV/home/demo/dataweb/browser_sessions/exploring_sioc.wqx">SIOC Ontology Overview via OpenLink RDF Browser</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.openlinksw.com:8890/DAV/home/demo/dataweb/browser_sessions/exploring_sioc_types_modules.wqx">SIOC Type Ontology Module </a>via OpenLink RDF Browser<br /> </li> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.openlinksw.com:8890/DAV/home/demo/dataweb/browser_sessions/exploring_sioc_services.wqx">SIOC Services Ontology Module </a>via OpenLink RDF Browser.</li> </ol> <p>Key point, if you are modeling People, Communities, Organizations, Documents, and other entities in the People, Organizations, Documents etc. Data Space, don't forget to : FOAF-FOAF-FOAF it Up! :-)</p>
Shared Ontologies Linked Data Style!
2007-06-01T23:54:05Z
2007-06-01T19:54:05.000001-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1202
<p>Over the last few hours the FOAF project received a <a href="http://dannyayers.com/2007/05/25/foaf-0">wakeup call</a> via <a href="http://danbri.org/">Dan Brickley</a>'s <a href="http://xmlns.com/foaf/spec">FOAF 0.9</a> "touch" effort.</p> <p>Naturally, this triggered an obvious opportunity to demonstrate the prowess of <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linked_Data">Linked Data</a> on the Semantic Web. What follows is a quick dump of what I sent to the <a href="http://lists.foaf-project.org/mailman/listinfo/foaf-dev">foaf-dev</a> mailing list:</p> <p>Here are variety of FOAF Views built using:</p> <ul> - <a href="http://dbpedia.openlinksw.com:8890/DAV/JS/rdfbrowser/index.html">OpenLink RDF Browser</a> </ul> <ul> - <a href="http://dbpedia.openlinksw.com:8890/isparql">Interactive SPARQL QBE </a> </ul> <ul> - <a href="http://dbpedia.openlinksw.com:8890/sparql">Raw SPARQL Endpoint</a> </ul> <p>Enabling you to explore the following lines:</p> <ul> - <a href="http://dbpedia.openlinksw.com:8890/DAV/home/demo/dataweb/linked_data_pages/foaf_overview.isparql">FOAF Overview via a Linked Data Page</a> (same as Dynamic Data Page) </ul> <ul> - <a href="http://dbpedia.openlinksw.com:8890/DAV/home/demo/dataweb/linked_data_pages/foaf_overview_by_status.isparql">FOAF Overview by Term Status via Linked Data Page</a> </ul> <ul> - <a href="http://dbpedia.openlinksw.com:8890/DAV/home/demo/dataweb/queries/foaf_overview.rq">FOAF Overview SPARQL Query (.rq File)</a> </ul> <ul> - <a href="http://dbpedia.openlinksw.com:8890/DAV/home/demo/dataweb/queries/foaf_overview_by_status.rq">FOAF Overview by Term Status</a> </ul> <ul> - <a href="http://tinyurl.com/2hpeau">FOAF Overview via OpenLink RDF Browser</a> </ul>
Exploring FOAF Linked Data Style!
2007-05-25T18:36:47Z
2007-05-25T14:36:47-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1193
<p>The term "<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Community">Community</a>" is beginning resonate across the increasing number of conversations centered around the growing appreciation of the <a href="http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/apr2007/tc20070409_961951.htm">Semantic Data Web Vision</a>. I've been troubled in the past with the once growing tendency to disconnect <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_network">social networks</a> from Graph based Conceptual Data Models as expressed in the underlying infrastructure (Data Management layer) of many first generation social networking services.</p> <p>Last week, <a href="http://www.johnbreslin.com">John Breslin</a> published a post that contained a very nice presentation of what is best described as "<a href="http://www.johnbreslin.com/blog/2007/04/23/t-sioc-object-centred-sociality/">Objects of Our Sociality</a>". The presentation provides insight into the elements that collectively drive the creation of People & Data networks (communities). The presentation certainly unveils the often forgotten fact that although People & Data network construction is always socially driven, our intentions aren't always amorous :-)</p> <p>At the core of the<a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&q=semantic%20data%20web&type=text&output=html"> Semantic Data Web vision</a> is the desire to leverage the "<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Network_effect">network effects</a>" that communities provide, while exponentially reducing the cost of knowledge creation, discovery, and exchange in the process.</p> <p>In short, the Semantic Data Web ultimately enables us to collectively do our bit for a greater good! Thus, quoting <a href="http://www.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee/">TimBL</a>, "<a href="http://www.w3.org/2006/Talks/0314-ox-tbl/#(22)">you do your bit and others will do theirs</a>" :-)</p>
It's the Community, Cupid!
2008-02-05T04:20:25Z
2008-02-04T23:20:25.000002-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1190
<p dir="ltr">As I continue my quest to unravel the thinking and vison behind the "Universal Server" branding of <a href="http://www.openlnksw.com/virtuoso">Virtuoso</a>, it always simplifies matters when I come across articles that bring context to this vision. </p> <p dir="ltr">Tim Berners-Lee provided a <a href="http://www.w3.org/2004/Talks/0519-tbl-keynote/">keynote at WWW2004</a> earlier this week, and <a href="http://www.xml.com/pub/au/192">Paul Ford </a>provided a <a href="http://www.xml.com/pub/a/2004/05/20/www-timbl.html">keynote breakdown</a> from which I have scrapped a poignant excerpt that helps me illuminate Virtuoso's role in the inevitable semantic web.</p> <p dir="ltr">First off, I see the <a href="http://www.w3.org/DesignIssues/Semantic.html">Semantic Web</a> as a core component of Web 2.x (a minor upgrade of <a href="http://www.web2con.com/">Web 2.0</a>), and I see Virtuoso as a definitive Web 2.0 (and beyond) technology, hence the use today of the branding term "Universal Server". A term that I expect to become a common product moniker in the not too distant future.</p> <p dir="ltr">The first challenge that confronts the semantic web is the creation of Semantic content. How will the content be created? Ideally, this should come from data, at the end of the day this is a data contextualization process. The excerpt below from Paul's <a href="http://www.xml.com/pub/a/2004/05/20/www-timbl.html">article</a> highlights the point:</p> <blockquote dir="ltr" style="margin-right: 0px;"> <p>Rather than concerning themselves unduly with hewing to existing ontologies, Berners-Lee pushed developers to start using RDF and triples more aggressively. In particular, he wants to see existing databases exported as RDF, with ontologies created ad-hoc to match the structure of that data. Rather than using PHP scripts only to produce HTML, he suggested, create RDF as well. Then, when all of the RDF is aggregated, apply rules and see what happens. "Let's not fall back on handmade markup."</p> </blockquote> <p dir="ltr">Data in existing databases does not have to be exported as RDF, especially if sensitivity to change is a specific contextual requirement. Naturally, the assumption is made that most databases don't have the ability to produce RDF so an additonal tool would be required to perform the data exports and transformation, and then a separate HTTP server makes this repurposed RDF data accessible over HTTP.</p> <blockquote dir="ltr" style="margin-right: 0px;"> <p dir="ltr">Later in the talk, he described a cascade of Semantic Web connections, postulating that one day, individuals may be able to follow links from a parts catalog to order status, from location to weather to taxes.</p> </blockquote> <p dir="ltr">The final excerpt (above) outlines the kinds of interactions that the Semantic Web facilitates. The traversal from a "part catalog" to "order status", or from "location" to "weather" to "taxes", illustrates the roles that services and service orchestration will also play in the Semantic Web era.</p> <p dir="ltr">Thus, we can safely deduce the following about the semantic web:</p> <ol dir="ltr"> <li> <div>It has RDF at its foundation </div> </li> <li> <div>We need to transform existing data into RDF; ideally retaining sensitivity to changes</div> </li> <li> <div>Allows ontologies to be associated with RDF post generation</div> </li> <li> <div>RDF graph navigation will be event driven and orchestrated (the cascading effect)</div> </li> <li> <div>There will be an RDF Query Language (there are several burgeoning ones currently)</div> </li> <li> <div>HTTP will be the prime transport protocol</div> </li> </ol> <p>I would also like to conclude that what we know today, as the monolithic "point of presence" on the web called a "Web Site" (which infers browsing and page serving), is naturally going to morph into a different kind of "point of presence" that is capable of delivering the following from a single process:</p> <ol> <li> <div>Serve up Semantic Data from existing data sources </div> </li> <li> <div>Provide execution endpoints for Web Services</div> </li> <li> <div>Provide an instigation point for events that trigger Service Orchestratio</div> </li> </ol> <p>This is what Virtuoso is all about, and why it is described as a "Universal Server"; a server instance that speaks many protocols, delivering a plethora of functionality (Database, Web Services Platform, Orchestration Engine, and more).</p>
Semantic Web brings clarity to the Universal Server concept
2007-04-23T16:42:13Z
2007-04-23T12:42:13-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1144
<p>As I have stated, and implied, in various posts about the Data Web and burgeoning Semantic Web in general; the value of RDF is felt rather than seen (driven by presence as opposed to web sites). That said, it is always possible to use the visual Interactive-Web dimension (Web 1.0) as a conduit to the Data-Web dimension.</p> <p>In this third take on my introduction to the Data Web I would like to share a link with you (a Dynamic Start Page in Web 2.0 parlance) with a Data Web twist: You do not have to preset the Start Page Data Sources (this is a small-big thing, if you get my drift, hopefully!).</p> <p>Here are some Data Web based Dynamic Start Pages that I have built for some key play ers from the Semantic Web realm (in random order):</p> <ol> <li> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/home/demo/Public/Queries/danbri_dataspace.isparql.xml">Dan Brickley</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/home/demo/Public/Queries/timbl_dataspace.isparql.xml">Tim Berners-Lee</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/home/demo/Public/Queries/danc_dataspace.isparql.xml">Dan Connolly</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/home/demo/Public/Queries/danja_dataspace.isparql.xml">Danny Ayers</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/home/demo/Public/Queries/planet_rdf_dataspace.isparql.xml">Planet RDF</a> </li> </ol> <p>"These are RDF prepped Data Sources....", you might be thinking, right? Well here is the reminder: <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/blog/~kidehen/?id=1122">The Data Web is a Global Data Generation and Integration Effort</a>. Participation may be active (Semantic Web & Microformats Community), or passive (web sites, weblogs, wikis, shared bookmarks, feed subscription, discussion forums, mailing lists etc..). Irrespective of participation mode, RDF instance can be generated from close to anything (I say this because I plan to add binary files holding metadata to this mix shortly). Here are examples of Dynamic Start Pages for non RDF Data Sources:</p> <ol> <li> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/home/demo/Public/Queries/delicious_web20_events_dataspace.isparql.xml">del.icio.us Web 2.0 Events Bookmarks</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/home/demo/Public/Queries/vecosys_dataspace.isparql.xml">Vecosys</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/home/demo/Public/Queries/techcrunch_dataspace.isparql.xml">Techcrunch</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/home/demo/Public/Queries/jonudell_dataspace.isparql.xml">Jon Udell's Blog</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/home/demo/Public/Queries/davewiner_dataspace.isparql.xml">Dave Winer's Scripting News</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/home/demo/Public/Queries/scobelizer_dataspace.isparql.xml">Robert Scoble's Blog</a> </li> </ol> <p>what about Microformats you may be wondering? Here goes:</p> <ol> <li> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/home/demo/Public/Queries/microformats_dataspace.isparql.xml">Microformats Wiki</a> (click on the Brian Suda link for instance) </li> <li> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/home/demo/Public/Queries/planet_microformats_dataspace.isparql.xml">Microformats Planet</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/home/demo/Public/Queries/delicious_microformats_dataspace.isparql.xml">Del.icio.us Microformats Bookmarks</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/home/demo/Public/Queries/ben_adida_dataspace.isparql.xml">Ben Adida's home page</a> (RDFa)</li> </ol> <p>Let's carry on.</p> <p>How about some traditional Web Sites? Here goes:</p> <ol> <li> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/home/demo/Public/Queries/openlink_dataspace.isparql.xml">OpenLink Software's Home Page</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/home/demo/Public/Queries/oracle_dataspace.isparql.xml">Oracle's Home Page</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/home/demo/Public/Queries/apple_dataspace.isparql.xml">Apple's Home Page</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/home/demo/Public/Queries/microsoft_dataspace.isparql.xml">Microsoft's Home Page</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/home/demo/Public/Queries/ibm_dataspace.isparql.xml">IBM's Home Page</a> </li> </ol> <p>And before I forget, here is <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/home/demo/Public/Queries/kidehen_dataspace.isparql.xml">My Data Web Start Page </a>.</p> <p>Due to the use of Ajax in the Data Web Start Pages, IE6 and Safari will not work. For Mac OS X users, Webkit works fine. Ditto re. IE7 on Windows.</p>
Hello Data Web (Take 3 - Feel The "RDF" Force)
2007-02-24T22:01:28Z
2007-02-24T17:01:28-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1143
<p>I just overheard the following dialog between my six year old son and his play date:</p> <blockquote> <pre> Play Date: What is that thing on the Wall? My Son: Security Alarm Play Date: How does it work My Son: If you click on that top button and then open the door, I will have to enter a code when we come back in or the alarm will go off Play Date: What is the code? My Son: I can't tell you that! Play Date: Why not? My Son: You might come and steal something from our house! Play Date: No I won't! My Son: Well, you might tell someone that might come and steal something from our house! or that person could tell someone who could tell someone that would steal from our house</pre></blockquote> <p>LOL!! of course! At the same time wondering, how come a majority of adults don't quite see the need for granular access to Web Data in a manner that enables computers and humans to collectively arrive at similar decisions? </p> <p>Putting Data in context en route to producing actionable knowledge is a transient endeavor that engages a myriad of human senses. We demonstrate comprehension of this fact in our daily existence as social creatures (at a very early age as depicted above). That said, we seem to forget this fact when engaging the Web: If we can't see it then it can't be valuable.</p> <blockquote> <p>BTW - I just received a ping about the "<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/route79/399029535/">Sensory Web</a>" (which is just another way of describing a Data Driven Web experience from my vantage point.)</p> </blockquote> <p>In the popular M-V-C pattern you don't see the "M", but the "M" will kill you if you get it wrong (it is the FORCE)! Coming to think about it, the pattern could have been coined: V-C-M or C-M-V, but isn't for obvious reasons :-)</p> <p>RDF is the vehicle that enables us tap into the Data aspect of the Web. We started off with pages of blurb linked via hypertext (Web 1.0) and then looked to "Keywords" for some kind of data access; we then isolated some "Verbs" and discovered another dimension of Web Interaction (Web 2.0) but looked to these "Verbs" for data access which left us with Mashups; and now we are starting to extract "Nouns" and "Adjectives" from sentences (Subject, Predicate, Object - Triples) associated with resources on the Web (Data Web / Web 3.0 / Semantic Web Layer 1) which provides a natural data access substrate for <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&q=meshups&type=text&output=html">Meshups</a> (natural joining of disparate data from a plethora of data sources) while providing the foundation layer for the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Semantic_Web">Semantic Web</a>.</p> <p>For those who need use-cases that demonstrate tangible value re. the Semantic Web, here are some projects to note courtesy of the <a href="http://www.w3.org/2001/sw/sweo/">Semantic Web Education and Outreach</a> (SWEO) interest group: </p> <ol> <li> <a href="http://esw.w3.org/topic/SweoIG/TaskForces/CommunityProjects/FOAFWhitelisting">FOAF based White-lists</a> - Attacking SPAM </li> <li> <a href="http://esw.w3.org/topic/SweoIG/TaskForces/CommunityProjects/LinkingOpenData">Open Data Access and Linking for the Data Web</a> - Data Integration and Generation effort that creates a cluster of RDF instance data from a myriad of data sources relating to every day things such as: People, Places, Events, Projects, Discussions, Music, Books, and other things </li> <li> <a href="http://esw.w3.org/topic/SweoIG/TaskForces/CommunityProjects/PowderExtension">Content Labeling</a> - Protecting our kids on the Web amongst other matters relating to knowledge about data sources </li> <li> <a href="http://esw.w3.org/topic/SweoIG/TaskForces/CommunityProjects">Others..</a> </li> </ol> Related posts: <ol> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&q=rdf%20data%20integration&type=text&output=html">Data Web and Global Data Integration & Generation Effort</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&q='data%20web'&type=text&output=html">Previous Data Web posts</a>.</li> </ol>
Our Basic Human Instincts
2007-02-24T00:55:49Z
2007-02-23T19:55:49-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1081
<p> <a href="http://novaspivack.typepad.com/nova_spivacks_weblog/">Nova Spivack</a> provides poignant insights into the recent Web 2.0 vs Web 3.0 brouhaha which I've excerpted below: </p> <blockquote> <a href="http://novaspivack.typepad.com/nova_spivacks_weblog/2006/11/web_me20_explod.html">Web Me2.0 -- Exploding the Myth of Web 2.0</a>: <p>"Many people have told me this week that they think 'Web 2.0' has not been very impressive so far and that they really hope for a next-generation of the Web with some more significant innovation under the hood -- regardless of what it's called. A lot of people found the Web 2.0 conference in San Francisco to be underwhelming -- there was a lot of self-congratulation by the top few brands and the companies they have recently bought, but not much else happening. Where was all the innovation? Where was the focus on what's next? It seemed to be a conference mainly about what happened in the last year, not about what will happen in the coming year. But what happened last year is already so 'last year.' And frankly Web 2.0 still leaves a lot to be desired. The reason Tim Berners-Lee proposed the Semantic Web in the first place is that it will finally deliver on the real potential and vision of the Web. Not that today's Web 2.0 sucks completely -- it only sort of sucks. It's definitely useful and there are some nice bells and whistles we didn't have before. But it could still suck so much less!"</p> </blockquote> <p>Web 2.0 is a (not was) a piece of the overall Web puzzle. The Data Web (so called Web 3.0) is another critical piece of this puzzle, especially as it provides the foundation layer (Layer 1) of the Semantic Web.</p> <p>Web 2.0 was never about "Open Data Access", "Flexible Data Models", or "Open World" meshing of disparate data sources built atop disparate data schemas (see: <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/blog/~kidehen/?id=1032">Web 2.0's Open Data Access Conundrum</a>). It was simply about "Execution and APIs". I already written about "Web Interaction Dimensions", but you call also look at the relationship of the currently perceived dimensions through the M-V-C programming pattern: </p> <ol> <li>Viewer (V) - Web 1.0 (Interaction, Dimension 1 - Interactive-Web)</li> <li>Controller (C) - Web 2.0 (Services, Dimension 2 - Services-Web which is about Execution & Application Logic; SOA outside/in-front-of the Firewall for Enterprise 2.0 crowd)</li> <li>Model (M) - Web 3.0 (Data, Dimension 3 - Data-Web which is about data model dexterity and open data access)</li> </ol> <p>Another point to note, Social Networking is hot, but nearly every social network that I know (and I know and use most of them) suffers from an impedance mismatch between the service(s) they provide (social networks) and their underlying data models (in many cases Relational as opposed to Graph). Networks are about Relationships (N-ary) and your cannot effectively exploit the deep potential of: "Network Effects" (Wisdom of Crowds, Viral Marketing etc..) without a complimentary data model, you simply can't.</p> <p>Finally, the Data Web is already here, I promised a long time ago (Internet Time) that the manifestation of the Semantic Web would occur unobtrusively, meaning, we will wake up one day and realize we are using critical portions of the Semantic Web (i.e. Data-Web) without even knowing it. Guess what? It's already happening. Simple case in point, you may have started to notice the emergence of <a href="http://rdfs.org/sioc/spec/">SIOC</a> gems in the same way you may have observed those RSS 2.0 gems at the dawn of Web 2.0. What I am implying here is that the real question we should be asking is: Where is the Semantic Web Data? And how easy or difficult will it be to generate? And where are the tools? My answers are presented below:</p> <p> </p> <ol> <li> <a href="http://pingthesemanticweb.com/">Pingthesemanticweb.com</a> - Semantic Web Data Source Lookup & Tracking Service</li> <li> <a href="http://swoogle.umbc.edu/">Swoogle </a>- Semantic Web Ontology Location Service</li> <li> <a href="http://esw.w3.org/topic/RdfAndSql">Semantic Web Solutions for Generating RDF Data from SQL Data</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://esw.w3.org/topic/SemanticWebTools">Semantic Web Solutions Directory</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://sioc-project.org/">SIOC Project</a> - Semantically-Interlinked Online Communities Ontology, a grassroots effort that provides a critical bridge between Web 2.0 and the Data-Web. For instance, existing Web 2.0 application profiles such as; Blogs, Wikis, Feed Aggregators, Content Managers, Discussion Forums etc.. are much closer to the Data-Web than you may think :-) </li> <li> <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/wiki/main/Main/">Virtuoso</a> - our <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virtuoso_Universal_Server">Universal Server</a> for the Data-Web</li> <li> <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/wiki/main/Main/OdsIndex">OpenLink Data Spaces</a> (ODS) - our SIOC based platform for transparent incorporation of the Data-Web into Web 1.0 and Web 2.0</li> </ol> <p>Next stop, less writing, more demos, these are long overdue! At least from my side of the fence :-) I need to produce a little step-by-guide oriented screencasts that demonstrates how Web 2.0 meshes nicely with the Data-Web.</p> <p>Here are some (not so end-user friendly) examples of how you can use <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/rdf-sparql-query/">SPARQL</a> (Data-Web's Query Language) to query Web 2.0 Instance Data projected through the SIOC Ontology:</p> <p> </p> <ol> <li> <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/wiki/main/Main/ODSSIOCRef#Weblog%20Data%20Space">Weblog Data Query</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/wiki/main/Main/ODSSIOCRef#Wiki%20Data%20Space">Wiki Data Query</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/wiki/main/Main/ODSSIOCRef#Feeds%20/%20Subscriptions%20Data%20Space%20(Feed%20Aggregation)">Aggregated Feeds Data Query</a> - (RSS 1.0, RSS 2.0, Atom etc)</li> <li a="a" href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/wiki/main/Main/ODSSIOCRef#Bookmarks%20Data%20Space">Shared Bookmarks Data Space</li> <li> <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/wiki/main/Main/ODSSIOCRef#Briefcase%20Applications%20Data%20Space">Web Filesystem Data Query</a> - (Briefcase - Virtual Spotlight of sorts)</li> <li> <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/wiki/main/Main/ODSSIOCRef#Photo%20Gallery%20Data%20Space">Photo Gallery Data Query</a> (this could be data from Flickr etc..)</li> <li> <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/wiki/main/Main/ODSSIOCRef#Discussion%20/%20Conversation%20Data%20Space">Discussion Data Query</a> (e.g. Blog posts comments)</li> <li> <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/wiki/main/Main/ODSSIOCRef#Generic%20Data%20Space%20Queries">Data Queries across different Data Spaces</a> - combining data from Wikis, Blogs, Feeds, Photos, Bookmarks, Discussions etc..</li> </ol> <p>Note: You can use the online SPARQL Query Interface at: http://demo.openlinksw.com/isparql.</p> <p> </p> <p> Other Data-Web Technology usage demos include:</p> <p> </p> <ol> <li> <a href="http://www.w3.org/2005/ajar/tab">TimBL's Tabulator</a> - A Data-Web Browser</li> <li> <a href="http://sites.wiwiss.fu-berlin.de/suhl/bizer/ng4j/semwebclient/#examples">Semantic Web Client Library</a> - <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/rdf-concepts/">RDF</a> Data Drill Down Demos using SPARQL</li> <li> <a href="http://sioc-project.org/firefox">Semantic Radar</a> - A Firefox plug-in for auto-discovering SIOC Instance Data</li> <li> <a href="http://www.talkdigger.com/">Talk Digger</a> - SIOC based Web Conversation Tracker</li> </ol>
Web Me2.0 -- Exploding the Myth of Web 2.0
2006-11-16T21:11:46Z
2006-11-16T16:11:46-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1080
<p>It's kind of ironic to see what has emerged after <a href="http://iswc2006.semanticweb.org/" id="link-id12171fc0">ISWC 2006</a> and the <a href="http://web2con.com/" id="link-id10fff940">Web 2.0 Summit</a>. From my vantage point, it appears as though the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web">Web</a> 2.0 event inadvertently (albeit beneficially) left its attendees looking for the next big thing re. the Web Innovation Continuum as exemplified by the <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/12/business/12web.html?ei=5094&en=a34a6306f48166fb&hp=&ex=1163394000&partner=homepage&pagewanted=all" id="link-id145eb180">"Web 3.0" meme from the New York Times (NYT)</a> which triggered the current "Web 2.0 vs Web 3.0 Brouhaha".</p> <p>Amongst the numerous comments about this subject, I felt most compelled to respond to the commentary from Tim O'Reilly (based on his proximity to Web 2.0 etc..) in relation to his view that the NYT's Web 3.0 = Collective Intelligence Harnessing aspect of his <a href="http://www.oreillynet.com/pub/a/oreilly/tim/news/2005/09/30/what-is-web-20.html" id="link-id10b00010">Web 2.0 meme</a>. </p> <p>My response is dumped semi-verbatim below:</p> <blockquote> <p>Tim,</p> <p>A few things:</p> <ol> <li> We are in an innovation continuum </li> <li> The Web as a medium of innovation will evolve forever </li> <li> Different commentators have different views about monikers associated with these innovations</li> <li> To say Web 3.0 (aka the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data">Data</a> Web or <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id0xb1aeb88">Semantic Web</a> - Layer 1) is what Web 2.0's collective intelligence is all about is a little inaccurate (IMHO); Web 2.0 doesn't provide "Open Data Access" </li> <li> Web 2.0 is a "Web of Services" primarily, a dimension of "Web Interaction" defined by interaction with Services </li> <li> Web 3.0 ("Data Web" or "Web of Databases" or "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web">Semantic Web</a> - Layer 1") is a Web dimension that provides "Open Data Access" that will be exemplified by the transition from "Mash-ups" (brute force data joining) to "Mesh-ups" (natural data joining) </li> </ol> <p> The original "Web of Hypertext" or "Interactive Web", the current "Web of Services", and the emerging "Data Web" or "Web of Databases" collectively provide dimensions of interaction in the innovation continuum called the Web. </p> <p> There are many more dimensions to come. Monikers come and go, but the retrospective "Long Shadow" of Innovation is ultimately timeless.</p> <p> "Mutual Inclusivity" is a critical requirement for truly perceiving these "<a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&q=web%20dimensions&type=text&output=html" id="link-id10de2178">Web Interaction Dimensions</a>" ("Participation" if I recall). "Mutual Exclusivity" on the other hand, simpy leads to obscuring reality with Versionitis as exemplified by the ongoing: Web 1.0 vs 2.0 vs 3.0 debates.</p> </blockquote> <p>BTW - I enjoyed reading <a href="http://www.roughtype.com/archives/2006/11/welcome_web_30.php" id="link-id1855a380">Nick Carr's take on the Web 3.0 meme</a>, especially his "tongue in cheek" power-grab for the rights to all "Web 3.0" Conferences etc. :-) </p>
Web 2.0 vs Web 3.0 Brouhaha!
2008-09-05T03:00:54Z
2008-09-04T23:00:54-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1067
<p> <a href="http://www.geospatialsemanticweb.com/2006/10/22/geonames-marches-foward-with-ontology-v12#comments">Geonames marches foward with ontology v1.2</a>: "</p> <p> <a title="geonames" href="http://geonames.org">Geonames</a> announced the release of its <a title="http://www.geonames.org/ontology/ontology_v1.2.rdf" target="_blank" href="http://www.geonames.org/ontology/ontology_v1.2.rdf">Geonames ontology v1.2</a>. The new ontology has few enhancements. It introduced the notion of <em>linked data</em> and made clear distinction between URI that intended for linking documents and for linking ontology concepts.</p> <p> <a id="more-156"></a>Different types of geospatial data are of different spatial granularity. Data of different spatial granularity may relate to each other by the containment relation. For example, countries contain states, states contains cities and so on. Some geospatial data are of the similar spatial granularity (e.g., two cities that are nearby each other, or two countries that are neighboring each other). To support the knowledge representation of these relationships, the ontology introduced three new properties: <em>childreanFeatures</em>, <em>nearbyFeatures</em> and <em>neighbouringFeatures</em>.</p> <p>In the Semantic Web, both ontology concepts and physical web documents are linked by URI. Sometimes in applications, it’s useful to make clear whether the use of a URI is intended for linking documents or for linking ontology concepts. The new Geonames ontology introduced a URI convention for identifying the intended usage of a URI. This convention also simplifies the discovering of geospatial data using Geonames web services.</p> <p>Here is an example:</p> <ul> <li>URI for linking to the concept city Berlin: <a target="_blank" title="http://sws.geonames.org/2950159/" href="http://sws.geonames.org/2950159/">http://sws.geonames.org/2950159/</a> </li> <li>URI for linking to the descriptions about the city Berlin: <a target="_blank" title="http://sws.geonames.org/2950159/about.rdf" href="http://sws.geonames.org/2950159/about.rdf">http://sws.geonames.org/2950159/about.rdf</a> </li> <li>URI for linking to the descriptions of places that are nearby Berlin: <a target="_blank" title="http://sws.geonames.org/2950159/nearby.rdf" href="http://sws.geonames.org/2950159/nearby.rdf">http://sws.geonames.org/2950159/nearby.rdf</a> </li> </ul> <p>Other interesting ontology properties include <em>wikipediaArticle</em> and <em>locationMap</em>. The former links a <em>Feature </em>instance to a Web article on <a target="_blank" title="wikipedia" href="http://www.wikipedia.org">Wikipedia</a>, and the latter links a <em>Feature </em>instance to a digital map Web page.</p> <p>For additional information about Geonames ontology v1.2, see <a target="_blank" title="Semantic Web : Concept vs Document" href="http://geonames.wordpress.com/2006/10/21/semantic-web-concept-vs-document/">Marc’s post</a> at the Geonames blog. </p>" <p>(Via <a href="http://www.geospatialsemanticweb.com">Geospatial Semantic Web Blog</a>.)</p>
Geonames marches foward with ontology v1.2
2006-10-23T13:02:33Z
2006-10-23T09:02:33-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1012
<p>Additional commentary from <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/oerling/">Orri Erling</a>. re. ORDBMS, ADO.NET vNext, and RDF (in relation to Semantic Web Objects):</p> <p> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/oerling/?id=1007">More Thoughts on ORDBMS Clients, .NET and RDF</a>:</p> <blockquote>Continuing on from the previous post... If Microsoft opens the right interfaces for independent developers, we see many exciting possibilities for using ADO .NET 3 with <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/wiki/main/">Virtuoso</a>. <p>Microsoft quite explicitly states that their thrust is to decouple the client side representation of data as .NET objects from the relational schema on the database. This is a worthy goal.</p> <p>But we can also see other possible applications of the technology when we move away from strictly relational back ends. This can go in two directions: Towards object oriented database and towards making applications for the semantic web.</p> <p>In the OODBMS direction, we could equate Virtuoso table hierarchies with .NET classes and create a tighter coupling between client and database, going as it were in the other direction from Microsofts intended decoupling. For example, we could do typical OODBMS tricks such as prefetch of objects based on storage clustering. The simplest case of this is like virtual memory, where the request for one byte brings in the whole page or group of pages. The basic idea is that what is created together probably gets used together and if all objects are modeled as subclasses of (subtables) of a common superclass, then, regardless of instance type, what is created together (has consecutive ids) will indeed tend to cluster on the same page. These tricks can deliver good results in very navigational applications like GIS or CAD. But these are rather specialized things and we do not see OODBMS making any great comeback.</p> <p>But what is more interesting and more topical in the present times is making clients for the RDF world. There, the<a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/owl-ref/"> OWL Ontology Language</a> could be used to make the .NET classes and the DBMS could, when returning URIs serving as subjects of triple include specified predicates on these subjects, enough to allow instantiating .NET instances as 'proxies' of these RDF objects. Of course, only predicates for which the client has a representation are relevant, thus some client-server handshake is needed at the start. What data could be prefetched is like the intersection of a concise bounded description and what the client has classes for. The rest of the mapping would be very simple, with IRIs becoming pointers, multi-valued predicates lists and so on. IRIs for which the RDF type were not known or inferable could be left out or represented as a special class with name-value pairs for its attributes, same with blank nodes.</p> <p>In this way,.NETs considerable UI capabilities could directly be exploited for visualizing RDF data, only given that the data complied reasonably well with a known ontology.</p> <p>If an <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/rdf-sparql-query/">SPARQL</a> query returned a resultset, IRI type columns would be returned as .NET instances and the server would prefetch enough data for filling them in. For a SPARQL CONSTRUCT, a collection object could be returned with the objects materialized inside. If the interfaces allow passing an Entity SQL string, these could possibly be specialized to allow for a SPARQL string instead. LINQ might have to be extended to allow for SPARQL type queries, though.</p> <p>Many of these questions will be better answerable as we get more details on Microsofts forthcoming ADO .NET release. We hope that sufficient latitude exists for exploring all these interesting avenues of development. </p> </blockquote>
More Thoughts on ORDBMS Clients, ADO.NET vNext, and RDF
2006-07-18T18:28:58Z
2006-07-18T14:28:58.000001-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1005
<p>Microsoft's recent unveiling of the next <a href="http://msdn.microsoft.com/data/default.aspx?pull=/library/en-us/dnvs05/html/ADONETEnFrmOvw.asp">generation of ADO.NET</a> has pretty much crystalized a long running hunch that the era of standardized client/user level interfaces for "Object-Relational" technology is neigh. Finally, this application / problem domain is attracting the attention of industry behemoths such as Microsoft.</p> <p> </p> <p>In an initial response to these developments<a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/oerling/">Orri Erling</a>, Virtuoso's Program Manager, shares <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/oerling/?id=1002">valuable insights from past re. Object-Relational technology developments and deliverables challenges</a>. As Orri notes, the Virtuoso team suspended ORM and ORDBMS work at the onset of the <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/wiki/main/Main/VOSHistory">Kubl-Virtuoso transition</a> due to the lack of standardized client-side functionality exposure points.</p> <p>My hope is that Microsoft's efforts trigger community wide activity that result in a collection of interfaces that make scenarios such as generating .NET based Semantic Web Objects (where the S in an S-P->O RDF-Triple becomes a bona fide .NET class instance generated from OWL).</p> <p>To be continued since the interface specifics re. ADO.NET 3.0 remain in flux...</p>
Object Relational Rediscovered?
2006-07-14T01:59:16Z
2006-07-13T21:59:16.000002-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/993
<p>Jon and I had a recent chat yesterday that is now available in <a href="http://weblog.infoworld.com/udell/2006/04/28.html#a1437">Podcast</a> form.</p> <blockquote> <cite></cite> <p>"In my <a href="http://weblog.infoworld.com/udell/gems/ju_idehen.mp3">fourth Friday podcast</a> we hear from Kingsley Idehen, CEO of <a href="http://openlinksw.com/">OpenLink Software</a>. I wrote about OpenLink's universal database and app server, Virtuoso, back in <a href="http://www.infoworld.com/article/02/04/12/020415plvirtuoso_1.html">2002</a> and <a href="http://www.infoworld.com/article/03/03/21/12virtuoso_1.html">2003</a>. Earlier this month Virtuoso became the first mature SQL/XML hybrid to make the <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/blog/%7Ekidehen/?id=951">transition to open source</a>. The latest incarnation of the product also adds SPARQL (a semantic web query language) to its repertoire. <b>...</b>"</p> <p>(Via <a href="http://weblog.infoworld.com/udell/">Jon's Radio</a>.)</p> </blockquote> I would like to make an important clarification re. the GData Protocol and what is popularly dubbed as "<a href="http://jeremy.zawodny.com/blog/archives/006687.html">Adam Bosworth's fingerprints.</a>" I do not believe in a one solution (a simple one for the sake of simplicity) to a deceptively complex problem. Virtuoso supports Atom 1.0 (syndication only at the current time) and Atom 0.3 (syndication and publication which have been in place for years). <blockquote>BTW - the GData Protocol and Atom 1.0 publishing support will be delivered in both the Open Source and Commercial Edition updates to Virtuoso next week (very little work due to what's already in place).</blockquote> <p>I make the clarification above to eliminate the possibility of assuming mutual exclusivity of my perspective/vison and Adam's (Jon also makes this important point when he speaks about our opinions being on either side of a spectrum/continuum). I simply want to broaden the scope of this discussion. I am a profound believer in the Semantic Web / Data Web vision, and I predict that we will be querying the Googlebase via SPARQL in the not to distant future (this doesn't mean that netizens will be forced to master SPARQL, absolutely not! But there will be conduit technologies that deal with matter).</p> <p>Side note: I actually last spoke with Adam at the NY Hilton in 2000 (the day I unveiled Virtuoso to the public for the first time, in person). We bumped into each other and I told him about Virtuoso (at the time the big emphasis was SQL to XML and the vocabulary we had chosen re. SQL extension...), and he told me about his departure from Microsoft and the commencement of his new venture (CrossGain prior to his stint at BEA), what struck me even more was his interest in Linux and Open Source (bearing in mind this was about 3 or so week after he departed Microsoft.)</p> <p>If you are encountering Virtuoso for the first time via this post or Jon's, please make time to read the <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/wiki/main/Main/VOSHistory">product history</a> article on the <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/wiki/main/">Virtuoso Wiki</a> (which is one of many Virtuoso based applications that make up our soon to be released OpenLink DataSpace offering).</p> <p>That said, I better go listen to the podcast :-)</p>
My podcast conversation with Jon Udell
2006-06-29T14:14:44Z
2006-06-29T10:14:44.000001-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/991
There is an interesting article at regdeveloper.com titled: <a href="http://www.regdeveloper.co.uk/2006/06/23/unstructured_data/">Structured data is boring and useless</a>.. This article provides insight into a serious point of confusion about what exactly is structured vs. unstructured data. Here is a key excerpt: <blockquote> <cite>"We all know that structured data is boring and useless; while unstructured data is sexy and chock full of value. Well, only up to a point, Lord Copper. Genuinely unstructured data can be a real nuisance - imagine extracting the return address from an unstructured letter, without letterhead and any of the formatting usually applied to letters. A letter may be thought of as unstructured data, but most business letters are, in fact, highly-structured." .... </cite> </blockquote> Duncan Pauly, founder and chief technology officer of Coppereye add's eloquent insight to the conversation: <blockquote> <cite>"The labels "structured data" and "unstructured data" are often used ambiguously by different interest groups; and often used lazily to cover multiple distinct aspects of the issue. In reality, there are at least three orthogonal aspects to structure: <il></il></cite> <ol> * The structure of the data itself.</ol> <ol>* The structure of the container that hosts the data.</ol> <ol>* The structure of the access method used to access the data.</ol> These three dimensions are largely independent and one does not need to imply another. For example, it is absolutely feasible and reasonable to store unstructured data in a structured database container and access it by unstructured search mechanisms." </blockquote> <p> Data understanding and appreciation is dwindling at a time when the reverse should be happening. We are supposed to be in the throws of the "Information Age", but for some reason this appears to have no correlation with data and "data access" in the minds of many -- as reflected in the broad contradictory positions taken re. unstructured data vs structured data, structured is boring and useless while unstructured is useful and sexy....</p> <p> The difference between "Structured Containers" and "Structured Data" are clearly misunderstood by most (an unfortunate fact).</p> <p> For instance all DBMS products are "Structured Containers" aligned to one or more data models (typically one). These products have been limited by proprietary data access APIs and underlying data model specificity when used in the "Open-world" model that is at the core of the World Wide Web. This confusion also carries over to the misconception that Web 2.0 and the Semantic/Data Web are mutually exclusive. </p> <p> But things are changing fast, and the concept of multi-model DBMS products is beginning to crystalize. On our part, we have finally released the long promised "OpenLink Data Spaces" application layer that has been developed using our <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/wiki/main/">Virtuoso Universal Server</a>. We have structured unified storage containment exposed to the data web cloud via endpoints for querying or accessing data using a variety of mechanisms that include; GData, OpenSearch, SPARQL, XQuery/XPath, SQL etc.. </p> <p> To be continued.... </p>
Structured Data vs. Unstructured Data
2006-06-27T05:39:09Z
2006-06-27T01:39:09-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/978
<p> <a href="http://www.mkbergman.com/?p=216">Search Engine Challenges Posed by the Semantic Web</a>: "</p> <p> A pre-print from Tim Finin and Li Deng entitled, <a title="Search Engines for Semantic Web Knowledge" href="http://ebiquity.umbc.edu/paper/html/id/304/Search-Engines-for-Semantic-Web-Knowledge">Search Engines for Semantic Web Knowledge</a>,<sup>1</sup> presents a thoughtful and experienced overview of the challenges posed to conventional search by semantic Web constructs.' The authors’ base much of their observations on their experience with the <a href="http://swoogle.umbc.edu/" title="Swoogle">Swoogle</a> semantic Web search engine over the past two years.' They also used Swoogle, whose index contains information on over 1.3M RDF documents, to generate statistics on the semantic Web size and growth in the paper.</p> <p>Among other points, the authors note these key differences and challenges from conventional search engines:</p> <ul> <li> <em>Harvesting</em> — the need to discriminantly discover semantic Web documents and to accurately index their semi-structured components</li> <li> <em>Search </em>- the need for search to cover a broader range than documents in a repository, going from the universal to the atomic granularity of a triple.' Path tracing and provenance of the information may also be important</li> <li> <em>Rank</em> — results ranking needs to account for the contribution of the semi-structured data, and <br /> </li> <li> <em>Archive</em> — more versioning and tracking is needed since undelrying ontologies will surely grow and evolve.</li> </ul> <p>The authors particularly note the challenge of i<em>ndexing</em> as repositories grow to actual Internet scales.</p> <p>Though not noted, I would add to this list the challenge of user interfaces. Only a small percentage of users, for example, use Google’s more complicated advanced search form.' In its full-blown implementation, semantic Web search variations could make the advanced Google form look like child’s play.</p> <p>'</p> <hr width="33%" size="2" align="left" /> <p> <sup>1</sup>Tim Finin and Li Ding, 'Search Engines for Semantic Web Knowledge,' a pre-print to be published in the <em>Proceedings of XTech 2006: Building Web 2.0</em>, May 16, 2006, 19 pp.' A <a title="PDF: Search Engines for Semantic Web Knowledge" href="http://ebiquity.umbc.edu/get/a/publication/268.pdf">PDF of the paper is available for download</a>.</p>" <p>(Via <a href="http://www.mkbergman.com">AI3 - Adaptive Information:::</a>.)</p>
Search Engine Challenges Posed by the Semantic Web
2006-06-22T12:56:58Z
2006-06-22T08:56:58-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/965
<p>Jon and I had a recent chat yesterday that is now available in <a href="http://weblog.infoworld.com/udell/2006/04/28.html#a1437">Podcast</a> form.</p> <blockquote> <cite><p>"In my <a href="http://weblog.infoworld.com/udell/gems/ju_idehen.mp3">fourth Friday podcast</a> we hear from Kingsley Idehen, CEO of <a href="http://openlinksw.com/">OpenLink Software</a>. I wrote about OpenLink's universal database and app server, Virtuoso, back in <a href="http://www.infoworld.com/article/02/04/12/020415plvirtuoso_1.html">2002</a> and <a href="http://www.infoworld.com/article/03/03/21/12virtuoso_1.html">2003</a>. Earlier this month Virtuoso became the first mature SQL/XML hybrid to make the <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/blog/~kidehen/?id=951">transition to open source</a>. The latest incarnation of the product also adds SPARQL (a semantic web query language) to its repertoire. <b>...</b>"</p> <p>(Via <a href="http://weblog.infoworld.com/udell/">Jon's Radio</a>.)</p> </cite> </blockquote> I would like to make an important clarification re. the GData Protocol and what is popularly dubbed as "<a href="http://jeremy.zawodny.com/blog/archives/006687.html">Adam Bosworth's fingerprints.</a>" I do not believe in a one solution (a simple one for the sake of simplicity) to a deceptively complex problem. Virtuoso supports Atom 1.0 (syndication only at the current time) and Atom 0.3 (syndication and publication which have been in place for years). <blockquote>BTW - the GData Protocol and Atom 1.0 publishing support will be delivered in both the Open Source and Commercial Edition updates to Virtuoso next week (very little work due to what's already in place).</blockquote> <p>I make the clarification above to eliminate the possibility of assuming mutual exclusivity of my perspective/vison and Adam's (Jon also makes this important point when he speaks about our opinions being on either side of a spectrum/continuum). I simply want to broaden the scope of this discussion. I am a profound believer in the Semantic Web / Data Web vision, and I predict that we will be querying the Googlebase via SPARQL in the not to distant future (this doesn't mean that netizens will be forced to master SPARQL, absolutely not! But there will be conduit technologies that deal with matter).</p> <p>Side note: I actually last spoke with Adam at the NY Hilton in 2000 (the day I unveiled Virtuoso to the public for the first time, in person). We bumped into each other and I told him about Virtuoso (at the time the big emphasis was SQL to XML and the vocabulary we had chosen re. SQL extension...), and he told me about his departure from Microsoft and the commencement of his new venture (CrossGain prior to his stint at BEA), what struck me even more was his interest in Linux and Open Source (bearing in mind this was about 3 or so week after he departed Microsoft.)</p> <p>If you are encountering Virtuoso for the first time via this post or Jon's, please make time to read the <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/wiki/main/Main/VOSHistory/">product history</a> article on the <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/wiki/main/Main/">Virtuoso Wiki</a> (which is one of many Virtuoso based applications that make up our soon to be released OpenLink DataSpace offering).</p> <p>That said, I better go listen to the podcast :-)</p>
My podcast conversation with Jon Udell
2006-07-21T11:22:41Z
2006-07-21T07:22:41.000001-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/947
<p> <a href="http://ebiquity.umbc.edu/blogger/2006/04/04/swoogle-knows-how-semantic-web-ontologies-are-used/">Swoogle knows how Semantic Web ontologies are used</a>: "</p> <xhtml:div xmlns:xhtml="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"> <xhtml:div> <xhtml:p> <xhtml:img src="http://swoogle.umbc.edu/images/logo_mini.png" align="right" alt="" /> </xhtml:p> <xhtml:p>The <xhtml:a href="http://dublincore.org/">Dublin Core Metadata Initiative</xhtml:a> is updating the RDF expression of DC and might add range restrictions to some properties. Mikael Nilsson wondered if we would use the <xhtml:a href="http://swoogle.umbc.edu/">Swoogle Semantic Web search engine</xhtml:a> to see what types of values are being used with DC properties.</xhtml:p> <xhtml:p>This kind of query is just the ticket for Swoogle. Well, almost. The current web-based interface supports a limited number of query types. Many more can be asked if you use SQL directly to query Swoogle’s underlying databases. We don’t want to provide a direct SQL query service over the main Swoogle database because it’s easy to ask a query that will take a looooooong time to answer and some could even crash the database server. We are planning to put up a second server with a copy of the database and we give <xhtml:em>Swoogle Power Users</xhtml:em> (SPUs) access to it.</xhtml:p> <xhtml:p>We ran a simple SQL query to generate some initial data for Mikael showing fall of the DC properties. For each one, we list all of the ranges that values were drawn from and the number of separate documents and triples for each combination. For example</xhtml:p> <xhtml:table border="1" align="center" cellpadding="6" bgcolor="#E9E9E9"> <xhtml:tr bgcolor="#333300"> <xhtml:td> <xhtml:div align="center"> <xhtml:font color="#FFFFFF"><xhtml:strong>Property</xhtml:strong> </xhtml:font> </xhtml:div> </xhtml:td> <xhtml:td> <xhtml:div align="center"> <xhtml:font color="#FFFFFF"><xhtml:strong>Range</xhtml:strong> </xhtml:font> </xhtml:div> </xhtml:td> <xhtml:td> <xhtml:div align="center"> <xhtml:font color="#FFFFFF"><xhtml:strong>Documents</xhtml:strong> </xhtml:font> </xhtml:div> </xhtml:td> <xhtml:td> <xhtml:div align="center"> <xhtml:font color="#FFFFFF"><xhtml:strong>Triples</xhtml:strong> </xhtml:font> </xhtml:div> </xhtml:td> </xhtml:tr> <xhtml:tr> <xhtml:td>dc:creater</xhtml:td> <xhtml:td>rdfs:Literal</xhtml:td> <xhtml:td> <xhtml:div align="right">32</xhtml:div> </xhtml:td> <xhtml:td> <xhtml:div align="right">648</xhtml:div> </xhtml:td> </xhtml:tr> <xhtml:tr> <xhtml:td>dc:creator</xhtml:td> <xhtml:td>rdfs:Literal</xhtml:td> <xhtml:td> <xhtml:div align="right">234655</xhtml:div> </xhtml:td> <xhtml:td> <xhtml:div align="right">2477665</xhtml:div> </xhtml:td> </xhtml:tr> <xhtml:tr> <xhtml:td>dc:creator</xhtml:td> <xhtml:td>wn:Person</xhtml:td> <xhtml:td> <xhtml:div align="right">2714</xhtml:div> </xhtml:td> <xhtml:td> <xhtml:div align="right">1138250</xhtml:div> </xhtml:td> </xhtml:tr> <xhtml:tr> <xhtml:td>dc:creator</xhtml:td> <xhtml:td>cc:Agent</xhtml:td> <xhtml:td> <xhtml:div align="right">4090</xhtml:div> </xhtml:td> <xhtml:td> <xhtml:div align="right">6359</xhtml:div> </xhtml:td> </xhtml:tr> <xhtml:tr> <xhtml:td>dc:creator</xhtml:td> <xhtml:td>foaf:Person</xhtml:td> <xhtml:td> <xhtml:div align="right">2281</xhtml:div> </xhtml:td> <xhtml:td> <xhtml:div align="right">5969</xhtml:div> </xhtml:td> </xhtml:tr> <xhtml:tr> <xhtml:td>dc:creator</xhtml:td> <xhtml:td>foaf:Agent</xhtml:td> <xhtml:td> <xhtml:div align="right">1723</xhtml:div> </xhtml:td> <xhtml:td> <xhtml:div align="right">3234</xhtml:div> </xhtml:td> </xhtml:tr> </xhtml:table> <xhtml:p>Notice that the first property in this partial table is an obvious typo. You can see the complete table as <xhtml:a href="http://www.csee.umbc.edu/~finin/noindex/dc/dcPropertiesRanges.pdf"> pdf</xhtml:a> file or as an excel <xhtml:a href="http://www.csee.umbc.edu/~finin/noindex/dc/dcPropertiesRanges.xls"> spreadsheet</xhtml:a>.</xhtml:p> <xhtml:p>[Tim Finin, UMBC ebiquity lab]</xhtml:p> </xhtml:div> </xhtml:div>" <p>(Via <a href="http://planetrdf.com/">Planet RDF</a>.)</p>
Swoogle knows how Semantic Web ontologies are used
2006-06-22T12:56:58Z
2006-06-22T08:56:58-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/898
<p><a href="http://dannyayers.com/archives/2005/11/10/semantic-web-challenge-winners/">Semantic Web Challenge Winners</a>: "</p><p>Hot from the Galway <a href="http://chatlogs.planetrdf.com/swig/2005-11-10.html">sportsdesk</a>:</p><blockquote><p> 1. Prize: <a href="http://www.confoto.org/">CONFOTO</a>, appmosphere web applications, Germany<br /> 2. Prize: <a href="http://www.cs.concordia.ca/FungalWeb/">FungalWeb</a>, Concordia University, Canada<br /> 3. Prize: <a href="http://www.personal-reader.de/semwebchallenge/sw-challenge.html">Personal Publication Reader</a>, Universität Hannover, Germany </p></blockquote><p><a href="http://challenge.semanticweb.org/">challenge.semanticweb.org</a></p><blockquote><p><a href="http://www.confoto.org/">CONFOTO</a> is a browsing and annotation service for conference photos. It combines recent Web trends (tag-based categorization, interactive user interfaces, syndication) with the advantages of Semantic Web platforms (machine-understandable information, an extensible data model, the possibility to mix arbitrary RDF vocabularies). </p></blockquote><p>Congrats <a href="http://www.bnode.org/en-semweblog">bengee</a>!!</p><p>(Benjamin had a string of bad luck just prior to the conference, there may still be glitches in the app - <em>‘my sparql store exploded last week’</em>) </p>" <p>(Via <a href="http://dannyayers.com">Raw</a>.)</p>
Semantic Web Challenge Winners
2006-06-22T12:56:58Z
2006-06-22T08:56:58-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/882
<p><a href="http://marc.blogs.it/">Marc Canter</a>'s <a href="http://marc.blogs.it/archives/2005/10/breaking_the_we.html">Breaking the Web Wide Open! </a> article is something I found pretty late (by my normal discovery standards). This was partly due to the pre- and post- Web 2.0 event noise levels that have dumped the description of an important industry inflection into the "Bozo Bin" of many. Personally, I think we shouldn't confuse the Web 2.0 traditional-pitch-fest conference with an attempt to identify an important industry inflection).</p><p> Anyway, Marc's article is a very refreshing read because it provides a really good insight into the general landscape of a rapidly evolving Web alongside genuine appreciation of our broader timeless pursuit of "Openness". </p><p>To really help this document provide additional value have scrapped the content of the original post and dumped it below so that we can appreciate the value of the links embedded within the article (note: thanks to Virtuoso I only had to paste the content into my blog, the extraction to my <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/blog/~kidehen/index.vspx?page=linkblog">Linkblog</a> and <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/blog/~kidehen/index.vspx?page=summary">Blog Summary</a> Pages are simply features of my <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/virtuos">Virtuoso </a>based Blog Engine):</p><blockquote><h3 class="hed2" style="padding-bottom: 10px">Breaking the Web Wide Open! (complete story)</h3><p>Even the web giants like AOL, Google, MSN, and Yahoo need to observe these open standards, or they'll risk becoming the "walled gardens" of the new web and be coolio no more.</p><p class="byline"><b><a href="http://community.alwayson-network.com/cgi-bin/WebObjects/AlwaysOn.woa/wa/display?id=9254:Person">Marc Canter</a></b> [<a href="http://community.alwayson-network.com/cgi-bin/WebObjects/AlwaysOn.woa/wa/display?id=9254:Person"><b>Broadband Mechanics, Inc.</b></a>] | POSTED: 09.26.05 @12:00</p><table width="100%" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0"><tr><td valign="TOP" class="copy1"><img src="http://community.alwayson-network.com/ao/images/thumb/19433429363e7cd6b1ecfb7.jpg" align="LEFT" border="0" width="80" style="margin: 0px 10px 5px 0px" alt="" /><i><b>Editorial Note:</b> Several months ago, AlwaysOn got a personal invitation from Yahoo founder Jerry Yang "to see and give us feedback on our new social media product, y!360." We were happy to oblige and dutifully showed up, joining a conference room full of hard-core bloggers and new, new media types. The geeks gave Yahoo 360 an overwhelming thumbs down, with comments like, "So the only services I can use within this new network are Yahoo services? What if I don't use Yahoo IM?" In essence, the Yahoo team was booed for being "closed web," and we heartily agreed. With Yahoo 360, Yahoo continues building its own "walled garden" to control its 135 million customersan accusation also hurled at AOL in the early 1990s, before AOL migrated its private network service onto the web. As the</i> <a href="http://bernardmoon.blogspot.com/2005/08/yahoos-personality-crisis.html" target="_blank">Economist<i> recently noted</i></a>, "Yahoo, in short, has old media plans for the new-media era."<br /><br />The irony to our view here is, of course, that today's AO Network is also a "closed web." In the end, Mr. Yang's thoughtful invitation and our ensuing disappointment in his new service led to the assignment of this article. It also confirmed our existing plan to completely revamp the AO Network around open standards. To tie it all together, we recruited the chief architect of our new site, <a href="http://www.corante.com/amateur/articles/20030211-3564.html" target="_blank">the notorious Marc Canter</a>, to pen this piece. We look forward to our reader feedback.<br /><br /><b>Breaking the Web Wide Open!</b><br />By Marc Canter<br /><br />For decades, "walled gardens" of proprietary standards and content have been the strategy of dominant players in mainframe computer software, wireless telecommunications services, and the World Wide Webit was their successful lock-in strategy of keeping their customers theirs. But like it or not, those walls are tumbling down. Open web standards are being adopted so widely, with such value and impact, that the web giantsAmazon, AOL, eBay, Google, Microsoft, and Yahooare facing the difficult decision of opening up to what they don't control.<br /><br />The online world is evolving into a new open web (sometimes called the Web 2.0), which is all about being personalized and customized for each user. Not only open source software, but <i>open standards</i> are becoming an essential component. <br /><br />Many of the web giants have been using open source software for years. Most of them use at least parts of the <a href="http://www.onlamp.com/pub/a/onlamp/2001/01/25/lamp.html" target="_blank">LAMP</a> (Linux, Apache, MySQL, Perl/Python/PHP) stack, even if they aren't well-known for giving back to the open source community. For these incumbents that grew big on proprietary web services, the methods, practices, and applications of open source software development are difficult to fully adopt. And the next open source movementswhich will be as much about open standards as about codewill be a lot harder for the incumbents to exploit.<br /><br />While the incumbents use cheap open source software to run their back-ends systems, their business models largely depend on proprietary software and algorithms. But our view a new slew of open software, open protocols, and open standards will confront the incumbents with the classic <i><a href="http://www.businessweek.com/chapter/christensen.htm" target="_blank">Innovator's Dilemma</a></i>. Should they adopt these tools and standards, painfully cannibalizing their existing revenue for a new unproven concept, or should they stick with their currently lucrative model with the risk that eventually a bunch of upstarts eat their lunch? <br /><br />Credit should go to several of the web giants who have been making efforts to "open up." Google, Yahoo, eBay, and Amazon all have Open APIs (Application Programming Interfaces) built into their data and systems. Any software developer can access and use them for whatever creative purposes they wish. This means that the API provider becomes an open platform for everyone to use and build on top of. This notion has expanded like wildfire throughout the blogosphere, so nowadays, Open APIs are pretty much required.<br /><br />Other incumbents also have open strategies. AOL has got the RSS religion, <a href="http://www.siliconbeat.com/entries/2005/07/27/aol_gets_rss_religion_with_my_aoland_feedsters_help.html" target="_blank">providing a feedreader and RSS search</a> in order to escape the "walled garden of content" stigma. <a href="http://www.apple.com/podcasting/" target="_blank">Apple now incorporates podcasts</a>, the "personal radio shows" that are latest rage in audio narrowcasting, into iTunes. Even Microsoft is supporting open standards, for example <a href="http://www.microsoft.com/technet/prodtechnol/winxppro/plan/rtcprot.mspx#EKAA" target="_blank">by endorsing SIP (Session Initiation Protocol) for internet telephony and conferencing</a> over Skype's proprietary format or one of its own devising.<br /><br />But new open standards and protocols are in use, under construction, or being proposed every day, pushing the envelope of where we are right now. Many of these standards are coming from startup companies and small groups of developers, not from the giants. Together with the Open APIs, those new standards will contribute to a new, open infrastructure. Tens of thousands of developers will use and improve this open infrastructure to create new kinds of web-based applications and services, to offer web users a highly personalized online experience.<br /><br /><b>A Brief History of Openness</b><br /><br />At this point, I have to admit that I am not just a passive observer, full-time journalist or "just some blogger"but an active evangelist and developer of these standards. It's the vision of "open infrastructure" that's driving <a href="http://www.broadbandmechanics.com/bbm2005.htm" target="_blank">my company </a> and the reason why I'm writing this article. This article will give you some of the background behind on these standards, and what the evolution of the next generation of open standards will look like.<br /><br />Starting back in the 1980s, establishing a software standard was a key strategy for any software company. My former company, MacroMind (which became Macromedia), achieved this goal early on with Director. As <a href="http://webmonkey.wired.com/webmonkey/99/27/index3a_page6.html?tw=multimedia" target="_blank">Director evolved into Flash</a>, the world saw that other companies besides Microsoft, Adobe, and Apple could establish true cross-platform, independent media standards.<br /><br />Then <a href="http://www.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee/" target="_blank">Tim Berners-Lee</a> and <a href="http://www.ibiblio.org/pioneers/andreesen.html" target="_blank">Marc Andreessen</a> came along, and changed the rules of the software business and of entrepreneurialism. No matter how entrenched and "standardized" software was, the rug could still get pulled out from under it. <a href="http://geekphilosopher.com/MainPage/WebBrowserWars.htm?q=Stocks" target="_blank">Netscape did it to Microsoft, and then Microsoft did it <i>back</i> to Netscape</a>. The web evolved, and lots of standards evolved with it. The leading open source standards (such as the LAMP stack) became widely used alternatives to proprietary closed-source offerings. <br /><br />Open standards are more than just technology. Open standards mean sharing, empowering, and community support. Someone floats a new idea (or <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meme" target="_blank">meme</a>) and the community runs with it – with each person making their own contributions to the standard – evolving it without a moment's hesitation about "giving away their intellectual property."<br /><br />One good example of this was <a href="http://www.sifry.com/alerts/" target="_blank">Dave Sifry</a>, who built the Technorati blog-tracking technology inspired by the <a href="http://www.myelin.co.nz/ecosystem/" target="_blank">Blogging Ecosystem</a>, a weekend project by young hacker <a href="http://marc.blogs.it/archives/2005/07/phil_pearson_jo.html" target="_blank">Phil Pearson</a>. Dave liked what he saw and he ran with itturning Technorati into what it is today.<br /><br /><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dave_Winer" target="_blank">Dave Winer</a> has contributed enormously to this area of open standards. He defined and personally created several open standards and protocolssuch as RSS, OPML, and XML-RPC. Dave has also <a href="http://newhome.weblogs.com/historyOfWeblogs" target="_blank">helped build</a> the blogosphere through his enthusiasm and passion.<br /><br />By 2003, hundreds of programmers were working on creating and establishing new standards for almost everything. The best of these new standards have evolved into compelling web services platforms – such as <a href="http://del.icio.us/" target="_blank">del.icio.us</a>, <a href="http://webjay.org/about" target="_blank">Webjay</a>, or <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/tags/ao2005/" target="_blank">Flickr</a>. Some have even spun off formal standards – like XSPF (a standard for playlists) or instant messaging standard XMPP (also known as Jabber).<br /><br />Today's Open APIs are complemented by standardized Schemasthe structure of the data itself and its associated meta-data. Take for example a <a href="http://www.ipodder.org/whatIsPodcasting" target="_blank">podcasting feed</a>. It consists of: a) the radio show itself, b) information on who is on the show, what the show is about and how long the show is (the meta-data) and also c) API calls to retrieve a show (a single feed item) and play it from a specified server. <br /><br />The combination of Open APIs, standardized schemas for handling meta-data, and an industry which agrees on these standards are breaking the web wide open right now. So what new open standards should the web incumbentsand yoube watching? Keep an eye on the following developments:<br /><br /><b>Identity<br />Attention<br />Open Media<br />Microcontent Publishing<br />Open Social Networks<br />Tags<br />Pinging <br />Routing<br />Open Communications<br />Device Management and Control</b><br /><br /><br /><b>1. Identity</b><br /><br />Right now, you don't really control your own online identity. At the core of just about every online piece of software is a membership system. Some systems allow you to browse a site anonymouslybut unless you register with the site you can't do things like search for an article, post a comment, buy something, or review it. The problem is that each and every site has its own membership system. So you constantly have to register with new systems, which cannot share dataeven you'd want them to. By establishing a <a href="http://www.wired.com/news/privacy/0,1848,68329-2,00.html?tw=wn_story_page_next1" target="_blank">"single sign-on" standard</a>, disparate sites can allow users to freely move from site to site, and let them control the movement of their personal profile data, as well as any other data they've created. <br /><br />With <a href="http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/2005/01/03/stories/2005010301440200.htm" target="_blank">Passport, Microsoft unsuccessfully attempted</a> to force its proprietary standard on the industry. Instead, a world is evolving where most people assume that users want to control their own data, whether that data is their profile, their blog posts and photos, or some collection of their past interactions, purchases, and recommendations. As long as users can control their digital identity, any kind of service or interaction can be layered on top of it.<br /><br /><a href="http://www.identity20.com/media/OSCON2005/" target="_blank">Identity 2.0</a> is all about users controlling their own profile data and becoming their own agents. This way the users themselves, rather than other intermediaries, will profit from their ID info. Once developers start offering single sign-on to their users, and users have trusted places to store their datawhich respect the limits and provide access controls over that data, users will be able to access personalized services which will understand and use their personal data.<br /><br />Identity 2.0 may seem like some geeky, visionary future standard that isn't defined yet, but by putting each user's digital identity at the core of all their online experiences, Identity 2.0 is becoming the cornerstone of the new open web. <br /><br /><b>The Initiatives:</b><br />Right now, Identity 2.0 is under construction through various efforts from Microsoft (the <a href="http://msdn.microsoft.com/webservices/webservices/understanding/advancedwebservices/default.aspx?pull=/library/en-us/dnwebsrv/html/identitymetasystem.asp" target="_blank">"InfoCard" component built into the Vista operating system</a> and its "<a href="http://garage.docsearls.com/node/605" target="_blank">Identity Metasystem</a>"), <a href="http://sxip.com" target="_blank">Sxip Identity</a>, <a href="http://www.identtycommons.net" target="_blank">Identity Commons</a>, <a href="http://www.projectliberty.org/" target="_blank">Liberty Alliance</a>, <a href="http://lid.netmesh.org/" target="_blank">LID</a> (NetMesh's Lightweight ID), and SixApart's <a href="http://openid.net/" target="_blank">OpenID</a>.<br /><br /><b>More Movers and Shakers:</b><br />Identity Commons and <a href="http://www.identitywoman.net" target="_blank">Kaliya Hamlin</a>, Sxip Identity and <a href="http://blame.ca/dick/" target="_blank">Dick Hardt</a>, the <a href="http://www.identitygang.org/" target="_blank"> Identity Gang</a> and <a href="http://www.searls.com/dochome.html#Bio" target="_blank">Doc Searls</a>, Microsoft's <a href="http://www.identityblog.com/" target="_blank">Kim Cameron</a>, <a href="http://www.craigburton.com/" target="_blank">Craig Burton</a>, <a href="http://phil.windley.org/" target="_blank">Phil Windley</a>, and <a href="http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=05/07/05/2020221&from=rss" target="_blank">Brad Fitzpatrick</a>, to name a few.<br /><br /><br /><b>2. Attention</b><br /><br />How many readers know what their online attention is worth? If you don't, Google and Yahoo dothey make their living off our attention. They know what we're searching for, happily turn it into a keyword, and sell that keyword to advertisers. They make money off our attention. We don't. <br /><br />Technorati and friends proposed <a href="http://blogs.zdnet.com/Gillmor/index.php?p=74" target="_blank">an attention standard, Attention.xml</a>, designed to "help you keep track of what you've read, what you're spending time on, and what you should be paying attention to." <a href="http://attentiontrust.org/" target="_blank">AttentionTrust</a> is an effort by <a href="http://blogs.zdnet.com/Gillmor/?p=132" target="_blank">Steve Gillmor</a> and <a href="http://majestic.typepad.com/seth/2005/07/attentiontrusto.html" target="_blank">Seth Goldstein </a>to standardize on how captured end-user performance, browsing, and interest data are used. <br /><br />Blogger <a href="http://worcester.typepad.com/pc4media/2005/07/attentiontrusto_1.html" target="_blank">Peter Caputa gives a good summary</a> of AttentionTrust: <blockquote>"As we use the web, we reveal lots of information about ourselves by what we pay attention to. Imagine if all of that information could be stored in a nice neat little xml file. And when we travel around the web, we can optionally share it with websites or other people. We can make them pay for it, lease it ... we get to decide who has access to it, how long they have access to it, and what we want in return. And they have to tell us what they are going to do with our Attention data."</blockquote><br />So when you give your attention to sites that adhere to the AttentionTrust, your attention rights (<i>you own your attention, you can move your attention, you can pay attention and be paid for it</i>, and <i>you can see how your attention is used</i>) are guaranteed. Attention data is crucial to the future of the open web, and Steve and Seth are making sure that no one entity or oligopoly controls it. <br /><br /><b>Movers and Shakers:</b><br /><a href="http://blogs.zdnet.com/Gillmor/" target="_blank">Steve Gillmor</a>, <a href="http://majestic.typepad.com/about.html" target="_blank">Seth Goldstein</a>, <a href="http://www.sifry.com/alerts/" target="_blank">Dave Sifry</a> and the <a href="http://developers.technorati.com/wiki/attentionxml" target="_blank">other Attention.xml folks</a>. <br /><br /><br /><b>3. Open Media</b><br /><br />Proprietary media standardsFlash, Windows Media, and QuickTime, to name a few helped liven up the web. But they are proprietary standards that try to keep us locked in, and they weren't created from scratch to handle today's online content. That's why, for many of us, an Open Media standard has been a holy grail. Yahoo's new Media RSS standard brings us one step closer to achieving open media, as do <a href="http://www.vorbis.com/faq/#what" target="_blank">Ogg Vorbis</a> audio codecs, <a href="http://webjay.org/" target="_blank">XSPF playlists</a>, or <a href="http://musicbrainz.org/" target="_blank">MusicBrainz</a>. And several sites offer digital creators not only a place to store their content, but also to sell it. <br /><br /><a href="http://search.yahoo.com/mrss" target="_blank">Media RSS </a>(being developed by Yahoo with help from the community) extends RSS and combines it with "RSS enclosures" adds metadata to any media itemto create a comprehensive solution for media "narrowcasters." To gain acceptance for Media RSS, Yahoo knows it has to work with the community. As an active member of this community, I can tell you that we'll create Media RSS equivalents for <a href="http://www.xml.com/pub/a/2001/01/24/rdf.html" target="_blank">rdf</a> (an alternative subscription format) and <a href="http://www.atomenabled.org/" target="_blank">Atom</a> (yet <i>another</i> subscription format), so no one will be able to complain that Yahoo is picking sides in format wars.<br /><br />When Yahoo announced the purchase of Flickr, Yahoo founder Jerry Yang insinuated that Yahoo is acquiring "open DNA" to turn Yahoo into <a href="http://www.flickr.com/services/api/" target="_blank">an open standards player</a>. Yahoo is showing what happens when you take a multi-billion dollar company and make openness one of its core valuesso Google, beware, even if Google does have more research fellows and Ph.D.s. <br /><br />The open media landscape is far and wide, reaching from game machine hacks and mobile phone downloads to PC-driven bookmarklets, players, and editors, and it includes many other standardization efforts. <a href="http://www.xspf.org/" target="_blank">XSPF</a> is an open standard for playlists, and MusicBrainz is an alternative to the proprietary (and originally effectively stolen) database that <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gracenote" target="_blank">Gracenote</a> licenses. <br /><br /><a href="http://www.ourmedia.org/" target="_blank">Ourmedia.org</a> is a community front-end to Brewster Kahle's <a href="http://www.archive.org" target="_blank">Internet Archive</a>. Brewster has promised free bandwidth and free storage forever to any content creators who choose to share their content via the Internet Archive. Ourmedia.org is providing an easy-to-use interface and community to get content in and out of the Internet Archive, giving ourmedia.org users the ability to share their media anywhere they wish, without being locked into a particular service or tool. Ourmedia plans to offer open APIs and an open media registry that interconnects other open media repositories into a DNS-like registry (just like the www domain system), so folks can browse and discover open content across many open media services. Systems like <a href="http://www.brightcove.com/" target="_blank">Brightcove</a> and <a href="http://www.evhead.com/2005/02/how-odeo-happened.asp" target="_blank">Odeo</a> support the concept of an open registry, and hope to work with digital creators to sell their work to fulfill the financial aspect of <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Long_Tail" target="_blank">the "Long Tail."</a><br /><br /><b>More Movers and Shakers:</b><br /><a href="http://creativecommons.org/about/people" target="_blank">Creative Commons</a>, the <a href="http://www.omn.org/" target="_blank">Open Media Network</a>, <a href="http://www.momentshowing.net/about.html" target="_blank">Jay Dedman</a>, <a href="http://ryanedit.blogspot.com/" target="_blank">Ryanne Hodson</a>, <a href="http://michaelverdi.com/index.php" target="_blank">Michael Verdi</a>, <a href="http://www.chapmanlogic.com/blog/aboutEli.html" target="_blank">Eli Chapman</a>, <a href="http://www.unmediated.org/" target="_blank">Kenyatta Cheese</a>, <a href="http://www.itconversations.com/about.html" target="_blank">Doug Kaye</a>, <a href="http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/13.09/yahoo.html" target="_blank">Brad Horowitz</a>, <a href="http://webjay.org/about#colophon" target="_blank">Lucas Gonze</a>, <a href="http://musicbrainz.org/wd/MusicBrainzBio" target="_blank">Robert Kaye</a>, <a href="http://www.lifewithalacrity.com/" target="_blank">Christopher Allen</a>, <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brewster_Kahle" target="_blank">Brewster Kahle</a>, <a href="http://www.newmediamusings.com/" target="_blank">JD Lasica</a>, and indeed, <a href="http://www.corante.com/amateur/articles/20030211-3564.html" target="_blank">Marc Canter</a>, among others.<br /><br /><br /><b>4. Microcontent Publishing</b><br /><br />Unstructured content is cheap to create, but hard to search through. Structured content is expensive to create, but easy to search. <a href="http://developers.technorati.com/wiki/MicroFormats" target="_blank">Microformats</a> resolve the dilemma with simple structures that are cheap to use and easy to search.<br /><br />The first kind of widely adopted microcontent is blogging. Every post is an encapsulated idea, addressable via a URL called a permalink. You can syndicate or subscribe to this microcontent using RSS or an RSS equivalent, and news or blog aggregators can then display these feeds in a convenient readable fashion. But a blog post is just a block of unstructured text—not a bad thing, but just a first step for microcontent. When it comes to<i>structured</i> data, such as personal identity profiles, product reviews, or calendar-type event data, RSS was not designed to maintain the integrity of the structures. <br /><br />Right now, blogging doesn't have the underlying structure necessary for full-fledged microcontent publishing. But that will change. Think of local information services (such as movie listings, event guides, or restaurant reviews) that any college kid can access and use in her weekend programming project to create new services and tools.<br /><br />Today's blogging tools will evolve into microcontent publishing systems, and will help spread the notion of structured data across the blogosphere. New ways to store, represent and produce microcontent will create new standards, such as <a href="http://structuredblogging.org/" target="_blank">Structured Blogging</a> and <a href="http://microformats.org/" target="_blank">Microformats</a>. Microformats differ from RSS feeds in that you can't subscribe to them. Instead, Microformats are embedded into webpages and discovered by search engines like Google or Technorati. Microformats are creating common definitions for "What is a review or event? What are the specific fields in the data structure?" They can also specify what we can do with all this information.<a href="http://www.opml.org/spec" target="_blank">OPML (Outline Processor Markup Language)</a> is a hierarchical file format for storing microcontent and structured data. It was developed by <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dave_Winer" target="_blank">Dave Winer</a> of RSS and podcast fame.<br /><br />Events are one popular type of microcontent. <a href="http://www.openevents.com" target="_blank">OpenEvents</a> is already working to create shared databases of standardized events, which would get used by a new generation of event portals—such as <a href="http://eventful.com/gotevents/" target="_blank">Eventful/EVDB</a>, <a href="http://upcoming.org/" target="_blank">Upcoming.org</a>, and <a href="http://www.whizspark.com/" target="_blank">WhizSpark</a>. The idea of OpenEvents is that event-oriented systems and services can work together to establish shared events databases (and associated APIs) that any developer could then use to create and offer their own new service or application. <a href="http://marc.blogs.it/archives/2005/04/rvw_redux_openr.html" target="_blank">OpenReviews</a> is still in the conceptual stage, but it would make it possible to provide open alternatives to closed systems like Epinions, and establish a shared database of local and global reviews. Its shared open servers would be filled with all sorts of reviews for anyone to access. <br /><br />Why is this important? Because I predict that in the future, 10 times more people will be writing reviews than maintaining their own blog. The list of possible microcontent standards goes on: OpenJobpostings, OpenRecipes, and even OpenLists. Microsoft <a href="http://www.reallysimplesyndication.com/2005/06/22" target="_blank">recently revealed</a> that it has been working on an important new kind of microcontent: Lists—so OpenLists will attempt to establish standards for the <i>kind</i> of lists we all use, such as lists of Links, lists of To Do Items, lists of People, Wish Lists, etc.<br /><br /><b>Movers and Shakers:</b><br /><a href="http://tantek.com/log/2005/09.html" target="_blank">Tantek Çelik</a> and <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kevin_Marks" target="_blank">Kevin Marks</a> of <a href="http://developers.technorati.com/wiki/MicroFormats" target="_blank">Technorati</a>, <a href="http://dannyayers.com/" target="_blank">Danny Ayers</a>, <a href="http://www.meyerweb.com/" target="_blank">Eric Meyer</a>, <a href="http://photomatt.net/" target="_blank">Matt Mullenweg</a>, <a href="http://zlab.commerce.net/" target="_blank">Rohit Khare</a>, <a href="http://ifindkarma.typepad.com/relax/" target="_blank">Adam Rifkin</a>, <a href="http://www.sivas.com/aleene/" target="_blank">Arnaud Leene</a>, <a href="http://radio.weblogs.com/0110772/" target="_blank">Seb Paquet</a>, <a href="http://hublog.hubmed.org/" target="_blank">Alf Eaton</a>, <a href="http://www.myelin.co.nz/post/" target="_blank">Phil Pearson</a>, <a href="http://www.joereger.com/" target="_blank">Joe Reger</a>, <a href="http://bobwyman.pubsub.com/" target="_blank">Bob Wyman</a> among others.<br /><br /><br /><b>5. Open Social Networks</b><br /><br />I'll never forget the first time I met <a href="http://www.jabrams.com/" target="_blank">Jonathan Abrams</a>, the founder of Friendster. He was arrogant and brash and he claimed he "<i>owned</i>" all his users, and that he was going to monetize them and make a fortune off them. This attitude robbed Friendster of its momentum, letting MySpace, Facebook, and other social networks take Friendster's place.<br /><br />Jonathan's notion of social networks as a way to control users is typical of the Web 1.0 business model and its attitude towards users in general. Social networks have become one of the battlegrounds between old and new ways of thinking. Open standards for Social Networking will define those sides very clearly. Since meeting Jonathan, I have been working towards finding and establishing open standards for social networks. Instead of closed, centralized social networks with 10 million people in them, the goal is making it possible to have 10 million social networks that each have 10 people in them.<br /><br />FOAF (which stands for Friend Of A Friend, and describes people and relationships in a way that computers can parse) is a schema to represent not only your personal profile's meta-data, but your social network as well. Thousands of researchers use the <a href="http://www.foaf-project.org/" target="_blank">FOAF schema</a> in their "Semantic Web" projects to connect people in all sorts of new ways. <a href="http://gmpg.org/xfn/" target="_blank">XFN</a> is a microformat standard for representing your social network, while <a href="http://www.imc.org/pdi/" target="_blank">vCard</a> (long familiar to users of contact manager programs like Outlook) is a microformat that contains your profile information. Microformats are baked into any xHTML webpage, which means that<i>any</i> blog, social network page, or any webpage in general can "contain" your social network in itand be used by<i>any</i> compatible tool, service or application. <br /><br />PeopleAggregator is an earlier project now being integrated into <a href="http://drupal.org/" target="_blank">open content management framework Drupal</a>. The <a href="http://www.broadbandmechanics.com/PeopleAggregator/" target="_blank">PeopleAggregator APIs</a> will make it possible to establish relationships, send messages, create or join groups, and post between different social networks. (Sneak preview: this technology will be available in the upcoming GoingOn Network.) <br /><br />All of these open social networking standards mean that inter-connected social networks will form a mesh that will parallel the blogosphere. This vibrant, distributed, decentralized world will be driven by open standards: personalized online experiences are what the new open web will be all aboutand what could be more personalized than people's networks?<br /><br /><b>Movers and Shakers:</b><br /><a href="http://esigler.2nw.net/" target="_blank">Eric Sigler</a>, <a href="http://lucifer.intercosmos.net/index.php?view=about" target="_blank">Joel De Gan</a>, <a href="http://crschmidt.net/" target="_blank">Chris Schmidt</a>, <a href="http://voidstar.com/" target="_blank">Julian Bond</a>, <a href="http://people.tribe.net/paul?_click_path=Application%5Btribe%5D.Person%5Bf2232c95-e123-43a3-b48d-24a5f11f09dc%5D&r=10535" target="_blank">Paul Martino</a>, <a href="http://napsterization.org/stories/archives/000513.html" target="_blank">Mary Hodder</a>, <a href="http://public.2idi.com/=Drummond.Reed" target="_blank">Drummond Reed</a>, <a href="http://danbri.org/" target="_blank">Dan Brickley</a>, <a href="http://360.yahoo.com/profile-9lciejI3aafX1stHPoIRNmkmv4EowQ--" target="_blank">Randy Farmer</a>, and <a href="http://www.kaliyasblogs.net/Iwoman/" target="_blank">Kaliya Hamlin</a>, to name a few.<br /><br /><br /><b>6. Tags</b><br /><br />Nowadays, no self-respecting tool or service can ship without <a href="http://www.salon.com/tech/feature/2005/02/08/tagging/index_np.html" target="_blank">tags</a>. Tags are keywords or phrases attached to photos, blog posts, URLs, or even video clips. These user- and creator-generated tags are an open alternative to what used to be the domain of librarians and information scientists: categorizing information and content using taxonomies. Tags are instead creating <a href="http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/13.04/view.html?pg=4" target="_blank">"folksonomies."</a><br /><br />The recently proposed OpenTags concept would be an open, community-owned version of the popular <a href="http://www.technorati.com/tag/" target="_blank">Technorati Tags service</a>. It would aggregate the usage of tags across a wide range of services, sites, and content tools. In addition to Technorati's current tag features, OpenTags would let groups of people share their tags in "<a href="http://www.zeldman.com/daily/0405d.shtml/" target="_blank">TagClouds</a>." Open tagging is likely to include some of the open identity features discussed above, to create a tag system that is resilient to spam, and yet trustable across sites all over the web.<br /><br />OpenTags owes a debt to earlier versions of shared tagging systems, which include <a href="http://www.topicexchange.com/" target="_blank">Topic Exchange</a> and something called the <a href="http://www.evectors.com/itkcollector/" target="_blank">k-collector</a>a knowledge management tag aggregatorfrom Italian company eVectors. <br /><br /><b>Movers & Shakers:</b><br /><a href="http://www.myelin.co.nz/notes/" target="_blank">Phil Pearson</a>, <a href="http://matt.blogs.it/" target="_blank">Matt Mower </a>, <a href="http://paolo.evectors.it/" target="_blank">Paolo Valdemarin</a>, and <a href="http://marc.blogs.it/archives/2005/03/opentopics.html" target="_blank">Mary Hodder</a> and <a href="http://www.equalsdrummond.name/index.php?p=39" target="_blank"> Drummond Reed</a> again, among others.<br /><br /><br /><b>7. Pinging</b><br /><br />Websites used to be mostly static. Search engines that <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Web_crawler" target="_blank">crawled</a> (or "spidered") them every so often did a good enough job to show reasonably current versions of your cousin's homepage or even <i>Time</i> magazine's weekly headlines. But when blogging took off, it became hard for search engines to keep up. (Google has only <a href="http://searchenginewatch.com/searchday/article.php/3548411" target="_blank">just managed</a> to offer <a href="http://www.google.com/help/about_blogsearch.html" target="_blank">blog-search functionality</a>, despite <a href="http://www.alwayson-network.com/comments.php?id=325_0_2_0_C" target="_blank">buying Blogger</a> back in early 2003.)<br /><br />To know what was new in the blogosphere, users couldn't depend on services that spidered webpages once in a while. The solution: a way for blogs themselves to automatically notify blog-tracking sites that they'd been updated. <a href="http://weblogs.com/" target="_blank">Weblogs.com</a> was the first blog "ping service": it displayed the name of a blog whenever that blog was updated. Pinging sites helped the blogosphere grow, and <a href="http://blo.gs/" target="_blank">more tools</a>, services, and portals started using pinging in new and different ways. Dozens of pinging services and sitesmost of which can't talk to each othersprang up. <br /><br />Matt Mullenweg (the creator of open source blogging software WordPress) decided that a one-stop service for pinging was needed. He created <a href="http://pingomatic.com/" target="_blank">Ping-o-Matic</a>which aggregates ping services and simplifies the pinging process for bloggers and tool developers. With Ping-o-Matic, any developer can alert all of the industry's blogging tools and tracking sites at once. This new kind of open standard, with shared infrastructure, is a critical to the scalability of Web 2.0 services.<br /><br />As <a href="http://pingomatic.com/about/" target="_blank">Matt said</a>:<br /><blockquote>There are a number of services designed specifically for tracking and connecting blogs. However it would be expensive for all the services to crawl all the blogs in the world all the time. By sending a small ping to each service you let them know you've updated so they can come check you out. They get the freshest data possible, you don't get a thousand robots spidering your site all the time. Everybody wins.</blockquote><br /><b>Movers and Shakers:</b><br /><a href="http://photomatt.net/about/" target="_blank">Matt Mullenweg</a>, <a href="http://trainedmonkey.com/entry/2251" target="_blank">Jim Winstead</a>, <a href="http://newhome.weblogs.com/faq" target="_blank">Dave Winer</a><br /><br /><br /><b>8. Routing</b><br /><br />Bloggers used to have to manually enter the links and content snippets of blog posts or news items they wanted to blog. Today, some RSS aggregators can send a specified post directly into an associated blogging tool: as bloggers browse through the feeds they subscribe to, they can easily specify and send any post they wish to "<a href="http://www.microsoftmonitor.com/archives/010209.html" target="_blank">reblog</a>" from their news aggregator or feed reader into their blogging tool. (This is usually referred to as "<a href="http://help.blogger.com/bin/answer.py?answer=152&topic=17" target="_blank">BlogThis</a>.") As structured blogging comes into its own (see the section on Microcontent Publishing), it will be increasingly important to maintain the structural integrity of these pieces of microcontent when reblogging them. <br /><br />Promising standard <a href="http://redirectthis.com/" target="_blank">RedirectThis</a> will combine a "BlogThis"-like capability while maintaining the integrity of the microcontent. RedirectThis will let bloggers and content developers attach a simple "PostThis" button to their posts. Clicking on that button will send that post to the reader/blogger's favorite <a href="http://ecto.kung-foo.tv/archives/000990.php" target="_blank">blogging tool</a>. This favorite tool is specified at the RedirectThis web service, where users register their blogging tool of choice. RedirectThis also helps maintain the integrity and structure of microcontentthen it's just up to the user to prefer a blogging tool that also attains that lofty goal of microcontent integrity. <br /><br />OutputThis is another nascent web services standard, to let bloggers specify what "destinations" they'd like to have as options in their blogging tool. As new destinations are added to the service, more checkboxes would get added to their blogging toolallowing them to route their published microcontent to additional destinations.<br /><br /><b>Movers and Shakers:</b><br /><a href="http://reblog.org/" target="_blank">Michael Migurski</a>, <a href="http://www.gonze.com/about" target="_blank">Lucas Gonze</a><br /><br /><br /><b>9. Open Communications</b><br /><br />Likely, you've experienced the joys of finding friends on AIM or Yahoo Messenger, or the convenience of Skyping with someone overseas. Not that you're about to throw away your mobile phone or BlackBerry, but for many, also having access to Instant Messaging (IM) and Voice over IP (VoIP) is crucial. <br /><br />IM and VoIP are mainstream technologies that already enjoy the benefits of open standards. Entire industries are bornright this secondbased around these open standards. <a href="http://www.jabber.org/" target="_blank">Jabber</a> has been an open IM technology for yearsin fact, <a href="http://www.xmpp.org/history.html" target="_blank">as XMPP</a>, it was officially dubbed a standard by <a href="http://www.ietf.org/overview.html" target="_blank">the IETF</a>. Although becoming an <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IETF" target="_blank">official IETF standard</a> is usually the kiss of death, Jabber looks like it'll be around for a while, as entire generations of collaborative, work-group applications and services have been built on top of its messaging protocol. For VoIP, <a href="http://skype.com/helloagain.html" target="_blank">Skype</a> is clearly the leading standard todaythough one could <a href="http://socialsoftware.weblogsinc.com/entry/1234000923058521/" target="_blank">argue just how "open" it is</a> (and defenders of the IETF's <a href="http://www.cs.columbia.edu/sip/" target="_blank">SIP standard</a> often do). But it is free and user-friendly, so there won't be much argument from <i>users</i> about it being insufficiently open. Yet there may be a cloud on Skype's horizon: web behemoth Google recently released a beta of <a href="http://www.google.com/talk/developer.html" target="_blank">Google Talk, an IM client committed to open standards</a>. It currently <a href="http://radar.oreilly.com/archives/2005/08/google_talk_rel.html" target="_blank">supports XMPP, and will support SIP</a> for VoIP calls.<br /><br /><b>Movers and Shakers:</b><br /><a href="http://www.jabber.org/people/jer.shtml" target="_blank">Jeremie Miller</a>, <a href="http://www.cs.columbia.edu/~hgs/" target="_blank">Henning Schulzrinne</a>, <a href="http://www.von.com/schedule_eos11114704148.html" target="_blank">Jon Peterson</a>, <a href="http://www.pulver.com/jeff/" target="_blank">Jeff Pulver</a><br /><br /><br /><b>10. Device Management and Control</b><br /><br />To access online content, we're using more and more devices. BlackBerrys, iPods, Treos, you name it. As the web evolves, more and more different devices will have to communicate with each other to give us the content we want when and where we want it. No-one wants to be dependent on one vendor anymorelike, <a href="http://www.alwayson-network.com/comments.php?id=P9409_0_6_0_C" target="_blank">say, Sony</a>for their laptop, phone, MP3 player, PDA, and digital camera, so that it all works together. We need fully interoperable devices, and the standards to make that work. And to fully make use of how content is moving online content and innovative web services, those standards need to be open.<br /><br /><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Midi" target="_blank">MIDI (musical instrument digital interface)</a>, one of the very first open standards in music, connected disparate vendors' instruments, post-production equipment, and recording devices. But MIDI is limited, and <a href="http://www.oreillynet.com/pub/wlg/8015" target="_blank">MIDI II has been very slow to arrive</a>. Now a new standard for controlling musical devices has emerged: <a href="http://www.cnmat.berkeley.edu/OpenSoundControl/" target="_blank">OSC (Open SoundControl)</a>. This protocol is optimized for modern networking technology and inter-connects music, video and controller devices with "other multimedia devices." OSC is used by a wide range of developers, and is being taken up in the mainstream MIDI marketplace.<br /><br />Another open-standards-based device management technology is <a href="http://www.zigbee.org" target="_blank">ZigBee</a>, for building wireless intelligence and network monitoring into all kinds of devices. ZigBee is supported by many networking, consumer electronics, and mobile device companies.<br /><br /><br /> · · · · · · <br /><br /><b>The Change to Openness</b><br /><br />The rise of open source software and its "<a href="http://www.oreillynet.com/pub/a/oreilly/tim/articles/architecture_of_participation.html" target="_blank">architecture of participation</a>" are completely shaking up the old proprietary-web-services-and-standards approach. Sun Microsystemswhose proprietary Java standard helped define the Web 1.0is opening its Solaris OS and has even announced the apparent paradox of an <a href="http://blogs.zdnet.com/open-source/?p=418" target="_blank">open-source Digital Rights Management</a> system.<br /><br />Today's incumbents will have to adapt to the new openness of the Web 2.0. If they stick to their <a href="http://www.gartner.com/DisplayDocument?doc_cd=131038" target="_blank">proprietary standards</a>, code, and content, they'll become the new walled gardensplaces users visit briefly to retrieve data and content from enclosed data silos, but not where users "live." The incumbents' revenue models will have to change. Instead of "owning" their users, users will know they own themselves, and will expect a return on their valuable identity and attention. Instead of being locked into incompatible media formats, users will expect easy access to digital content across many platforms. <br /><br />Yesterday's web giants and tomorrow's users will need to find a mutually beneficial new balancebetween open and proprietary, developer and user, hierarchical and horizontal, owned and shared, and compatible and closed. <br /><br /><br /><i>Marc Canter is an active evangelist and developer of open standards. Early in his career, Marc founded MacroMind, which became Macromedia. These days, he is CEO of Broadband Mechanics, a founding member of the Identity Gang and of ourmedia.org. Broadband Mechanics is currently developing the <a href="http://www.alwayson-network.com/comments.php?id=11262_0_1_0_C" target="_blank">GoingOn Network</a> (with the AlwaysOn Network), as well as an open platform for social networking called the PeopleAggregator.</i><br /><br />A version of the above post appears in the Fall 2005 issue of AlwaysOn's quarterly print blogozine, and ran as <a href="http://www.alwayson-network.com/comments.php?id=12063_0_1_0_C" target="_blank">a four-part series</a> on the AlwaysOn Network website.</td></tr></table><br /><p>(Via <a href="http://marc.blogs.it/">Marc's Voice</a>.)</p></blockquote>
Breaking the Web Wide Open!
2006-06-22T12:56:58Z
2006-06-22T08:56:58-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/880
<p><a href="http://dannyayers.com/archives/2005/10/24/yet-another-rss-history/">Yet Another RSS History</a>: "</p><p><em>[You don’t expect me to work out the CSS right after making it semantic, do you?] </em></p><p>Shift to another universe. It’s sometime in the late 1990’s. <a href="http://www.guha.com/cv.html">Ramanathan Guha</a>, <a href="http://www.tbray.org/ongoing/">Tim Bray</a>, <a href="http://scripting.com">Dave Winer</a>, <a href="http://tantek.com">Tantek Çelik</a>, <a href="http://dan.libby.com/">Dan Libby</a> and <a href="http://www.w3.org/People/Connolly/">Dan Connolly</a> are sharing a jacuzzi*. As they sip Marghueritas, their conversation goes like this: </p><ul><li><cite>DanL</cite><br /><blockquote><p>So, we’ve got this idea for publishing content that’s a bit like <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/NOTE-CDFsubmit.html">CDF</a>, but we’ve made the system more of a service than just a desktop thing.</p></blockquote></li><li><cite>Guha</cite><br /><blockquote><p>Sounds cool. Might be a good fit with this RDF thing I’ve been working on.</p></blockquote></li><li><cite>Dave</cite><br /><blockquote><p>Hmm, Dan’s stuff does sound cool, but with all due respect dude, RDF does seem a bit complicated. I really don’t think the folks out in userland would get it. And they majored in graphs.</p></blockquote></li><li><cite>Tim</cite><br /><blockquote><p>Maybe we could make it a bit more straightforward, you know, like put pointy brackets around it?</p></blockquote></li><li><cite>Dave</cite><br /><blockquote><p>Straightforward’s good. Better still, simple. They like simple.</p></blockquote></li><li><cite>Tantek</cite><br /><blockquote><p>But what about the rest of the Web, you know, like HTML?</p></blockquote></li><li><cite>DanL</cite><br /><blockquote><p>Hmm, but how do we do the timestamping kind of thing, and wrap it up in a ‘microposty’ way, the things that makes this distribution mode work?</p></blockquote></li><li><cite>Guha</cite><br /><blockquote><p>Yeah, metadata is cool. Keep the metadata.</p></blockquote></li><li><cite>Tim</cite><br /><blockquote><p>Not cheap though. The Web must be cheap. Did Andreesen show you his pictures..?</p></blockquote></li><li><cite>Dave</cite><br /><blockquote><p>…’Microposty’? you mean like my newsletter thing, but on the Web?</p></blockquote></li><li><cite>DanL</cite><br /><blockquote><p>Yep, like Cool Diary Entry of the Day</p></blockquote></li><li><cite>Tim</cite><br /><blockquote><p>But do we really need 1000 pages of spec for that?</p></blockquote></li><li><cite>Tantek</cite><br /><blockquote><p>…Incidentally, did you see my <a href="http://tantek.com/CSS/Examples/boxmodelhack.html">Box Model Hack?</a></p></blockquote></li><li><cite>Guha</cite><br /><blockquote><p>Yup.</p></blockquote></li><li><cite>DanL</cite><br /><blockquote><p>Yup.</p></blockquote></li><li><cite>Tim</cite><br /><blockquote><p>Yup.</p></blockquote></li><li><cite>Dave</cite><br /><blockquote><p>Yup. I explained that on DaveNet last year.</p></blockquote></li><li><cite>MarcC</cite><br /><blockquote><p>Hey! I’ve got it: ‘MyDigitalCocktail’..?</p></blockquote></li><li><cite>DanC</cite><br /><blockquote><p>Hang on, that gives me <a href="http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/www-rdf-interest/2000Mar/0103">an idea</a>…</p></blockquote></li></ul><p><em>There was a tangible outcome to this conversation: a document format which supports content and unambiguous, explicit, data and metadata, timestamping and much, much more. It’s viewable in a regular browser. Can be syndicated; can be aggregated. Unlike forgetful RSS, archives are almost always retrievable using regular HTTP methods. In this universe there was no RSS. No syndication wars. No talking-at-cross-purposes conflict between docheads and dataheads, syntax fans and model fans. No-one had to publish simple data in Byzantine RDF/XML. No-one had to deal with doubly-escaped content and silent data loss. There was no need for any new format for business cards, calendars, blogs, link lists, reviews, pet profiles. XHTML with CSS was more than enough. DanL got the MyNetscape he wanted. Tim got the simple, tight format he wanted. Guha got the AI. Tantek got to do presentations in a cool black raincoat. DanC finally got his schedule on his Palm Pilot. Dave got the credit. MarcC got the parasols and a grass skirt none of the others would admit to having brought. </em></p><p>Shift back to this universe. Check out <a href="http://microformats.org/wiki/hatom">hAtom</a>. It’s not finished yet, but <a href="http://blogmatrix.com">David</a>’s been methodically working through the (utterly sound) <a href="http://microformats.org/wiki/process">microformats process</a>. Looks good to me. </p><p><em>* apologies for the imagery, but how else do think Silicon Valley might seem to someone raised in the cowpat-coated hills of Derbyshire?</em></p><p>PS. Apologies to everyone mentioned. And before you suggest it, blogging *is* therapy.</p>" <p>(Via <a href="http://dannyayers.com">Raw</a>.)</p>
Yet Another RSS History
2006-06-22T12:56:58Z
2006-06-22T08:56:58-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/870
I have just read <a href="http://www.25hoursaday.com/weblog/PermaLink.aspx?guid=e481327e-5e8b-4b93-982e-db206222a2cf">Dare Obasanjo's recent contribution to the Web 2.0 clarification effort</a>. His post-processing of the <a href="http://www.oreillynet.com/pub/a/oreilly/tim/news/2005/09/30/what-is-web-20.html?page=1">Web 2.0 treatise by Tim O'Reilly</a> certainly got me thinking about the thorny issue of attempting to define Web 2.0. As most already know, the subject of Web 2.0 definition has been contentious from the onset (unfortunately for the wrong reasons: hype over substance): <cite><blockquote>just take a look at the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Web_2.0">oxymoronic Wikipedia 2.0 imbroglio</a> to get my drift. In retrospect, I should have called on <a href="http://news.com.com/Esquire+wikis+article+on+Wikipedia/2100-1038_3-5885171.html">Esquire magazine</a> to get the Web 2.0 article going :-) ).</blockquote></cite> Anyway, back to Dare's analysis of Tim's 7 Web 2.0 litmus test items listed below: <blockquote><cite><ul><li> Services, not packaged software, with cost-effective scalability </li><li> Control over unique, hard-to-recreate data sources that get richer as more people use them </li><li> Trusting users as co-developers </li><li> Harnessing collective intelligence </li><li> Leveraging the long tail through customer self-service </li><li> Software above the level of a single device </li><li> Lightweight user interfaces, development models, AND business models </li></ul></cite></blockquote> And trimmed down to 3 by Dare: <blockquote><cite><ul dir="ltr"><li><div>Exposes Web services that can be accessed on any device or platform by any developer or user. RSS feeds, RESTful APIs and SOAP APIs are all examples of Web services. </div></li><li><div>Harnesses the collective knowledge of its user base to benefit users </div></li><li><div>Leverages the long tail through customer self-service </div></li></ul></cite></blockquote> Well, I would like to summarize this a little further using a few excerpts from my numerous contributions to the Web 2.0 talk page on Wikipedia (albeit mildly revised; see strikeouts etc.): <blockquote><cite>Web 2.0 is a web of <strike>executable</strike> service invocation endpoints (those Web Services URIs) and well-formed content (all of that RSS, Atom, RDF, XHTML, etc. based Web Content out on the NET). The <strike>executable</strike> service invocation endpoints and well-formed content are accessible via URIs. <p>Put in even simpler terms, Web 2.0 is an incarnation of the web defined by URIs for invoking Web Services and/or consuming or syndicating well-formed content.</p></cite><p>Looks like I've self edited my own definition in the process. :-)</p></blockquote><p>If you don't grok this definition then consider using it as a trigger for taking a closer look at the dynamics that genuinely differentiate Web 1.0 and Web 2.0.</p> In another Wikipedia "talk page" contribution (regarding "Web 2.0 Business Impact") I attempt to answer the question posed <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Web_2.0#Business_Impact">here</a>, which should also shed light on the premise of my definition above: <blockquote><cite><p>Web 1.0 was about web sites geared towards an interaction with human beings as opposed to computers. In a sense this mirrors the difference between HTML and XML.</p><p>A simple example (purchasing a book):</p><p>amazon.com provides value to you by enabling you to search and purchase the desired book online via the site http://www.amazon.com.</p><p>In the Web 1.0 era the process of searching for your desired book, and then eventually purchasing the book in question, required visible interaction with the site http://www.amazon.com. In today's Web 2.0 based Web the process of discovering a catalog of books, searching for your particular book of interest, and eventually purchasing the book, occurs via Web Services which amazon has chosen to expose via an executable endpoint (<i>the Web point of presence for exposing its Web Services</i>).</p><p>Direct interaction via http://www.amazon.com is no longer required. A weblog can quite easily associate keywords, tags, and post categories with items in amazon.com's catalogs. In addition, weblogs can also act as entry points for consuming the amazon.com value proposition (making books available for purchase online), by enabling you to purchase a book directly from the weblog (assuming the blog owner is an amazon associate etc..). Now compare the impact of this kind of value discovery and consumption cycle driven by software to the same process driven by humans interaction with a static or dynamic HTML page (Web 1.0 site). </p></cite></blockquote><p>To surmise, Web 2.0 is a reflection of the potential of XML expressed through the collective impact of Web Services (XML based distributed computing) and Well-formed Content (Blogosphere, Wikisphere, XHTML micro content etc.). The potential simply comes down to the ability to ultimately connect events, triggers, impulses (chatter, conversation, etc.), and data in general via URIs.</p><p>Let's never forget that XML is the reason why we have a blogosphere (RSS/Atom/RDF are applications of XML). Likewise, XML is also the reason why we have Web Services (doesn't matter what format).</p><p>As I have stated in the past, we must go by Web 2.0 en route what is popularly referred to as the Semantic Web (it will be known by another name by the time we get there; 3.0 or 4.0, who knows or cares?). At the current time, the prerequisite activity of self annotation is in full swing on the current Web, thanks to the inflective effects of Web 2.0.</p><p>BTW - Would this <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&q=semantic%20web&type=text&output=html">URI</a> to <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&q=semantic%20web&type=text&output=html">all Semantic Web related posts on my blog</a> pass the Web 2.0 litmus test? Likewise, this <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&q=web%202.0&type=text&output=html">URI</a> to all <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&q=web%202.0&type=text&output=html">Web 2.0 related posts</a>? I wonder :-)</p>
The Web 2.0 Litmus Test
2006-06-22T12:56:58Z
2006-06-22T08:56:58-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/849
<div align="left">After digesting <a href="http://obliqueangle.blogspot.com/">Oblique Angle</a>'s post titled: <a href="http://obliqueangle.blogspot.com/2005/05/world-wide-web-of-junk.html">World Wide Web of Junk</a>, it was nice to be reassured that I am not part of a shrinking minority of increasingly peturbed Web users. The post excerpt below is what compelled me to contribute some of my thoughts about the current state of the Web and a future "Semantic Web".</div> <blockquote style="margin-right: 0px;" dir="ltr"> <div align="left">The value of the Internet as a repository of useful information is very low. <a href="http://faculty.haas.berkeley.edu/shapiro/">Carl Shapiro </a>in <a href="http://www.inforules.com/">“Information Rules”</a> suggests that the amount of actually useful information on the Internet would fit within roughly 15,000 books, which is about half the size of an average mall bookstore. To put this in perspective: there are over 5 billion unique, static & publicly accessible web pages on the www. Apparently Only 6% of web sites have educational content (Maureen Henninger, <a href="http://www.mja.com.au/public/bookroom/1999/mullins/mullins.html">“Don’t just surf the net: Effective research strategies”. </a>UNSW Press). Even of the educational content only a fraction is of significant informational value.</div></blockquote> <div dir="ltr" align="left">Noise is taking over the Web at an alarming rate (to be expected in a sense ), and even though <a href="http://www.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee/">Tim Berners-Lee</a> (TBL) had the foresight to create the Web, many see nothing but futility in his vision for a "Semantic Web" (I don't!). A recent example of such commentary comes from Eric Nee's CIO article, titled: <span class="print_article_title"><a href="http://www.cioinsight.com/print_article2/0,2533,a=151806,00.asp">Web Future is Not Semantic, Or Overly Orderly</a>. I take issue with this article because, like most (who have been bitten at least once), I don't like mono culture</span><span class="print_article_title">. </span>This article inadvertently promotes "Google Mono Culture". I have excerpted the more frustrating parts of this article below:</div> <blockquote style="margin-right: 0px;" dir="ltr"> <div dir="ltr" align="left"> <p><em>..As Stanford students, Larry Page and Sergey Brin looked at the same problem—how to impart meaning to all the content on the Web—and decided to take a different approach. The two developed sophisticated software that relied on other clues to discover the meaning of content, such as which Web sites the information was linked to. And in 1998 they launched Google..</em></p></div></blockquote> <p dir="ltr">You mean noise ranking. Now, I don't think Larry and Sergey set out to do this, but Google page ranks are ultimately based on the concept of "Google Juice" (aka links). The value quotient of this algorithm is accelerating at internet speed (ironically, but naturally). Human beings are smarter than computers, we just process data (not information!) much slower that's all. Thus, we can conjure up numerous ways to bubble up the google link ranking algorithms in no time (as is the case today). </p> <blockquote style="margin-right: 0px;" dir="ltr"> <p dir="ltr" align="left"><em>..What most differentiates Google's approach from Berners-Lee's is that Google doesn't require people to change the way they post content..</em></p></blockquote> <p dir="ltr" align="left">The Semantic Web doesn't require anyone to change how they post content either! It just provides a roadmap for intelligent content managment and consumption through innovative products. </p><blockquote style="margin-right: 0px;" dir="ltr"> <p dir="ltr" align="left"><em>..As Sergey Brin told Infoworld's 2002 CTO Forum, "I'd rather make progress by having computers under-stand what humans write, than by forcing -humans to write in ways that computers can understand." In fact, Google has not participated at all in the W3C's formulation of Semantic Web standards, says Eric Miller.. </em></p></blockquote> <p dir="ltr" align="left">Semantic Content generated by next generation content managers will make more progress, and they certainly won't require humans to write any differently. If anything, humans will find the process quite refreshing as and when participation is required e.g. clicking bookmarklets associated with tagging services such as '<a href="http://del.icio.us">del.icio.us</a>', <a href="http://de.lirio.us">'de.lirio.us</a>', or <a href="http://www.unalog.com">Unalog</a> and others. But this is only the beginning, if I can click on a bookmarklet to post this blog post to a tagging service, then why wouldn't I be able to incorporate the "tag service post" into the same process that saves my blog post (the post is content that ends up in a <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com">content management system</a> aka blog server)? </p><blockquote style="margin-right: 0px;" dir="ltr"> <p dir="ltr" align="left"><em>Yet Google's impact on the Web is so dramatic that it probably makes more sense to call the next generation of the Web the "Google Web" rather than the "Semantic Web."</em></p></blockquote> <p dir="ltr" align="left">Ah! so you think we really want the noisy "Google Web" as opposed to a federation of distributed Information- and Knowledgbases ala the "Semantic Web"? I don't think so somehow!</p> <p dir="ltr" align="left">Today we are generally excited about "tagging" but fail to see its correlation with the "Semantic Web", somehow? I have said this before, and I will say it again, the "Semantic Web" is going to be self-annotated by humans with the aid of intelligent and unobtrusive annotation technology solutions. These solutions will provide context and purpose by using our our social essence as currency. The annotation effort will be subliminal, there won't be a "Semantic Web Day" parade or anything of the like. It will appear before us all, in all its glory, without any fanfare. Funnily enough, we might not even call it "The Semantic Web", who cares? But it will have the distinct attributes of being very "Quiet" and highly "Valuable"; with no burden on "how we write", but constructive burden on "why we write" as part of the content contribution process (less Google/Yahoo/etc juice chasing for more knowledge assembly and exchange). </p><p dir="ltr" align="left">We are social creatures at our core. The Internet and Web have collectively reduced the connectivity hurdles that once made social network oriented solutions implausible. The eradication of these hurdles ultimately feeds the very impulses that trigger the critical self-annotation that is the basis of my fundamental belief in the realization of TBL's Semantic Web vision. </p><p dir="ltr" align="left"> </p>
World Wide Web of Junk
2006-06-22T12:56:58Z
2006-06-22T08:56:58-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/846
<blockquote dir="ltr" style="MARGIN-RIGHT: 0px"> <p>While I'm still trying to figure this out, you should read Shelley's original post, <a href="http://weblog.burningbird.net/archives/2005/03/15/steve-levy-dave-sifrey-and-nz-bear-you-are-hurting-us/">Steve Levy, Dave Sifry, and NZ Bear: You are Hurting Us</a> and see whether you think the arguments against blogrolls are as wrong as I think they are. </p></blockquote> <div align="right">[via <a href="http://www.25hoursaday.com/weblog/">Dare Obasanjo aka Carnage4Life</a>]</div> <div align="left"> </div> <div align="left">Shelley's <a href="http://weblog.burningbird.net/archives/2005/03/15/steve-levy-dave-sifrey-and-nz-bear-you-are-hurting-us/">post</a> does bring attention to important issues relating to the blogosphere. It touches on how a simple matter can get complex very quickly. All of a sudden what was so simple, becomes pretty complex.</div> <div align="left"> </div> <div align="left">Blogrolls are completely ambiguous. We use them in a variety of ways, but the inherent ambiguity leads to misinterpretation, and in some cases it breeds dysfunctionality of the kind Shelley alludes to in this excerpt:</div> <blockquote dir="ltr" style="MARGIN-RIGHT: 0px"> <div align="left"> <p><em>"..The Technorati Top 100 is too much like Google in that ânoiseâ becomes equated with âauthorityâ. Rather than provide a method to expose new voices, your list becomes nothing more than a way for those on top to further cement their positions. More, it can be easily manipulated with just the release of a piece of software.."</em></p></div></blockquote> <div align="left"> </div> <div align="left">When blogrolls started to appear on blog home pages there was no blogosphere as we know it today (most viewing was browser as opposed to aggregator based). Blogrolls where a great way of bootstrapping a burgeoning blogosphere (a kind of "look who's blogging now" symbol). The issue of Blogrolls being dynamic, static, or genuinely meaningful was unimportant, unfortunately. In a sense they were simple, static, and in today's parlance: fashionably sloppy.</div> <div align="left"> </div> <div align="left">Today, we have a very extensive and lively blogosphere, it is now mainstream, and has basically become a data source in its own right; introducing challenges exemplified by our inability to clearly state the meaning and purpose of a blogroll.</div> <div align="left"> </div> <div align="left">The question of "blogroll meaning" may result in alternative use of "<a href="http://developers.technorati.com/wiki/attentionxml">attention.xml</a>" which has the prime goal of addressing challenges associated with tracking and reading posts from a large blog subscription pool. Why not use this as the basis for generating less ambiguous blogrolls?</div> <div align="left"> </div> <div align="left">The blogosphere has been an important catalyst for understanding the current Web 2.0 inflection as demonstrated by the transition from the Web Browsers to Feed Aggregators & Readers for reading and tracking blogs (blog home pages are secondary aspects of the interaction with any given blog these days). Unfortunately, there is a general perception that Web 2.0 and the Semantic Web are mutually exclusive, primarily due to the perceived lofty goals of the latter (what's wrong with being challenged?). From my vantage point, I continue to see Web 2.0 as a necessary infrastructure component for the Semantic Web that will ultimately provide context for understanding why it's so important. </div> <div align="left"> </div> <div align="left">The Semantic Web will certainly aid in our ability to infer or deduce the meaning of a blog owner's published blogroll since it provides a vehicle for conveying such meaning in human and machine consumable forms. Until then, I remain stumped. I see where Shelley is coming from, but I don't know what to do with my blogroll right this moment :-) On the other hand I certainly know what I am planning to do with my real blogroll (not the snapshot you see today) in the not too distant future.</div> <div align="left"> </div>
When did Blogrolls Become Evil?
2006-06-22T12:56:58Z
2006-06-22T08:56:58-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/766
<p>If a picture speaks a thousand words, I sometimes wonder how many words we attribute to a multimedia clip? Especially one that is now openly accessible to many who don't quite understand the high degree of: "Back To The Future" quotient of most of what we see today.</p> <p>The Internet Archive initiative is building up an amazing collection of content that includes this <a href="http://www.archive.org/movies/details-db.php?collection=computerchronicles&collectionid=CC501_hypercard">"must watch" movie</a> about the somewhat forgotten <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypercard">hypercard</a> development environment.</p> <p>As I watched the hypercard movie I obtained clear reassurance that my vision of <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Web_2.0">Web 2.0</a> as critical infrastructure for a future Semantic Web isn't unfounded. The solution building methodology espoused by hypercard is exactly how Semantic Web applications will be built, and this will be done by orchestrating the componentary of Web 2.0.</p> <p>When watching this clip make the following mental adjustments:</p> <ol> <li>Swap hypercard stacks for discrete and/or composite services that have published endpoints exposed by Web 2.0 points of presence<br /><br /></li> <li>Think of information taking the form of XML based content e.g. RSS, Atom, RDF, FOAF, XFN, and other future XML based data contextualization formats; all accessible via URIs<br /><br /></li> <li>When the Apple Mac operating system is mentioned (or infered) think of the Internet (you don't need Windows, Mac OS, Linux, UNIX etc. to realize the vision, the network provided by the Internet is the Operating System)<br /><br /></li> <li>When the Apple computer is mentioned simply think about a plethora of function specific devices (computers, mobile phones, PDAs etc.) that overtly or covertly provide conduits to the new operating environment (the Internet)<br /><br /></li> <li>As you hear term "whole new body of people that are non programmers contributing there ideas" think about yourself and the increasing ease of participation that's beginning to take shape in this emerging frontier!<br /><br /></li> <li>As for "<a href="http://www.wholeearthmag.com/about.html">Whole Earth Catalog", </a>think <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org">Wikipedia</a> or more recent efforts such as <a href="http://www.answers.com">Answers.com</a>.</li></ol> <p>Web 2.0 is a reflection of the web taking its first major step out of the technology stone age (certainly the case relative to the hypercard movie and "pre web" application development in general). </p> <p> </p>
Back To The Future: Hypermedia
2006-06-22T12:56:58Z
2006-06-22T08:56:58-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/710
<p dir="ltr">I have yanked out a key segment from the <a href="http://www.emergic.org/archives/2005/03/01/index.html#tech_talk_the_future_of_search_perspectives">TECH TALK: The Future of Search: Perspectives</a> post that I find really poignant regarding the changing shape and form of the Web:</p> <blockquote dir="ltr" style="MARGIN-RIGHT: 0px"> <p></p> <p dir="ltr">It is clear that in comparison to the Web of the last century, the nature of data on the Web later in this decade will be very different in the following aspects:</p> <ul> <li dir="ltr">Volume of data is growing by orders of magnitudes every year<br />Multimedia and sensor data are becoming more and more common.<br /><br /></li> <li dir="ltr">Spatio-temporal attributes of data are important.<br /><br /></li> <li dir="ltr">Different data sources provide information to form the holistic picture.<br /><br /></li> <li dir="ltr">Users are not concerned with the location of data source, as long as its quality and credibility is assured. They want to know the result of the data assimilation (the big picture of the event).<br /><br /></li> <li dir="ltr">Real-time data processing is the only way to extract meaningful information<br />Exploration, not querying, is the predominant mode of interaction, which makes context and state critical.<br /><br /></li> <li dir="ltr">The user is interested in experience and information, independent of the medium and the source.<br /></li></ul> <p>Effectively, the nature of the knowledge on the Web is changing very fast. It used to be mostly static text documents; now it will be a combination of live and static multimedia, including text, data and documents with spatio-temporal attributes. Considering these changes, can the search engines developed for static text documents be able to deal with the needs of the Web? [via <a href="http://www.emergic.org/">E M E R G I C . o r g</a>]</p></blockquote> <p dir="ltr">No, but this doesn't render them useless since we wouldn't be at this point without the likes of Google, Yahoo! et al. But building upon the data substrate that web data oriented search engines provide is where the next batch of Information access and Knowledge discovery solutions will carve out their space. The symbiotic relationship between <a href="http://google.com/">Google </a>(data) and Gurunet's <a href="http://answers.com/">Answers.com</a> (Information and Knowledge) is one interesting example.</p> <p dir="ltr" style="MARGIN-RIGHT: 0px">The Web is a distributed collection of databases that implement variety of data storage models but are commonly accessible via protocols that rely on HTTP for transport (in-bound and out-bound messages) services. These databases increasingly using well-formed XML for query result (data contextualization) persistence and URIs for permenant reference. 'What Database?" you might ask, "What you once called your Web Site, Blog, Wiki, etc.." my time-less reply.</p> <p dir="ltr" style="MARGIN-RIGHT: 0px">When you have the database that I describe above, and a collection of entry points from which discrete or composite Web Services can be invoked available from one or more internet domains, you end up with what I prefer to call "<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Web_2.0">Web 2.0</a>" presence, or what <a href="http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/002645.php">Richard McManus</a> describes as: "The Web as a Platform".</p> <p dir="ltr" style="MARGIN-RIGHT: 0px">Here is a collection of posts I have made in the past relating to Web 2.0, note that this list is dynamic since this blog is Virtuoso based (predictably):</p> <p dir="ltr" style="MARGIN-RIGHT: 0px">Free Text Search with XHTML results page (with Virtuoso generated URIs for RSS, Atom, and RDF): <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/blog/search.vspx?blogid=127&q=web+2.0&type=text&output=html">http://www.openlinksw.com/blog/search.vspx?blogid=127&q=web+2.0&type=text&output=html</a> </p> <p dir="ltr" style="MARGIN-RIGHT: 0px">It's also no secret that I believe that <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/">Virtuoso</a> is a bleeding edge Web 2.0 technology platform (and more..). The URIs that I am exposing provide the foundation layer for other complimentary Web initiatives such as the <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/blog/search.vspx?blogid=127&q=semantic+web&type=text&output=html">Semantic Web </a>(Web 2.0 provides infrastructure for the Semantic Web as time will show). They are also completely usable outside the realm of this blog.</p> <p dir="ltr" style="MARGIN-RIGHT: 0px">BTW - <a href="http://weblog.infoworld.com/udell/">Jon Udell</a> is writing, experimenting with, and demonstrating <a href="http://weblog.infoworld.com/udell/2005/03/01.html#a1187">similar concepts</a> across feeds within his Web 2.0 domain.</p> <p dir="ltr" style="MARGIN-RIGHT: 0px">These are indeed fun times!</p>
The Future of Search: Perspectives
2006-06-22T12:56:58Z
2006-06-22T08:56:58-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/695
<p><a href="http://www.answers.com/main/ntquery?s=definition+cognitive+dissonance&method=2&gwp=13">Cognitive dissonance</a> is how <a href="http://blogs.msdn.com/dareobasanjo/archive/2005/02/17/375367.aspx">Dare Obasanjo</a> aptly describes the emergence of some of the <a href="http://www.answers.com/main/ntquery?s=smart+tags&method=2&gwp=13">Smart Tags </a>concepts previously introduced by Microsoft and now emulated by the new google toolbar's autolink feature (<a href="http://glinden.blogspot.com/">Greg Linden</a> explains the problem with <a href="http://glinden.blogspot.com/2005/02/autolink-in-google-toolbar.html">clarity</a>).</p> <p>Anyway, back to cognitive dissonance. Could this be the reason for the following?</p> <ol> <li>Open Source products are increasingly database specific even though they could be database independent via Open Source ODBC SDK efforts such as <a href="http://www.iodbc.org">iODBC</a> and <a href="http://www.unixodbc.org">unixODBC</a>. We increasingly narrowing our choices down to database specific "Closed Source" or database specific "Open Source" solutions and somehow deem this to be progress<br /></li> <li>The prevalent use of free standards compliant data access drivers (<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ODBC">ODBC</a>, <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JDBC">JDBC</a>, and <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ADO.NET">ADO.NET</a>) or their native counterparts that remain vulnerable to simple password hacks (there are databases behind those dynamic web sites!!) as none of these have any notion of "rules based" authentication and data access policy<br /></li> <li>The time-tested fallacy that: "select * from table" defines a viable <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RDBMS">RDBMS</a> engine since Transaction Atomicity, Concurrency, Isolation, and Durability (ACID) mean zip! Ditto scrollable cursors, stored procedures, and other presumably useless aspects of any marginably decent RDBMS engine<br /></li> <li>Failing to comprehend that a <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weblog">Weblog</a> is your property (if you have a personal blog) not the property of the vendor hosting your service (that important issue of separating data ownership and data storage again). You may have heard about, or experienced, total loss of weblog and/or weblog archives arising from weblog engine or blog service provider changeovers<br /></li> <li>Failing to see the synergy between personal/group/corporate information stores (aka <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/blog/search.vspx?blogid=127&q=infoBase&type=text&output=html">infobase</a>) such as Wikis, Weblogs, and the burgeoning semantic web. <a href="http://weblog.infoworld.com/udell/2005/02/22.html#a1183">Jon Udell</a> for instance, is trying to get the point across via his tireless collection of <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XML_query_language">XQuery</a>/<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XPath">XPath</a> based queries aimed at the blogosphere section of the burgeoning semantic web. Here are some of mine (scoped to this weblog):<br /></li> <ul> <li>Security related posts to date (<a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/blog/search.vspx?blogid=127&q=//p[contains%28.%2C%27security%27%29]&type=xpath&output=html">XPath</a> query)<br /></li> <li>Infobase related posts to date (<a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/blog/search.vspx?blogid=127&q=infoBase&type=text&output=html">Free Text</a> search)<br /></li></ul></ol> <p>And more...</p>
Cognitive Dissonance
2006-06-22T12:56:58Z
2006-06-22T08:56:58-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/680
<blockquote dir="ltr" style="MARGIN-RIGHT: 0px"> <p><a href="http://techdirt.com/articles/20050209/1329235_F.shtml">Email As A Platform</a> It looks like more people are starting to realize that email is more than it seems. Especially given the drastic increase in storage size of web-based email applications, more people are realizing that <a href="http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/4167633.stm">email is basically a personal database</a>. People simply store information in their email, from contact information that was emailed to them to schedule information to purchase tracking from emailed receipts. Lots of people email messages to themselves, realizing that email is basically the best "permanent" filing system they have. That's part of the reason why good email search is so important. Of course, what the article doesn't discuss is the next stage of this evolution. If you have a database of important information, the next step is to build useful applications on top of it. In other words, people are starting to realize that email, itself, is a <i>platform</i> for personal information management. </p></blockquote> <div align="right">[via <a href="http://www.techdirt.com/">Techdirt</a>]</div> <div align="left"> </div> <div align="left">Yep! And this is where the Unified Storage vision comes into play. Many years ago the same issues emerged in the business application realm, and at the time the issue at hand was: separating the DBMS engine from the Application logic. This is what the SQL Access Group (SAG) addressed via the CLI that laid the foundation for ODBC, JDBC, and recent derivatives; OLE DB and ADO.NET. </div> <div align="left"> </div> <div align="left">Most of us live inside our email applications and the need to integrate the content of emails, address books, notes, calendars with other data sources (Web Portal, Blogs, Wikis, CRM, ERP, and more) as part of our application interaction cycles and domain specific workflow is finally becoming obvious. There is a need for separation of the application/service layer from the storage engine across each one of these functionality realms. XML, RDF, and Triple Stores (RDF / Semantic Data Stores) collectively provide a standards based framework for achieving this goal. On the other hand so does WinFS albeit total proprietary (by this I mean none standards compliant) at the current time.</div> <div align="left"> </div> <div align="left">As you can already see there are numerous applications (conventional or hosted) that address email, address books, bookmarking, notes, calendars, blogs, wikis, crm etc. specifically, but next to none that address the obvious need for transparent integration across each functionality realm - the ultimate goal.</div> <div align="left"> </div> <div align="left">Yes, you know what I am about to say! <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com">OpenLink Virtuoso</a> is the platform for developing and/or implementing these next generation solutions. We have also decided to go one step further by developing a number of applications that demonstrate the vision (and ultimate reality); and each of these applications (and the inherent integration tapestry) will be the subject of a future Virtuoso Application specific post.</div>
Email As A Platform
2006-06-22T12:56:58Z
2006-06-22T08:56:58-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/59
<a href="http://www.xulplanet.com/cgi-bin/ndeakin/homeN.cgi?ai=133">Data Structures and RDF</a> Time to chime in on the RDF debate. There are four general ways of storing information: A list, in which one has a number of items, which may or not be related to one another. A table, in which one has a number of items (records), each with a distinct set of properties or columns. A tree, in which one has a hierarchy of items. A graph, in which one has a number of items (nodes), with the nodes connected to each other in some way. There are others, but they are more or less just variations of the same. There are examples all over of each type. Arrays are examples of lists. Of course, they are used all over the place. Relational databases typically store all of their data in tables. So do spreadsheets. Trees are used for mail or news messages and your bookmarks. XML is a syntax for specifying trees of information. The Windows and Classic Macintosh file systems are presented and/or stored as a tree. The Unix file system however isn't a tree. It's a graph. RDF is a graph. The Web is also a graph -- it's a bunch of pages connected via links. Each of the four storage methods, lists, tables, trees, and graphs, increase in complexity as you go up. Lists are simple to store. Graphs are the most difficult. Actually, that doesn't need to be the case. But, very few programming languages come with any kind of Graph structure ready to use. Due to the complexity, you should probably store data in the lowest type possible, depending on the kind of data you have. You can always use one of the structures higher than what is necessary. A list could be stored in a table with only one column, a table can be stored in a tree, where a root node has a set of records, each with a set of properties, and a tree is really a specialized form of graph. However, the reverse is not true. You can't store a graph in a tree, you can't store a tree in a table, and you can't store a table in a list. Any place where you see someone trying to is a hack. Many people don't know this though. So they just store everything in a tabular database or in XML, regardless of what it is. This has two problems. First, you get data that can be stored in a simpler format, stored in some more complex format. So you get people passing lists of things around using XML. Or, configuration files stored in XML. Second, you get people trying to coerce more complex data into a simpler format, so you might see people trying to shove trees of data into a database. Or you get serialized RDF written as XML. Many people think that XML is the ultimate format for storing data. It isn't. It can represent trees nicely, and it can do tables and lists if you really wanted it to, but it can't represent graphs, not cleanly anyway. Perhaps what is needed is an eXtensible Graph Language, which represents graphs of data. There is RDF-XML, and XGMML but both use a language for describing trees. Actually, it shouldn't be called the eXtensible Graph Language, because then people will get confused thinking it's like XML. Because a tree can be represented as a graph, all data could be represented in the Graph Language (not that it should be, of course), unlike XML which can't. Of course, this assumes there isn't some higher level structure above the graph. Long, long ago, people stored data in lists, because that was all that was available. Then, someone came up with the idea of storing data in tables. So relational databases came along and people moved up the ladder to tables. A few years ago, XML came along so data moved up again to trees. Can you guess what will happen next? The Semantic Web folks want us to move to using graphs. Should we move to graphs? Seems to be the next logical step in information evolution. What's holding us back? Well, it's probably too soon. The world is still in the tree phase. One day, graphs will start to become more popular -- it will just take time. In 30 years, someone might come up with something beyond graphs, and we'll all slowly switch to it as well. There's also the RSS in RDF debate. Many people don't see the value in storing RSS data in RDF. This is because the information stored in a single RSS file isn't a graph -- it's a tree, so plain-old XML actually makes more sense. Of course, the Semantic Web folks don't agree. Why? Because they aren't thinking in terms of a single RSS file - they are thinking of building giant collections of RSS data, all linked together so that it forms one giant - hey, it's not a tree - it's a graph. Then, you can search and navigate it like you can with the existing Web. But of course, the Semantic Web lets the servers and the software you're using, know more about what you're talking about. This is unlike current popular search engines like Google which are pretty much just guessing. You can make it better, sure, but the best way to acheive accuracy is if someone tells it the answer to begin with.
<a href="http://www.xulplanet.com/cgi-bin/ndeakin/homeN.cgi?ai=133">Data Structures and RDF</a>
2006-06-22T12:56:58Z
2006-06-22T08:56:58-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/557
<p>The W3C RDF Data Access Working Group recently released an initial public Working Draft specification for "<a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/2004/WD-rdf-dawg-uc-20040602/"><font color="#000000">RDF Data Access Use Cases and Requirements</font></a>". Naturally, this triggered discussion on the RDF mailing list along the following lines:</p> <blockquote dir="ltr" style="MARGIN-RIGHT: 0px"> <p>In section, 4.1 Human-friendly Syntax, you say<font size="4"><b> </b></font>"There must be a text-based form of the query language which can be read and written by users of the language", and you list the status as "pending".</p> <p>As background for section 4.1, you may be interested in <a href="http://www.aifb.uni-karlsruhe.de/WBS/pha/rdf-query/">RDFQueryLangComparison1</a> (original text replaced with live link).<br /><br />It shows how to write queries in a form that includes English meanings.<br /><br />The example queries can be run by pointing a browser to <a eudora="autourl" href="http://www.reengineeringllc.com/" title="http://www.reengineeringllc.com/">www.reengineeringllc.com</a> .<br /><br />Perhaps importantly, given the intricacy of RDF for nonprogrammers, one can get an English explanation of the result of each query.<br /><br />-- Dr. Adrian Walker of <a href="https://www.reengineeringllc.com/ibl_login.html#about">Internet Business Logic </a></p></blockquote> <p dir="ltr">The Semantic Web continues to take shape, and Infonauts (information centric agents) are already taking <a href="http://www.reengineeringllc.com/IBL_tutorial_part1.html">shape</a>.</p> <p dir="ltr">A great this about the net is the "back to the future" nature of most Web and Internet technology. For instance we are now frenzied about Service Oriented Architecture (SOA), Event Drivent Architecture (EDA), Loose Coupling of Composite Services etc. Basically rehashing the CORBA vision.</p> <p dir="ltr">I see the Semantic Web playing a similar role in relation to artificial intelligence. </p> <p dir="ltr">BTW - It still always comes down to data, and as you can imagine <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/virtuoso">Virtuoso</a> will be playing its usual role of alleviating the practical implementation and ulization challenges of all of the above :-)</p> <p dir="ltr"> </p>
Comparison of RDF Query Languages
2006-06-22T12:56:58Z
2006-06-22T08:56:58-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/383
<a href="http://www.ventureblog.com/articles/indiv/2003/000192.html">RSS: The Best Of All Possible Worlds</a> <p>The thing that most surprised me today in the <a href="http://www.pulver.com/rvc2003/">SoftEdge</a> panel on Social Software was the reaction to RSS. I should be clear that I am an RSS true believer. It seems to me that metadata as a byproduct of social software engines (be it blogging or social networking or whatever) is not only enviable, it is inevitable. <a href="http://www.oreillynet.com/rss/">RSS</a> and <a href="http://www.foaf-project.org/">FOAF</a> and other yet-to-be-determined social software data protocols will become standards because it simply makes good sense for them to be standardized. Anyone paying attention to the unbelievable development and adoption curve of wireless can appreciate the immense value driven by standards -- and, in particular, standards that are truly standard. So it came as a bit of a shock to me that when I questioned the panelists on the implications of RSS and the Semantic Web, they were less sold on the inevitability of it all. </p> <p>When asked the question of whether the proliferation of RSS and FOAF might make it possible for reader technology to be the next killer application in knowledge management, I got very strong reactions from both Reid Hoffman and Meg Hourihan. Reid stated that he did not believe that RSS was sufficiently robust to provide significant value an any level. Meg followed up with a general indictment of the semantic web, which she views merely as a geek utopia. I will admit that I'm a fan of Candide (particularly at the hands of <a href="http://www.leonardbernstein.com/">Bernstein</a>), but I hardly view myself as Panglos. One need look no further than, for example, the tools that <a href="http://www.oddpost.com/learnmore.html">Oddpost</a> has incorporated into its web email client to allow an integrated email and blog experience. Better yet, through a relatively simple web service, Oddpost can deliver an RSS feed of a particular Google News search so that you can keep track of keywords that are of interest to you without having to visit Google repeatedly to find out if your company or candidate or favorite band has been mentioned in today's news. The same is true of watch lists on <a href="http://www.technorati.com/watchlists/index.html">Technorati</a>. Rather than periodically check to see if someone has linked to your blog, Technorati will do the work for you and deliver the info to your inbox only when there is information to be delivered. These examples are just the tip of the iceberg but the demonstrate the nascent power of RSS and related standards. I'll have to wait for another panel to have that argument with Reid and Meg. </p> <div align="right">[via <a href="http://www.ventureblog.com/">VentureBlog</a>] <div></div></div>
RSS: The Best Of All Possible Worlds
2006-06-22T12:56:58Z
2006-06-22T08:56:58-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/330
<a href="http://www.xulplanet.com/cgi-bin/ndeakin/homeN.cgi?ai=133">Data Structures and RDF</a> Time to chime in on the RDF debate. There are four general ways of storing information: A list, in which one has a number of items, which may or not be related to one another. A table, in which one has a number of items (records), each with a distinct set of properties or columns. A tree, in which one has a hierarchy of items. A graph, in which one has a number of items (nodes), with the nodes connected to each other in some way. There are others, but they are more or less just variations of the same. There are examples all over of each type. Arrays are examples of lists. Of course, they are used all over the place. Relational databases typically store all of their data in tables. So do spreadsheets. Trees are used for mail or news messages and your bookmarks. XML is a syntax for specifying trees of information. The Windows and Classic Macintosh file systems are presented and/or stored as a tree. The Unix file system however isn't a tree. It's a graph. RDF is a graph. The Web is also a graph -- it's a bunch of pages connected via links. Each of the four storage methods, lists, tables, trees, and graphs, increase in complexity as you go up. Lists are simple to store. Graphs are the most difficult. Actually, that doesn't need to be the case. But, very few programming languages come with any kind of Graph structure ready to use. Due to the complexity, you should probably store data in the lowest type possible, depending on the kind of data you have. You can always use one of the structures higher than what is necessary. A list could be stored in a table with only one column, a table can be stored in a tree, where a root node has a set of records, each with a set of properties, and a tree is really a specialized form of graph. However, the reverse is not true. You can't store a graph in a tree, you can't store a tree in a table, and you can't store a table in a list. Any place where you see someone trying to is a hack. Many people don't know this though. So they just store everything in a tabular database or in XML, regardless of what it is. This has two problems. First, you get data that can be stored in a simpler format, stored in some more complex format. So you get people passing lists of things around using XML. Or, configuration files stored in XML. Second, you get people trying to coerce more complex data into a simpler format, so you might see people trying to shove trees of data into a database. Or you get serialized RDF written as XML. Many people think that XML is the ultimate format for storing data. It isn't. It can represent trees nicely, and it can do tables and lists if you really wanted it to, but it can't represent graphs, not cleanly anyway. Perhaps what is needed is an eXtensible Graph Language, which represents graphs of data. There is RDF-XML, and XGMML but both use a language for describing trees. Actually, it shouldn't be called the eXtensible Graph Language, because then people will get confused thinking it's like XML. Because a tree can be represented as a graph, all data could be represented in the Graph Language (not that it should be, of course), unlike XML which can't. Of course, this assumes there isn't some higher level structure above the graph. Long, long ago, people stored data in lists, because that was all that was available. Then, someone came up with the idea of storing data in tables. So relational databases came along and people moved up the ladder to tables. A few years ago, XML came along so data moved up again to trees. Can you guess what will happen next? The Semantic Web folks want us to move to using graphs. Should we move to graphs? Seems to be the next logical step in information evolution. What's holding us back? Well, it's probably too soon. The world is still in the tree phase. One day, graphs will start to become more popular -- it will just take time. In 30 years, someone might come up with something beyond graphs, and we'll all slowly switch to it as well. There's also the RSS in RDF debate. Many people don't see the value in storing RSS data in RDF. This is because the information stored in a single RSS file isn't a graph -- it's a tree, so plain-old XML actually makes more sense. Of course, the Semantic Web folks don't agree. Why? Because they aren't thinking in terms of a single RSS file - they are thinking of building giant collections of RSS data, all linked together so that it forms one giant - hey, it's not a tree - it's a graph. Then, you can search and navigate it like you can with the existing Web. But of course, the Semantic Web lets the servers and the software you're using, know more about what you're talking about. This is unlike current popular search engines like Google which are pretty much just guessing. You can make it better, sure, but the best way to acheive accuracy is if someone tells it the answer to begin with.
<a href="http://www.xulplanet.com/cgi-bin/ndeakin/homeN.cgi?ai=133">Data Structures and RDF</a>
2006-06-22T12:56:58Z
2006-06-22T08:56:58-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/241
<p><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: Arial;">When Virtuoso first unleashed support for XML (in-built XSL, Native XML Storage, Validating XML Parser, XPath, and XQuery) the core message was the delivery of a single server solution that would address the challenges of creating XML data.</span></p><p xmlns="o"></p> <p><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: Arial;">In the year 2000 the question of the shape and form of XML data was unclear to many, and reading the article below basically took me back in time to when we released <a href="http://www.it-director.com/article.php?articleid=916">Virtuoso 2.0</a> (we are now at <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/virtuoso">release 3.0</a> commercially with a <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/press/virt32_wwdc1.htm">3.2 beta </a>dropping any minute).</span></p><p xmlns="o"></p> <p><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: Arial;">RSS is a great XML application, and it does a great job of demonstrating how XML --the new data access foundation layer-- will galvanize the next generation Web (I refer to this as Web 2.0.). </span></p> <blockquote dir="ltr" style="margin-right: 0px;"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: Arial;"> <p><a href="http://jena.hpl.hp.com:3030/blojsom-hp/blog/technologies/blogging/metadata/?permalink=1214847A10C1966396472E816A7A4243.textile">RSS: INJAN (It's not just about news)</a> </p> <p><span class="caps">RSS</span> is not just about news, according to <a href="http://groups.yahoo.com/group/rss-dev/message/5764">Ian Davis on rss-dev</a>.<br />He presents a nice list of alternatives, which I reproduce here (and to which I�d add, of course, bibliography management)</p> <ul> <li>Sitemaps: one of the S�s in <span class="caps">RSS</span> stands for summary. A sitemap is a summary of the content on a site, the items are pages or content areas. This is clearly a non-chronological ordering of items. Is a hierarchy of <span class="caps">RSS</span> sitemaps implied here � how would the linking between them work? How hard would it be to hack a web browser to pick up the <span class="caps">RSS</span> sitemap and display it in a sidebar when you visit the site?</li> <li>Small ads: also known as classifieds. These expire so there�s some kind of dynamic going on here but the ordering of items isn�t necessarily chronological. How to describe the location of the seller, or the condition of the item or even the price. Not every ad is selling something � perhaps it�s to rent out a room.</li> <li>Personals: similar model to the small ads. No prices though (I hope). Comes with a ready made vocabulary of terms that could be converted to an <span class="caps">RDF</span> schema. Probably should do that just for the hell of it anyway � gsoh</li> <li>Weather reports: how about a week�s worth of weather in an <span class="caps">RSS</span> channel. If an item is dated in the future, should an aggregator display it before time? Alternate representations include maps of temperature and pressure etc.</li> <li>Auctions: again, related to small ads, but these are much more time limited since there is a hard cutoff after which the auction is closed. The sequence of bids could be interesting � would it make sense to thread them like a discussion so you can see the tactics?</li> <li>TV listings: this is definitely chronological but with a twist � the items have durations. They also have other metadata such as cast lists, classification ratings, widescreen, stereo, program type. Some types have additional information such as director and production year.</li> <li>Top ten listings: top ten singles, books, dvds, richest people, ugliest, rear of the year etc. Not chronological, but has definate order. May update from day to day or even more often.</li> <li>Sales reporting: imagine if every department of a company reported their sales figures via <span class="caps">RSS</span>. Then the divisions aggregate the departmental figures and republish to the regional offices, who aggregate and add value up the chain. The chairman of the company subscribes to one super-aggregate feed.</li> <li>Membership lists / buddy lists: could I publish my buddy list from Jabber or other instant messengers? Maybe as an interchange format or perhaps could be used to look for shared contacts. Lots of potential overlap with <span class="caps">FOAF</span> here.</li> <li>Mailing lists: or in fact any messaging system such as usenet. There are some efforts at doing this already (e.g. yahoogroups) but we need more information � threads; references; headers; links into archives.</li> <li>Price lists / inventory: the items here are products or services. No particular ordering but it�d be nice to be able to subscribe to a catalog of products and prices from a company. The aggregator should be able to pick out price rises or bargains given enough history.</li> <div align="right">[via <a href="http://jena.hpl.hp.com:3030/blojsom-hp/blog/">Semantic Blogging Demonstrator</a>] </div></ul></span></blockquote> <p><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-family: Arial;">Thus, if we can comprehend RSS (the blog article below does a great job) we should be able to see the fundamental challenges that are before any organization seeking to exploit the potential of the imminent Web 2.0 inflection; how will you cost-effectively create XML data from existing data sources? Without upgrading or switching database engines, operating systems, programming languages? Put differently how can you exploit this phenomenon without losing your ever dwindling technology choices (believe me choices are dwindling fast but most are oblivious to this fact).</span></p><p xmlns="o"></p> <p> </p> <a href="index.vspx?tag=xml" rel="tag" style="display:none;">xml</a><a href="index.vspx?tag=rss" rel="tag" style="display:none;">rss</a><a href="index.vspx?tag=syndication" rel="tag" style="display:none;">syndication</a>
RSS: INJAN (It's not just about news)
2006-06-22T12:56:58Z
2006-06-22T08:56:58-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/228
<p><a href="http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=03/08/03/142259">Microsoft to do for Usenet what it did for Email & The Web?</a> </p> <p><a href="http://netscan.research.microsoft.com/">Netscan</a> is an interesting NNTP based project and it is pretty much along the same lines of what <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/virtuoso/whatis.htm">Virtuoso</a> has provided (albeit with an inferior UI) for NNTP since 1999.</p> <p>Using Virtuoso the data presented by Netscan could very easily be presented as XML which could then be further processed using XPath, XQuery, and XSL-T with the final result RDF (since this is metadata afterall - another contribution to the Semantic Web)</p>
Microsoft to do for Usenet what it did for Email & The Web?
2006-06-22T12:56:58Z
2006-06-22T08:56:58-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/202
<p><a href="http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=03/07/04/1955241">O'Reilly on the Commoditization of Software</a> </p> <p>Certinaly an interesting proposition, or should I say vision, but I don't think this proposition does justice to some of the valid insights contained in this recent <a href="http://www.idg.se/ArticlePages/idgnet.asp?id=4635">IDG interview </a>with <a href="http://tim.oreilly.com/">Tim O'Reilly</a>. Here are some of Tim's quotes:</p> <blockquote dir="ltr" style="MARGIN-RIGHT: 0px"> <p><em>"Nobody is pointing out something that I think is way more significant: all of the killer apps of the Internet era: Amazon (.com, Inc), Google (Inc.), and Maps.yahoo.com. They run on Linux or FreeBSD, but they're not apps in the way that people have traditionally thought of applications, so they just don't get considered. Amazon is built with Perl on top of Linux. It's basically a bunch of open source hackers, but they're working for a company that's as fiercely proprietary as any proprietary software company."</em></p></blockquote> <p dir="ltr">Solutions are always more important that the technology that makes up the solutions from a business development perspective. The trouble is that the constituent parts of a solution ultimately affect the longevity of the solution (the future adaptability of the solution), hence the middleware and components segments of the software industry.</p> <blockquote dir="ltr" style="MARGIN-RIGHT: 0px"> <p dir="ltr"><em>"With eBay it's even clearer. The fact is, it's the critical mass of marketplace buyers and sellers and all the information that people have put in that marketplace as a repository."<br /><br />"So I think we're going to find more and more places where that happens, where somebody gets a critical mass of customers and data and that becomes their source of value. On that basis, I will predict that -- this is an outrageous prediction -- but eBay will buy Oracle someday. The value will have moved so much to people who are not now seen as software suppliers."</em></p></blockquote> <p>In reading this article that I can only assume that Tim does realize the inevitable; computing is, and always will be about data -- creation, transformation, dissemination, and exploitation. That said, you don't maximize the opportunities that such a realization accords by acquiring the largest vendor of database software. </p> <p>The largest database vendor doesn't imply dominance in any of the following areas:</p> <ol> <li>Data Creation </li> <li>Data Storage</li> <li>Data Access</li> <li>Data Dissemination</li> <li>Data Exploitation</li></ol> <p>I see the Internet as the Database (comprising various forms), and the Web as a dominant database segment within Internet realm. Every Internet Point of Presence is really a point of Data interaction; Creation, Storage, Access, Dissemination, and Exploitation.</p> <p>eBay can acquire a license from Oracle or any other database vendor and still be sucessful, and all they need to do is come to the actual realization that like Amazon and Google they could become a very important Executable and Semantic Web platform by finally understanding that their home page isn't that important, it's the interactions with the site that matter. All of this is certainly achievable without acquiring Oracle.</p> <p>In short, this applies to any organization that seeks to incorporate the Internet into their operational strategy (Business Development, Customer Services, Intranets, Extranets etc.). I am inclined to believe that Sofware Commoditization (which has been with us for a very long time) is the new moniker for "its all about data" or to quote <a href="http://www.intertwingly.net/blog/index.rss">Sam Ruby</a>, "It's just data".</p>
eBay Will Someday Buy Oracle?
2006-06-22T12:56:58Z
2006-06-22T08:56:58-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1647
<h3>What is <a class="auto-href" href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SPARQL" id="link-id0x1ab60ac0">SPARQL</a>?</h3> <p>A declarative query language from the W3C for querying structured propositional <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data">data</a> (in the form of 3-<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tuple" id="link-id0x1b1e0010">tuple</a> [triples] or 4-tuple [quads] records) stored in a <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deductive_database" id="link-id0x1cf8af98">deductive database</a> (colloquially referred to as triple or quad stores in <a class="auto-href" href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id0x1caf5050">Semantic Web</a> and <a class="auto-href" href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id0x19d781b8">Linked Data</a> parlance).</p> <p>SPARQL is inherently platform independent. Like <a class="auto-href" href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SQL" id="link-id0x1b879140">SQL</a>, the query language and the backend database engine are distinct. Database clients capture SPARQL queries which are then passed on to compliant backend databases.</p> <h3>Why is it important?</h3> <p>Like SQL for relational databases, it provides a powerful mechanism for accessing and joining data across one or more data partitions (named graphs identified by IRIs). The aforementioned capability also enables the construction of sophisticated Views, Reports (HTML or those produced in native form by desktop productivity tools), and data streams for other services.</p> <p>Unlike SQL, SPARQL includes result serialization formats and an HTTP based wire protocol. Thus, the ubiquity and sophistication of HTTP is integral to SPARQL i.e., client side applications (user agents) only need to be able to perform an HTTP GET against a <a class="auto-href" href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uniform_Resource_Locator" id="link-id0x1ba287e8">URL</a> en route to exploiting the power of SPARQL.</p> <h3>How do I use it, generally?</h3> <ol> <li>Locate a SPARQL endpoint (<a href="http://dbpedia.org/sparql" id="link-id0x1d7436b0">DBpedia</a>, <a href="http://lod.openlinksw.com/sparql" id="link-id0x1bf20690">LOD Cloud Cache</a>, <a href="http://semantic.data.gov" id="link-id0x1a8ebc28">Data.Gov</a>, <a href="http://linkeddata.uriburner.com/sparql" id="link-id0x1be93070">URIBurner</a>, <a href="http://www.delicious.com/kidehen/sparql_endpoint" id="link-id0x1cce9b40">others</a>), or;</li> <li>Install a SPARQL compliant database server (quad or triple store) on your desktop, workgroup server, data center, or cloud (e.g., <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/dataspace/dav/wiki/Main/VirtuosoEC2AMI" id="link-id0x1cd697a0">Amazon EC2 AMI</a>)</li> <li>Start the database server</li> <li>Execute SPARQL Queries via the <a href="http://lod.openlinksw.com/sparql" id="link-id0x1b99d790">SPARQL endpoint.</a> </li> </ol> <h3>How do I use SPARQL with <a class="auto-href" href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com" id="link-id0x1c9adc80">Virtuoso</a>?</h3> <p>What follows is a very simple guide for using SPARQL against your own instance of Virtuoso:</p> <ol> <li>Software Download and Installation</li> <li>Data Loading from Data Sources exposed at Network Addresses (e.g. HTTP URLs) using very simple methods</li> <li>Actual SPARQL query execution via SPARQL endpoint.</li> </ol> <h3>Installation Steps</h3> <ol> <li> Download <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/dataspace/dav/wiki/Main/VOSDownload" id="link-id0x1b795100">Virtuoso Open Source</a> or <a href="http://download.openlinksw.com/virtwiz/virtuoso.php" id="link-id0x1cce46f0">Virtuoso Commercial</a> Editions </li> <li> Run installer (if using Commercial edition of Windows Open Source Edition, otherwise follow build guide) </li> <li> Follow post-installation guide and verify installation by typing in the command: virtuoso -? (if this fails check you've followed installation and setup steps, then verify environment variables have been set) </li> <li> Start the Virtuoso server using the command: virtuoso-start.sh </li> <li> Verify you have a connection to the Virtuoso Server via the command: isql localhost (assuming you're using default DB settings) or the command: isql localhost:1112 (assuming demo database) or goto your browser and type in: http://<virtuoso-server-host-name>:[port]/conductor (e.g. http://localhost:8889/conductor for default DB or http://localhost:8890/conductor if using Demo DB) </li> <li> Go to SPARQL endpoint which is typically -- http://<virtuoso-server-host-name>:[port]/sparql </li> <li> Run a quick sample query (since the database always has system data in place): select distinct * where {?s ?p ?o} limit 50 .</li> </ol> <h3>Troubleshooting</h3> <ol> <li>Ensure environment settings are set and functional -- if using Mac OS X or Windows, so you don't have to worry about this, just start and stop your Virtuoso server using native OS services applets</li> <li>If using the Open Source Edition, follow the <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/dataspace/dav/wiki/Main/VOSMake#Getting%20Started" id="link-id0x1bfa7548">getting started guide</a> -- it covers PATH and startup directory location re. starting and stopping Virtuoso servers.</li> <li>Sponging (HTTP GETs against external Data Sources) within SPARQL queries is disabled by default. You can enable this feature by assigning "<a href="http://docs.openlinksw.com/virtuoso/rdfsparql.html#rdfsupportedprotocolendpointuri" id="link-id0x1d566270">SPARQL_SPONGE</a>" privileges to user "SPARQL". Note, more sophisticated security exists via <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/dataspace/dav/wiki/Main/VirtAuthPolicyFOAFSSL" id="link-id0x1a3c9eb8">WebID based ACLs</a>. </li> </ol> <h3>Data Loading Steps</h3> <ol> <li> Identify an RDF based structured data source of interest -- a file that contains 3-tuple / triples available at an address on a public or private HTTP based network </li> <li>Determine the Address (URL) of the RDF data source</li> <li>Go to your Virtuoso SPARQL endpoint and type in the following SPARQL query: DEFINE GET:SOFT "replace" SELECT DISTINCT * FROM <RDFDataSourceURL> WHERE {?s ?p ?o} </li> <li> All the triples in the RDF resource (data source accessed via URL) will be loaded into the Virtuoso Quad Store (using RDF Data Source URL as the internal quad store Named Graph IRI) as part of the SPARQL query processing pipeline. </li> </ol> <p> Note: the data source URL doesn't even have to be RDF based -- which is where the Virtuoso <a class="auto-href" href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/Whitepapers/html/VirtSpongerWhitePaper.html" id="link-id0x1d1a0978">Sponger</a> Middleware comes into play (download and install the <a href="http://s3.amazonaws.com/opldownload/uda/vad-packages/6.1/virtuoso/rdf_mappers_dav.vad" id="link-id0x1d0e1530">VAD installer package</a> first) since it delivers the following features to Virtuoso's SPARQL engine: </p> <ol> <li> Transformation of data from non RDF data sources (file content, hypermedia resources, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web">web</a> services output etc..) into RDF based 3-tuples (triples)</li> <li> Cache Invalidation Scheme Construction -- thus, subsequent queries (without the define get:soft "replace" pragma will not be required bar when you forcefully want to override cache).</li> <li> If you have very large data sources like DBpedia etc. from CKAN, simply use our <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/dav/wiki/Main/VirtBulkRDFLoader" id="link-id0x1d19b4b0">bulk loader</a> . </li> </ol> <h3>SPARQL Endpoint Discovery</h3> <p>Public SPARQL endpoints are emerging at an ever increasing rate. Thus, we've setup up a DNS lookup service that provides access to a large number of SPARQL endpoints. Of course, this doesn't cover all existing endpoints, so if our endpoint is missing please ping <a class="auto-href" href="http://myopenlink.net/dataspace/person/kidehen#this" id="link-id0x1d634848">me</a>.</p> <p>Here are a collection of commands for using DNS-SD to discover SPARQL endpoints:</p> <ol> <li>dns-sd -B _sparql._tcp sparql.openlinksw.com -- browse for services instances</li> <li>dns-sd -Z _sparql._tcp sparql.openlinksw.com -- output results in Zone File format</li> <li></li> </ol> <h3>Related</h3> <ol> <li> <a href="http://www.ensta.fr/~diam/ruby/online/ruby-doc-stdlib/libdoc/net/http/rdoc/index.html" id="link-id0x1b156610">Using HTTP from Ruby</a> -- you can just make <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/dataspace/dav/wiki/Main/VOSSparqlProtocol" id="link-id0x1d024d60">SPARQL Protocol URLs</a> re. SPARQL</li> <li> <a href="http://sparql.rubyforge.org/client/" id="link-id0x1cd43a48">Using SPARQL Endpoints via Ruby</a> -- Ruby example using DBpedia endpoint</li> <li> <a href="http://wikis.openlinksw.com/dataspace/owiki/wiki/OATWikiWeb/InteractiveSparqlQueryBuilder" id="link-id0x1b9d2190">Interactive SPARQL Query By Example (QBE) tool</a> -- provides a graphical user interface (as is common in SQL realm re. query building against <a class="auto-href" href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Relational_database_management_system" id="link-id0x1bfffb70">RDBMS</a> engines) that works with any SPARQL endpoint </li> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/dav/wiki/Main/VirtRDFInsert" id="link-id0x1ab63de0">Other methods of loading RDF data into Virtuoso</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/dataspace/dav/wiki/Main/VirtSponger" id="link-id0x1ca248e0">Virtuoso Sponger</a> -- architecture and how it turns a wide variety of non RDF data sources into SPARQL accessible data </li> <li> <a href="http://ode.openlinksw.com/example.html" id="link-id0x1be34758">Using OpenLink Data Explorer</a> (ODE) to populate Virtuoso -- locate a resource of interest; click on a bookmarklet or use <a class="auto-href" href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Context_%28language_use%29" id="link-id0x1ca84af0">context</a> menus (if using ODE extensions for Firefox, Safari, or Chrome); and you'll have SPARQL accessible data automatically inserted into your Virtuoso instance. </li> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1295" id="link-id0x1c9060f0">W3C's SPARQLing Data Access Ingenuity</a> -- an older generic SPARQL introduction post </li> <li> <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/dataspace/dav/wiki/Main/VirtSPARQLRef" id="link-id0x1cf1e298">Collection of SPARQL Query Examples </a>-- GoodRelations (Product Offers), <a class="auto-href" href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Friend_of_a_friend" id="link-id0x1c0445d0">FOAF</a> (Profiles), <a class="auto-href" href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SIOC" id="link-id0x1b785e48">SIOC</a> (Data Spaces -- <a href="http://ods.openlinksw.com/dataspace/dav/wiki/ODS/ODSAtomOWLRefExampleBlog" id="link-id0x1b6c9f78">Blogs</a>, <a href="http://ods.openlinksw.com/dataspace/dav/wiki/ODS/ODSAtomOWLRefExampleWiki" id="link-id0x1c188280">Wikis</a>, <a href="http://ods.openlinksw.com/dataspace/dav/wiki/ODS/ODSAtomOWLRefExampleBookmarks" id="link-id0x1a9a8f98">Bookmarks</a>, <a href="http://ods.openlinksw.com/dataspace/dav/wiki/ODS/ODSAtomOWLRefExampleFeeds" id="link-id0x1720c658">Feed Collections</a>, <a href="http://ods.openlinksw.com/dataspace/dav/wiki/ODS/ODSAtomOWLRefExampleGallery" id="link-id0x1cdba348">Photo Galleries</a>, <a href="http://ods.openlinksw.com/dataspace/dav/wiki/ODS/ODSAtomOWLRefExampleBriefcase" id="link-id0x1c8f1148">Briefcase/DropBox</a>, <a href="http://ods.openlinksw.com/dataspace/dav/wiki/ODS/ODSAtomOWLRefExampleAddressbook" id="link-id0x1b5eb7e0">AddressBook</a>, <a href="http://ods.openlinksw.com/dataspace/dav/wiki/ODS/ODSAtomOWLRefExampleCalendar" id="link-id0x1c575120">Calendars</a>, <a href="http://ods.openlinksw.com/dataspace/dav/wiki/ODS/ODSAtomOWLRefExampleDiscussions" id="link-id0x1c73be98">Discussion Forums</a>) </li> <li> <a href="http://lod.openlinksw.com/demo_queries/" id="link-id0x1b08aa00">Collection of Live SPARQL Queries against LOD Cloud Cache</a> -- simple and advanced queries. </li> </ol>
Simple Virtuoso Installation & Utilization Guide for SPARQL Users (Update 5)
2011-01-19T15:43:35Z
2011-01-19T10:43:35-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1609
<h2>Situation Analysis</h2> <p>Since the beginning of the modern IT era, each period of innovation has inadvertently introduced its fair share of <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data">Data</a> Silos. The driving force behind this anomaly remains an overemphasis on the role of applications when selecting problem solutions. Unfortunately, most solution selecting decision makers remain oblivious to the fact that most applications are architecturally monolithic; i.e., they fail to separate the following five layers that are critical to all solutions: </p> <ol> <li>Data Unit (Datum or Data Object) Identity,</li> <li>Data Storage/Persistence,</li> <li>Data Access,</li> <li>Data Representation, and</li> <li>Data Presentation/Visualization. </li> </ol> <p>The rise of the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Internet" id="link-id13fe21b0">Internet</a>, and its exponentially-growing user-friendly enclave known as the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web" id="link-id1233c608">World Wide Web</a>, is bringing the intrinsic costs of the monolithic application architecture anomaly to bear -- in manners unanticipated by many. For example, the emergence of network-oriented solutions across the realms of Enterprise 2.0-based Collaboration and <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web">Web</a> 2.0-based Software-as-a-Service (SaaS), combined with the overarching influence of Social Media, are producing more heterogeneously-structured and disparately-located data sources than people can effectively process.</p> <p>As is often the case, a variety of problem and product monikers have emerged for the data access and integration challenges outlined above. Contemporary examples include Enterprise <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Information" id="link-id13f7e458">Information</a> Integration, Master Data Management, and <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Federated_database_system" id="link-id13f57da0">Data Virtualization</a>. Labeling aside, the fundamental issues of the unresolved Data Integration challenge boil down to the following:</p> <ul> <li>Data Model Heterogeneity</li> <li>Data Quality (Cleanliness)</li> <li>Semantic Variance across Contexts (e.g., weights and measures).</li> </ul> <p>Effectively solving today's data integration challenges requires a move away from monolithic application architecture to loosely-coupled, network-centric application architectures. Basically, we need a ubiquitous network-centric application protocol that lends itself to loosely-coupled across-the-wire orchestration of data interactions. In short, this will be what revitalizes the art of application development and deployment.</p> <p>The World Wide Web is built around a network application protocol called HTTP. This protocol intrinsically separates the five layers listed earlier, thereby enabling:</p> <ul> <li>Use of Generic HTTP URIs as Data Object (<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Entity" id="link-id113b7318">Entity</a>) Identifiers;</li> <li>Identifier Co-reference, such that multiple <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Identity_(object-oriented_programming)" id="link-id117151d8">Data Object Identifiers</a> may reference the same Data Object;</li> <li>Use of the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Entity-attribute-value_model" id="link-id13fa4fa0">Entity</a>-Attribute-Value Model to describe Data Objects using real world modeling friendly conceptual graphs;</li> <li>Use of HTTP URLs to Identify Locations of Resources that bear (host) Data Object Descriptions (Representations);</li> <li>Data Access mechanism for retrieving Data Object Representations from persistent or transient storage locations.</li> </ul> <h2>What is <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com" id="link-id116af950">Virtuoso</a>?</h2> <p>A uniquely designed to address today's escalating Data Access and Integration challenges without compromising performance, security, or platform independence. At its core lies an unrivaled commitment to industry standards combined with unique technology innovation that transcends erstwhile distinct realms such as: </p> <ul> <li>Data Management (<a href="http://blogs.usnet.private:8893/main/rdbms-engine.html" id="link-id11943dc0">Relational</a>, <a href="http://blogs.usnet.private:8893/main/rdf-quad-store.html" id="link-id12312240">RDF Graph</a>, or Document), </li> <li> <a href="http://blogs.usnet.private:8893/main/middleware.htm" id="link-id115d71c0">Data Access Middleware</a>, </li> <li> <a href="http://blogs.usnet.private:8893/main/web-application-server.html" id="link-id142ca788">Web Application & Services Deployment</a>, </li> <li> <a href="http://blogs.usnet.private:8893/main/linked-data.html" id="link-id112b92c0">Linked Data Deployment</a>, and </li> <li>Messaging. </li> </ul> <p>When Virtuoso is installed and running, HTTP-based Data Objects are automatically created as a by-product of its powerful data virtualization, transcending data sources and data representation formats. The benefits of such power extend across profiles such as:</p> <ul> <li> <a href="http://blogs.usnet.private:8893/information-and-knowledge-worker-benefits" id="link-id118df198">Information & Knowledge Workers</a>, </li> <li> <a href="http://blogs.usnet.private:8893/systems-integrator-benefits" id="link-id1429d178">Systems Integrators & Architects</a>, </li> <li> <a href="http://blogs.usnet.private:8893/distributed-collaboration-benefits" id="link-id142fa2a0">Distributed Collaboration & Social Media</a>, </li> <li> <a href="http://blogs.usnet.private:8893/cloud-computing-benefits" id="link-id11aee6b0">Cloud Computing</a>, and </li> <li> <a href="http://blogs.usnet.private:8893/application-developer-benefits" id="link-id142440b8">Application Development</a>. </li> </ul> <h2>Product Benefits Summary</h2> <ul> <li> <b>Enterprise Agility</b> — Virtuoso lets you mix-&-match best-of-class combinations of Operating Systems, Programming Environments, Database Engines and Data-Access Middleware when building or tweaking your IS infrastructure, without the typical impedance of vendor-lock-in.</li> <li> <b>Data Model Dexterity</b> — By supporting multiple protocols and data models in a single product, Virtuoso protects you against costly vulnerabilities such as: perennial acquisition and accumulation of expensive data model specific DBMS products that still operate on the fundamental principle of: proprietary technology lock-in, at a time when heterogeneity continues to intrinsically define the information technology landscape.</li> <li> <b>Cost-effectiveness</b> — By providing a single point of access (and single-sign-on, SSO) to a plethora of Web 2.0-style social networks, Web Services, and Content Management Systems, and by using Data Object Identifiers as units of Data Virtualization that become the focal points of all data access, Virtuoso lowers the cost to exploit emerging frontiers such as socially-enhanced enterprise collaboration.</li> <li> <b>Speed of Exploitation</b> — Virtuoso provides the ability to rapidly assemble 360-degree conceptual views of data, across internal line-of-business application (CRM, ERP, ECM, HR, etc.) data and/or external data sources, whether these are unstructured, semi-structured, or fully structured.</li> </ul> <p>Bottom line, Virtuoso delivers unrivaled flexibility and scalability, without compromising performance or security.</p> <h2>Related</h2> <ul> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com's BLOG [127]/1567" id="link-id13ee6840">HTTP URI Abstraction and Linked Data</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://blog.jonudell.net/2009/09/09/talking-with-kingsley-idehen-about-mastering-your-own-search-index/" id="link-id1428b698">Be The Master of Your Own Search Index</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://walkingoncoals.blogspot.com/2009/12/whos-data-is-it-part-1.html" id="link-id117db508">Who's Data Is It?</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1482" id="link-id13f64d90">MDM & Linked Data</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1453" id="link-id118861d8">What is Linked Data Oriented RDF-zation?</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1444" id="link-id11820d70">Semantic Web: Travails to Harmony Illustrated</a> </li> </ul> <p> </p>
OpenLink Virtuoso - Product Value Proposition Overiew
2010-02-27T17:46:36Z
2010-02-27T12:46:36-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1595
<p> One of the real problems that pervades all routes to <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id13539328">Linked Data</a> value prop. incomprehension stems from the layering of its value pyramid; especially when communicating with -initially detached- end-users. </p> <p> <strong>Note to <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web" id="link-id0x1c85f498">Web</a> Programmers:</strong> Linked Data is about <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data" id="link-id0x1c85f650">Data</a> (Wine) and not about Code (Fish). Thus, it isn't a "programmer only zone", far from it. More than anything else, its inherently inclusive and spreads its participation net widely across: Data Architects, Data Integrators, Power Users, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Knowledge" id="link-id13600d98">Knowledge</a> Workers, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Information" id="link-id149f8230">Information</a> Workers, Data Analysts, etc.. Basically, everyone that can "click on a link" is invited to this particular party; remember, it is about "Linked Data" not "Linked Code", after all. :-) </p> <h3>Problematic Value Pyramid Layering</h3> <p> Here is an example of a Linked Data value pyramid that I am stumbling across --with some frequency-- these days (note: 1 being the pyramid apex):</p> <ol> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SPARQL" id="link-id10e85538">SPARQL</a> Queries</li> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Resource_Description_Framework" id="link-id1495b578">RDF</a> Data Stores</li> <li> RDF Data Sets </li> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Hypertext_Transfer_Protocol" id="link-id158e4be0">HTTP</a> scheme URIs</li> </ol> <p> Basically, Linked Data deployment (assigning de-referencable HTTP URIs to DBMS records, their attributes, and attribute values [optionally] ) is occurring last. Even worse, this happens in the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Context_%28language_use%29" id="link-id626d988">context</a> of Linked Open Data oriented endeavors, resulting in nothing but confusion or inadvertent perpetuation of the overarching pragmatically challenged "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id111774b8">Semantic Web</a>" stereotype. </p> <p> As you can imagine, hitting SPARQL as your introduction to Linked Data is akin to hitting <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SQL" id="link-id151f9938">SQL</a> as your introduction to Relational Database Technology, neither is an elevator-style value prop. relay mechanism. </p> <p> In the relational realm, killer demos always started with desktop productivity tools (spreadsheets, report-writers, SQL QBE tools etc.) accessing, relational data sources en route to unveiling the "Productivity" and "Agility" value prop. that such binding delivered i.e., the desktop application (clients) and the databases (servers) are distinct, but operating in a mutually beneficial manner to all, courtesy of a data access standards such as <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Open_Database_Connectivity" id="link-id1519aac0">ODBC</a> (Open Database Connectivity). </p> <p> In the Linked Data realm, learning to embrace and extend best practices from the relational dbms realm remains a challenge, a lot of this has to do with hangovers from a misguided perception that RDF databases will somehow completely replace <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Relational_database_management_system" id="link-id110dec88">RDBMS</a> engines, rather than compliment them. Thus, you have a counter productive variant of NIH (Not Invented Here) in play, taking us to the dreaded realm of: Break the Pot and You Own It (exemplified by the 11+ year Semantic Web Project comprehension and appreciation odyssey). </p> <p> From my vantage point, here is how I believe the <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/presentations/Creating_Deploying_Exploiting_Linked_Data2/images/URI_Data_Source_SemWeb.png" id="link-id1592f528">Linked Data value pyramid should be layered</a>, especially when communicating the essential value prop.: </p> <ol> <li> HTTP URLs -- LINKs to documents (Reports) that users already appreciate, across the public Web and/or Intranets </li> <li> HTTP URIs -- typically not visually distinguishable from the URLs, so use the Data exposed by de-referencing a <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uniform_Resource_Locator" id="link-id11209ce8">URL</a> to show how each Data Item (<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Entity" id="link-id1449b558">Entity</a> or Object) is uniquely identified by a Generic HTTP <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uniform_Resource_Identifier" id="link-id112065f8">URI</a>, and how clicking on the said URIs leads to more structured metadata bearing documents available in a variety of data representation formats, thereby enabling flexible data presentation (e.g., smarter HTML pages) </li> <li> SPARQL -- when a user appreciates the data representation and presentation dexterity of a Generic HTTP URI, they will be more inclined to drill down an additional layer to unravel how HTTP URIs mechanically deliver such flexibility </li> <li> RDF Data Stores -- at this stage the user is now interested data sources behind the Generic HTTP URIs, courtesy of natural desire to tweak the data presented in the report; thus, you now have an engaged user ready to absorb the "How Generic HTTP URIs Pull This Off" message </li> <li>RDF Data Sets -- while attempting to make or tweak HTTP URIs, users become curious about the actual data loaded into the RDF Data Store, which is where data sets used to create powerful Lookup Data Spaces (e.g., <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/DBpedia" id="link-id110675c0">DBpedia</a>) come into play such as those from the <a href="http://www4.wiwiss.fu-berlin.de/bizer/pub/lod-datasets_2009-07-14.html" id="link-id11127ff8">LOD</a> constellation as exemplified by <a href="http://wiki.dbpedia.org/Datasets" id="link-id14a2fad8">DBpedia (extractions from Wikipedia)</a>.</li> </ol> <h3>Related</h3> <ul> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1565" id="link-id149c7048">Exploring the Linked Data Value Proposition</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1543" id="link-id14998f98">Simple Explanation of Linked Data & RDF Dynamics</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1546" id="link-id114fbd58">What is the Linked Data Meme About?</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1547" id="link-id1447ada0">Linked Data & Data Item Identifiers (Identity)</a> </li> </ul>
Getting The Linked Data Value Pyramid Layers Right (Update #2)
2010-01-31T22:47:04Z
2010-01-31T17:47:04-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1593
<p> One of the real problems that pervades all routes to <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id13539328">Linked Data</a> value prop. incomprehension stems from the layering of its value pyramid; especially when communicating with -initially detached- end-users. </p> <p> <strong>Note to <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web">Web</a> Programmers:</strong> Linked Data is about <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data">Data</a> (Wine) and not about Code (Fish). Thus, it isn't a "programmer only zone", far from it. More than anything else, its inherently inclusive and spreads its participation net widely across: Data Architects, Data Integrators, Power Users, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Knowledge" id="link-id13600d98">Knowledge</a> Workers, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Information" id="link-id149f8230">Information</a> Workers, Data Analysts, etc.. Basically, everyone that can "click on a link" is invited to this particular party; remember, it is about "Linked Data" not "Linked Code", after all. :-) </p> <h3>Problematic Value Pyramid Layering</h3> <p> Here is an example of a Linked Data value pyramid that I am stumbling across --with some frequency-- these days (note: 1 being the pyramid apex):</p> <ol> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SPARQL" id="link-id10e85538">SPARQL</a> Queries</li> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Resource_Description_Framework" id="link-id1495b578">RDF</a> Data Stores</li> <li> RDF Data Sets </li> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Hypertext_Transfer_Protocol" id="link-id158e4be0">HTTP</a> scheme URIs</li> </ol> <p> Basically, Linked Data deployment (assigning de-referencable HTTP URIs to DBMS records, their attributes, and attribute values [optionally] ) is occurring last. Even worse, this happens in the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Context_%28language_use%29" id="link-id626d988">context</a> of Linked Open Data oriented endeavors, resulting in nothing but confusion or inadvertent perpetuation of the overarching pragmatically challenged "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id111774b8">Semantic Web</a>" stereotype. </p> <p> As you can imagine, hitting SPARQL as your introduction to Linked Data is akin to hitting <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SQL" id="link-id151f9938">SQL</a> as your introduction to Relational Database Technology, neither is an elevator-style value prop. relay mechanism. </p> <p> In the relational realm, killer demos always started with desktop productivity tools (spreadsheets, report-writers, SQL QBE tools etc.) accessing, relational data sources en route to unveiling the "Productivity" and "Agility" value prop. that such binding delivered i.e., the desktop application (clients) and the databases (servers) are distinct, but operating in a mutually beneficial manner to all, courtesy of a data access standards such as <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Open_Database_Connectivity" id="link-id1519aac0">ODBC</a> (Open Database Connectivity). </p> <p> In the Linked Data realm, learning to embrace and extend best practices from the relational dbms realm remains a challenge, a lot of this has to do with hangovers from a misguided perception that RDF databases will somehow completely replace <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Relational_database_management_system" id="link-id110dec88">RDBMS</a> engines, rather than compliment them. Thus, you have a counter productive variant of NIH (Not Invented Here) in play, taking us to the dreaded realm of: Break the Pot and You Own It (exemplified by the 11+ year Semantic Web Project comprehension and appreciation odyssey). </p> <p> From my vantage point, here is how I believe the <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/presentations/Creating_Deploying_Exploiting_Linked_Data2/images/URI_Data_Source_SemWeb.png" id="link-id1592f528">Linked Data value pyramid should be layered</a>, especially when communicating the essential value prop.: </p> <ol> <li> HTTP URLs -- LINKs to documents (Reports) that users already appreciate, across the public Web and/or Intranets </li> <li> HTTP URIs -- typically not visually distinguishable from the URLs, so use the Data exposed by de-referencing a <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uniform_Resource_Locator" id="link-id11209ce8">URL</a> to show how each Data Item (<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Entity" id="link-id1449b558">Entity</a> or Object) is uniquely identified by a Generic HTTP <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uniform_Resource_Identifier" id="link-id112065f8">URI</a>, and how clicking on the said URIs leads to more structured metadata bearing documents available in a variety of data representation formats, thereby enabling flexible data presentation (e.g., smarter HTML pages) </li> <li> SPARQL -- when a user appreciates the data representation and presentation dexterity of a Generic HTTP URI, they will be more inclined to drill down an additional layer to unravel how HTTP URIs mechanically deliver such flexibility </li> <li> RDF Data Stores -- at this stage the user is now interested data sources behind the Generic HTTP URIs, courtesy of natural desire to tweak the data presented in the report; thus, you now have an engaged user ready to absorb the "How Generic HTTP URIs Pull This Off" message </li> <li>RDF Data Sets -- while attempting to make or tweak HTTP URIs, users become curious about the actual data loaded into the RDF Data Store, which is where data sets used to create powerful Lookup Data Spaces (e.g., <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/DBpedia" id="link-id110675c0">DBpedia</a>) come into play such as those from the <a href="http://www4.wiwiss.fu-berlin.de/bizer/pub/lod-datasets_2009-07-14.html" id="link-id11127ff8">LOD</a> constellation as exemplified by <a href="http://wiki.dbpedia.org/Datasets" id="link-id14a2fad8">DBpedia (extractions from Wikipedia)</a>.</li> </ol> <h3>Related</h3> <ul> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1565" id="link-id149c7048">Exploring the Linked Data Value Proposition</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1543" id="link-id14998f98">Simple Explanation of Linked Data & RDF Dynamics</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1546" id="link-id114fbd58">What is the Linked Data Meme About?</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1547" id="link-id1447ada0">Linked Data & Data Item Identifiers (Identity)</a> </li> </ul>
Getting The Linked Data Value Pyramid Layers Right (Update #2)
2010-02-01T14:02:14Z
2010-02-01T09:02:14.000004-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1584
<p> Personally, I believe that we've actually reached a watershed moment re. the evolution of the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web">Web</a> from a mesh of <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id123169a8">Linked Data</a> Containers (Web of Linked Documents) to a mesh of Linked Data Items (entities or real world objects).</p> <p> The journey towards this watershed moment started with the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id14f69f48">Semantic Web</a> Project, gained focus and pragmatism via the <a href="http://www.w3.org/DesignIssues/LinkedData.html" id="link-id11155f78">Linked Data meme</a>, attained substance & credibility via efforts such as <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/DBpedia" id="link-id15857c78">DBpedia</a> and the resulting cloud of <a href="http://www4.wiwiss.fu-berlin.de/bizer/pub/lod-datasets_2009-07-14.html" id="link-id16adf918">Open Linked Data Spaces</a>, and finally arrived at the most important destination of all: broad comprehension and coherence, via <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/RDFa" id="link-id1229b960">RDFa</a>. </p> <p> Over the years, I've chronicled the journey above via entries in this particular <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_Spaces" id="link-id14f76338">data space</a> (my <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Blog" id="link-idfd32c88">blog</a>) and most recently, via my rapid-fire comments and debates on <a href="http://twitter.com" id="link-id11339e80">Twitter</a> (basically hastag #linkeddata account: <a href="http://twitter.com/kidehen#this" id="link-id115e9af8">kidehen</a>). </p> <p> On a parallel front re. my chronicles, I've periodically had conversations with <a href="http://blog.jonudell.net/about/" id="link-id11829170">Jon Udell</a>, who has always provided a coherent sounding board and reconciliation framework for my world views and open data access vision; naturally, this has a lot to do with his holistic grasp of the big picture issues, associated technical details, and special communication prowess :-) </p> <p> Against this backdrop, I refer you to my <a href="http://itc.conversationsnetwork.org/shows/detail4233.html" id="link-id14ac9c08">most recent podcast conversation with Jon</a>, which is about how the tandem of HTML+RDFa and the <a href="http://www.heppnetz.de/projects/goodrelations/" id="link-id14279be8">GoodRelations vocabulary</a> deliver the critical missing links re. broad comprehension of the Semantic Web vision en route to mass exploitation. </p> <h3>Related</h3> <ul> <li> <a href="http://webbackplane.com/node/57" id="link-id113b5b00">Mark Birbeck Introduces RDFa</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://webbackplane.com/rdfa-handbook" id="link-id11b36ac0">RDFa Handbook</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.ebusiness-unibw.org/wiki/GoodRelations#CookBook:_GoodRelations_Recipes_and_Examples" id="link-id1519f458">GoodRelations Usage Examples & Templates</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://blog.jonudell.net/2009/09/09/talking-with-kingsley-idehen-about-mastering-your-own-search-index/" id="link-id11a62ce0">Be the master of your own search index</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://itc.conversationsnetwork.org/shows/detail4312.html" id="link-id115d54f0">Jon Udell Interviews Martin Hepp about GoodRelations, RDFa, and Esoteric Web Search</a> <br /> </li> </ul>
Conversation with Jon Udell: Are We There Yet Re. Web++ ?
2010-02-01T13:58:04Z
2010-02-01T08:58:04.000002-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1542
<h3>Problem:</h3> <p>Your Life, Profession, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web">Web</a>, and <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Internet" id="link-id0x1c6687f8">Internet</a> do not need to become mutually exclusive due to "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Information" id="link-id0x1c6696e8">information</a> overload".</p> <h3>Solution:</h3> <p> A platform or service that delivers a point of online presence that embodies the fundamental separation of: Identity, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data">Data</a> Access, Data Representation, Data Presentation, by adhering to Web and Internet protocols.</p> <h3>How:</h3> <p> Typical post installation (Local or Cloud) task sequence:</p> <ol> <li> Identify myself (happens automatically by way of registration)</li> <li>If in an LDAP environment, import accounts or associate system with LDAP for account lookup and authentication</li> <li> Identify Online Accounts (by fleshing out profile) which also connects system to online accounts and their data</li> <li>Use Profile for granular description (Biography, Interests, WishList, OfferList, etc.)</li> <li>Optionally upstream or downstream data to and from my online accounts</li> <li>Create content Tagging Rules</li> <li>Create rules for associating Tags with formal URIs</li> <li>Create automatic Hyperlinking Rules for reuse when new content is created (e.g. <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Blog" id="link-id11a7c660">Blog</a> posts)</li> <li>Exploit Data Portability virtues of RSS, Atom, OPML, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/RDFa" id="link-id13f54d50">RDFa</a>, RDF/XML, and other formats for imports and exports</li> <li>Automatically <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Tag" id="link-id121ddff0">tag</a> imported content</li> <li>Use function-specific helper application UIs for domain specific data generation e.g. AddressBook (optionally use vCard import), Calendar (optionally use iCalendar import), Email, File Storage (use WebDAV mount with copy and paste or HTTP GET), Feed Subscriptions (optionally import RSS/Atom/OPML feeds), Bookmarking (optionally import bookmark.html or XBEL) etc..</li> <li>Optionally enable "Conversation" feature (today: Social Media feature) across the relevant application domains (manage conversations under covers using NNTP, the standard for this functionality realm) </li> <li>Generate HTTP based <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Entity" id="link-id13d5d378">Entity</a> IDs (URIs) for every piece of data in this burgeoning <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_Spaces" id="link-id11a69670">data space</a> </li> <li>Use REST based APIs to perform CRUD tasks against my data (local and remote) (<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SPARQL" id="link-id11a76e10">SPARQL</a>, GData, Ubiquity Commands, Atom Publishing)</li> <li>Use OpenID, OAuth, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Friend_of_a_friend" id="link-id11c9b3e0">FOAF</a>+SSL, FOAF+SSL+OpenID for accessing data elsewhere</li> <li>Use OpenID, OAuth, FOAF+SSL, FOAF+SSL+OpenID for Controlling access to my data (Self Signed Certificate Generation, Browser Import of said Certificate & associated Private Key, plus persistence of Certificate to FOAF based profile data space in "one click")</li> <li>Have a simple UI for <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Entity-attribute-value_model" id="link-id14015bd0">Entity</a>-Attribute-Value or Subject-Predicate-Object arbitrary data annotations and creation since you can't pre model an "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Open_world_assumption" id="link-id11cd8548">Open World</a>" where the only constant is data flow</li> <li>Have my Personal <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uniform_Resource_Identifier" id="link-id142beee8">URI</a> (Web ID) as the single entry point for controlled access to my HTTP accessible data space</li> </ol> <p> I've just outlined a snippet of the capabilities of the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/OpenLink_Data_Spaces" id="link-id13d64740">OpenLink Data Spaces</a> platform. A platform built using OpenLink <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com" id="link-id13d74170">Virtuoso</a>, architected to deliver: open, platform independent, multi-model, data access and data management across heterogeneous data sources. </p> <p> All you need to remember is your URI when seeking to interact with your data space.</p> <h3>Related</h3> <ol> <li> <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/dataspace/dav/wiki/Main/GetAPersonalURIIn5MinutesOrLess" id="link-id13c97948">Get Yourself a URI (Web ID) in 5 Minutes or Less!</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&q=%22data%20spaces%22&type=text&output=html" id="link-id1431e088">Various posts over the years about Data Spaces</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1415" id="link-id11f837f0">Future of Desktop Post</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://bnode.org/blog/2009/04/22/semantic-web-apps-to-simplify-my-life" id="link-id1393f8a8">Simplify My Life Post</a> by <a href="http://bnode.org/about" id="link-id11da0cc8">Bengee Nowack</a> </li> </ol>
Take N: Yet Another OpenLink Data Spaces Introduction
2009-04-22T19:32:06Z
2009-04-22T15:32:06.000020-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1524
<p>Another post done in response to lost comments. This time, the comments relate to Robin Bloor's article titled: <a href="http://havemacwillblog.com/2008/12/16/what-is-web-30-and-why-should-i-care/" id="link-id12e79d70">What is Web 3.0 and Why Should I Care?</a> </p> <p>Robin:</p> <p> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Web_3.0" id="link-id12db8fb0">Web 3.0 </a>is fundamentally about the World Wid Web becoming a structured database equipped with a formal <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data">data</a> model (RDF which is a moniker for <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Entity-attribute-value_model" id="link-id11490990">Entity-Attribute-Value</a> with Classes & Relationships based Graph Model), query language, and a protocol for handling divrerse data representational requirements via negotiation</p>. <p>Web 3.0 is about a Web that facilitates serendipitous discovery of relevant things; thereby making serendipitous discovery quotient (SDQ), rather than search engine optimization (SEO), the critical success factor that drives how resources get published on the Web.</p> <p>Personally, I believe we are on the cusp of a major industry inflection re. how we interact with data hosted in computing spaces. In a nutshell, the conceptual model interaction based on real-world entities such as people, places, and other things (including abstract subject matter) will usurp traditional logical model interaction based on rows and columns of typed and/or untyped literal values exemplified by relational data access and management systems.</p> <p>Labels such as "Web 3.0", "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id13664538">Linked Data</a>", and "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id157ff968">Semantic Web</a>", are simply about the aforementioned model transition playing out on the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web" id="link-id114bd0e8">World Wide Web</a> and across private Linked Data Webs such as Intranets & Extranets, as exemplified emergence of the "Master Data Management" label/buzzword.</p> <h3>What's the critical infrastructure supporting Web 3.0?</h3> <p>As was the case with Web Services re. Web 2.0, there is a critical piece of infrastructure driving the evolution in question, and in this case it comes down to the evolution of Hyperlinking.</p> <p>We now have a new and complimentary variant of Hyperlinking commonly referred to as "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id152ed150">Hyperdata</a>" that now sits alongside "Hypertext". Hyperdata when used in conjunction with HTTP based URIs as Data Source Names (or Identifiers), delivers a potent and granular data access mechanism scoped down to the datum (object or record) level; which is much different from the document (record or <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Entity" id="link-id1141e830">entity</a> container) level linkage that Hypertext accords.</p> <p>In addition, the incorporation of HTTP into this new and enhanced granular Data Source Naming mechanism also addresses past challenges relating to separation of data, data representation, and data transmission protocols -- remember XDR woes familiar to all sockets level programmers -- courtesy of in-built content negotiation. Hence, via a simple HTTP GET --against a Data Source Name exposed by a Hyperdata link -- I can negotiate (from client or server sides) the exact representation of the description (entity-attribute-value graph) of an Entity / Data Object / Resource, dispatched by a data server.</p> <blockquote>For example, this is how a description of entity "<strong><a href="http://myopenlink.net/dataspace/person/kidehen#this" id="link-id141ce520">Me</a></strong>" ends up being available in (X)HTML or RDF document representations (as you will observe when you click on that link to my Personal <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uniform_Resource_Identifier" id="link-id15f9fed0">URI</a>).</blockquote> <p> The foundation of what I describe above comes from:</p> <ol> <li> Entity-Attribute-Value & Class Relationship Data Model (originating from LISP era with detours via the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Object_database" id="link-id12db8fb0">Object Database</a> era. into the Triples approach in RDF) </li> <li>Use of HTTP based Identifiers in the Entity <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Identity_%28object-oriented_programming%29" id="link-id1193af48">ID</a> construction process</li> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SPARQL" id="link-id1348f188">SPARQL</a> query language for the Data Model.</li> </ol> <p>Some live examples from <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/DBpedia" id="link-id12e62a50">DBpedia</a>:</p> <ul> <li> http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data</li> <li>http://dbpedia.org/resource/Hyperdata</li> <li>http://dbpedia.org/resource/Entity-attribute-value_model</li> <li>http://dbpedia.org/resource/Benjamin_Franklin</li> </ul> <h3>Related</h3> <ul> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1519?sid=5097848d70f69738bd366e2b6374672c&realm=wa" id="link-id13c31500">The End of RDBMS Primacy is Nigh</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://esw.w3.org/topic/SweoIG/TaskForces/CommunityProjects/LinkingOpenData" id="link-id1356e6a0">Linking Open Data Community</a> </li> </ul>
Response to: What is Web 3.0 and Why Should I Care?
2009-01-29T18:45:11Z
2009-01-29T13:45:11-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1522
<p>Yesterday, I stumbled across an <a href="http://www.ebizq.net" id="link-id13e41be8">ebiz</a> article by <a href="http://www.ebizq.net/MT4/mt-cp.cgi?__mode=view&blog_id=43&id=16" id="link-id11c080a0">David Linthicum</a> titled:<a href="http://www.ebizq.net/blogs/linthicum/2009/01/rdf_and_data_integration.php" id="link-id13620940"> RDF & Data Integration</a>. Naturally, I read it, and while reading encountered a number of inaccuracies that compelled <a href="http://myopenlink.net/dataspace/person/kidehen#this" id="link-id152f4828">me</a> to comment on the post. </p> <p>Today, I revisited the same article -- and to my shock and horror -- my comments do not exist (note: the site did accept my comments yesterday!). Even more frustrating for me, I now have to expend time I don't have re-writing my comments due to the depth and danger of the inaccuracies in this post re. RDF in general.</p> <h3>Important Note to ebiz and David: </h3> <p>Please look into what happened to my comments. It's too early for me to conclude that subjective censorship is a play on the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web">Web</a> -- which isn't a hard copy journalistic format style of platform where editors get away with such shenanigans. The Web is a sticky database, and outer joining is well and truly functional (meaning: exclusion and omission ultimately come back to bite via full outer join query results against the Web DB).</p> <p>By the way, if you publish the comments I made to the post (yesterday), I will add a note to this post, accordingly.</p> <p>Yes! David just confirmed to me via <a href="http://linkeddata.uriburner.com/about/html/http://dbpedia.org/resource/Category:Data_modeling" id="link-id15293c20">Twitter</a> that this is yet another comment system related issue and absolutely no intent to censor etc. His words <a href="http://linkeddata.uriburner.com/about/html/http://linkeddata.uriburner.com/about/rdf/http://twitter.com/DavidLinthicum/status/1159201301%23this" id="link-id14e5ac98">Twervatim</a> :-) </p> <p>For sake of clarity, I've itemized the inaccuracies and applied my correction comments (inline) accordingly:</p> <blockquote> <h3>Inaccuracy #1:</h3> <p>Resource Description Framework (RDF), a part of the XML story, provides interoperability between applications that exchange <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Information" id="link-id15f48080">information</a>. </p> <h3>Correction #1: </h3> <p>RDF and XML are not inextricably linked in any way. RDF is part Data Model (<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Entity-attribute-value_model" id="link-id119a7300">EAV</a>/CR style Graph) with associated markup and data serialization formats that include: N3, Turtle, TriX, RDF/XML etc.</p> <h3>Inaccuracy #2:</h3> <p>RDF uses XML to define a foundation for processing metadata and to provide a standard metadata infrastructure for both the Web and the enterprise. </p> <h3>Correction #2: </h3> <p>RDF/XML is an XML based markup and data serialization format. As a markup language it can be used for creating RDF model records/statements (using Subject, Predicate, Object or <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Entity-attribute-value_model" id="link-id15120c28">Entity</a>, Attribute, Value). As a serialization format, it provides a mechanism for marshaling RDF data across data managers and data consumers.</p> <h3>Inaccuracy #3:</h3> <p>The difference between the two is that XML is used to transport data using a common format, while RDF is layered on top of XML defining a broad category of data. </p> <h3>Correction #3:</h3> <p>See earlier corrections above.</p> <h3>Inaccuracy #4:</h3> <p>When the XML data is declared to be of the RDF format, applications are then able to understand the data without understanding who sent it. </p> <h3>Correction #4:</h3> <p>You do not declare data to be of RDF format. RDF isn't a format it is a data model (as stated above). You can "up lift" or map data from XML to RDF (hierarchical to graph model mapping). Likewise you can "down shift" or map data from RDF to XML (example: <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SPARQL" id="link-id146966c0">SPARQL</a> SELECT query patterns "down shift" to SPARQL Results XML, which isn't RDF/XML, while keeping access to graphs via URIs or <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Entity" id="link-id14282528">Entity</a> Identifiers that reside within the serialization).</p> <h3>Inaccuracy #5:</h3> <p>RDF extends the XML model and syntax to be specified for describing either resources or a collection of information. (XML points to a resource in order to scope and uniquely identify a set of properties known as the schema.).</p> <h3>Correction #5:</h3> <p>See earlier comments. </p> </blockquote> <p>The single accurate paragraph in this ebiz article lies right at the end and it states the following:</p> <blockquote> <cite>"I've always thought RDF has been underutilized for data integration, and it's really an old standard. Now that we're focused on both understanding and integrating data, perhaps RDF should make a comeback."</cite> </blockquote> <h3>Related:</h3> <ul> <li> <a href="http://www.w3.org/2001/sw/SW-FAQ#whrdfxml" id="link-id1534cdc8">Semantic Web FAQ fragment re. RDF and XML</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&q=rdf%20data%20integration&type=text&output=html" id="link-id15a7dbc0">Various posts re. RDF and Data Integration</a> from this <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Blog" id="link-id15da4618">Blog</a> <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_Spaces" id="link-id1120d810">Data Space</a>.</li> </ul>
ebiz RDF & Data Integration Article Retort
2009-01-29T21:25:58Z
2009-01-29T16:25:58-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1519
<p> As the world works it way through a "once in a generation" economic crisis, the long overdue downgrade of the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Relational_database_management_system" id="link-id15750540">RDBMS</a>, from its pivotal position at the apex of the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data" id="link-id0x66a74b8">data</a> access and data management pyramid is nigh.</p> <h3>What is the Data Access, and Data Management Value Pyramid?</h3> <p> As depicted below, a top-down view of the data access and data management value chain. The term: apex, simply indicates value primacy, which takes the form of a data access API based entry point into a DBMS realm -- aligned to an underlying data model. Examples of data access APIs include: Native Call Level Interfaces (CLIs), <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Open_Database_Connectivity" id="link-id11c254c0">ODBC</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Java_Database_Connectivity" id="link-id149b16a8">JDBC</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/ADO.NET" id="link-id11451eb0">ADO</a>.NET, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/OLE_DB" id="link-id15b02478">OLE-DB</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/XML_for_Analysis" id="link-id1181fa10">XMLA</a>, and <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web" id="link-id0x2fef498">Web</a> Services.</p> <div> <img alt="Image" src="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/images/Agility_Value_Factors_Pyramid.png" /> </div> <p> The degree to which ad-hoc views of data managed by a DBMS can be produced and dispatched to relevant data consumers (e.g. people), without compromising concurrency, data durability, and security, collectively determine the "Agility Value Factor" (AVF) of a given DBMS. Remember, agility as the cornerstone of environmental adaptation is as old as the concept of evolution, and intrinsic to all pursuits of primacy. </p> <p>In simpler business oriented terms, look at AVF as the degree to which DBMS technology affects the ability to effectively implement "Market Leadership Discipline" along the following pathways: innovation, operation excellence, or customer intimacy. </p> <h3>Why has RDBMS Primacy has Endured?</h3> <p> Historically, at least since the late '80s, the RDBMS genre of DBMS has consistently offered the highest AVF relative to other DBMS genres en route to primacy within the value pyramid. The desire to improve on paper reports and spreadsheets is basically what DBMS technology has fundamentally addressed to date, even though conceptual level interaction with data has never been its forte.</p> <div> <img alt="Image" src="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/images/Old_RDBMS_Primacy_Pyramid.png" /> </div> <p> For more then 10 years -- at the very least -- limitations of the traditional RDBMS in the realm of conceptual level interaction with data across diverse data sources and schemas (enterprise, Web, and <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Internet" id="link-id116001c0">Internet</a>) has been crystal clear to many RDBMS technology practitioners, as indicated by some of the quotes excerpted below:</p> <blockquote> <cite> <p> "Future of Database Research is excellent, but what is the future of data?" </p> "..it is hard for <a href="http://myopenlink.net/dataspace/person/kidehen#this" id="link-id14932398">me</a> to disagree with the conclusions in this report. It captures exactly the right thoughts, and should be a must read for everyone involved in the area of databases and database research in particular." <p>-- <a href="http://jhingran.typepad.com/anant_jhingrans_musings/" id="link-id11334c50">Dr. Anant Jingran</a>, CTO, IBM <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Information" id="link-id150c7970">Information</a> Management Systems, commenting on the <a href="http://db.cs.berkeley.edu/claremont/" id="link-id11c3b408">2007 RDBMS technology retreat</a> attended by a number of key DBMS technology pioneers and researchers.</p> </cite> </blockquote> <blockquote> <cite> <p> "<a href="http://www.databasecolumn.com/2007/09/one-size-fits-all.html" id="link-id15c14f08">One size fits all: A concept whose time has come and gone</a> </p> <p> </p> <ol> <li> They are direct descendants of System R and <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Ingres" id="link-id146da780">Ingres</a> and were architected more than 25 years ago</li> <li> They are advocating "one size fits all"; i.e. a single engine that solves all DBMS needs. </li> </ol> <p>-- Prof. <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Stonebraker" id="link-id145c4e28">Michael Stonebreaker</a>, one of the founding fathers of the RDBMS industry.</p> </cite> </blockquote> <p>Until this point in time, the requisite confluence of "circumstantial pain" and "open standards" based technology required to enable an objective "compare and contrast" of RDBMS engine virtues and viable alternatives hasn't occurred. Thus, the RDBMS has endured it position of primacy albeit on a "one size fits all basis". </p> <h4>Circumstantial Pain</h4> <p> As mentioned earlier, we are in the midst of an economic crisis that is ultimately about a consistent inability to connect dots across a substrate of interlinked data sources that transcend traditional data access boundaries with high doses of schematic heterogeneity. Ironically, in a era of the dot-com, we haven't been able to make meaningful connections between relevant "real-world things" that extend beyond primitive data hosted database tables and content management style document containers; we've struggled to achieve this in the most basic sense, let alone evolve our ability to connect inline with the <a href="http://www.vldb2007.org/program/slides/s1161-brodie.pdf" id="link-id11a0dcf0">exponential rate at which the Internet & Web are spawning "universes of discourse" (data spaces) that emanate from user activity</a> (within the enterprise and across the Internet & Web). In a nutshell, we haven't been able to upgrade our interaction with data such that "conceptual models" and resulting "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Context_%28language_use%29" id="link-id12da4b00">context</a> lenses" (or facets) become concrete; by this I mean: real-world <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Entity" id="link-id146a48a8">entity</a> interaction making its way into the computer realm as opposed to the impedance we all suffer today when we transition from conceptual model interaction (real-world) to logical model interaction (when dealing with RDBMS based data access and data management). </p> <p>Here are some simple examples of what I can only best describe as: "critical dots unconnected", resulting from an inability to interact with data conceptually:</p> <strong>Government (Globally) -</strong> <p> Financial regulatory bodies couldn't effectively discern that a <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Credit_default_swap" id="link-id115ba0e0">Credit Default Swap</a> is an Insurance policy in all but literal name. And in not doing so the cost of an unregulated <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Insurance" id="link-id158d4960">insurance policy</a> laid the foundation for exacerbating the toxicity of fatally flawed mortgage backed securities. Put simply: a flawed insurance policy was the fallback on a toxic security that financiers found exotic based on superficial packaging.</p> <strong>Enterprises - </strong> <p> Banks still don't understand that capital really does exists in tangible and intangible forms; with the intangible being the variant that is inherently dynamic. For example, a tech companies intellectual capital far exceeds the value of fixture, fittings, and buildings, but you be amazed to find that in most cases this vital asset has not significant value when banks get down to the nitty gritty of debt collateral; instead, a buffer of flawed securitization has occurred atop a borderline static asset class covering the aforementioned buildings, fixtures, and fittings. </p> <p> In the general enterprise arena, IT executives continued to "rip and replace" existing technology without ever effectively addressing the timeless inability to connect data across disparate data silos generated by internal enterprise applications, let alone the broader need to mesh data from the inside with external data sources. No correlations made between the growth of buzzwords and the compounding nature of data integration challenges. It's 2009 and only a miniscule number of executives dare fantasize about being anywhere within distance of the: relevant information at your fingertips vision. </p> <p> Looking more holistically at data interaction in general, whether you interact with data in the enterprise space (i.e., at work) or on the Internet or Web, you ultimately are delving into a mishmash of disparate computer systems, applications, service (Web or SOA), and databases (of the RDBMS variety in a majority of cases) associated with a plethora of disparate schemas. Yes, but even today "rip and replace" is still the norm pushed by most vendors; pitting one mono culture against another as exemplified by irrelevances such as: FOSS/LAMP vs Commercial or Web vs. Enterprise, when none of this matters if the data access and integration issues are recognized let alone addressed (see: <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1497?sid=0df0294caee8b37925c6a888bbbca136&realm=wa" id="link-id15c27300">Applications are Like Fish and Data Like Wine</a>). </p> <p> Like the current credit-crunch, exponential growth of data originating from disparate application databases and associated schemas, within shrinking processing time frames, has triggered a rethinking of what defines data access and data management value today en route to an inevitable RDBMS downgrade within the value pyramid.</p> <h3>Technology</h3> <p>There have been many attempts to address real-world modeling requirements across the broader DBMS community from Object Databases to Object-Relational Databases, and more recently the emergence of simple <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Entity-attribute-value_model" id="link-id1128dad0">Entity</a>-Attribute-Value model DBMS engines. In all cases failure has come down to the existence of one or more of the following deficiencies, across each potential alternative:</p> <ol> <li>Query language standardization - nothing close to <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SQL" id="link-id16002d60">SQL</a> standardization</li> <li>Data Access API standardization - nothing close to ODBC, JDBC, OLE-DB, or ADO.NET</li> <li>Wire protocol standardization - nothing close to HTTP</li> <li>Distributed Identity infrastructure - nothing close to the non-repudiatable digital Identity that <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Friend_of_a_friend" id="link-id14926b18">foaf</a>+ssl accords</li> <li>Use of Identifiers as network based pointers to data sources - nothing close to RDF based <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id16180a28">Linked Data</a> </li> <li>Negotiable data representation - nothing close to Mime and HTTP based Content Negotiation</li> <li>Scalability especially in the era of Internet & Web scale.</li> </ol> <h4>Entity-Attribute-Value with Classes & Relationships (<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Entity-attribute-value_model" id="link-id13e741b8">EAV</a>/CR) data models</h4> <p>A common characteristic shared by all post-relational DBMS management systems (from Object Relational to pure Object) is an orientation towards variations of EAV/CR based data models. Unfortunately, all efforts in the EAV/CR realm have typically suffered from at least one of the deficiencies listed above. In addition, the same "one DBMS model fits all" approach that lies at the heart of the RDBMS downgrade also exists in the EAV/CR realm.</p> <h3>What Comes Next?</h3> <p>The RDBMS is not going away (ever), but its era of primacy -- by virtue of its placement at the apex of the data access and data management value pyramid -- is over! I make this bold claim for the following reasons: </p> <ol> <li> The Internet aided "Global Village" has brought "<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_World_Assumption" id="link-id1148e560">Open World</a>" vs "<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Closed_World_Assumption" id="link-id11967cd0">Closed World</a>" assumption issues to the fore e.g., the current global economic crisis remains centered on the inability to connect dots across "Open World" and "Closed World" data frontiers </li> <li> Entity-Attribute-Value with Classes & Relationships (EAV/CR) based DBMS models are more effective when dealing with disparate data associated with disparate schemas, across disparate DBMS engines, host operating systems, and networks. </li> </ol> <p>Based on the above, it is crystal clear that a different kind of DBMS -- one with higher AVF relative to the RDBMS -- needs to sit atop today's data access and data management value pyramid. The characteristics of this DBMS must include the following:</p> <ol> <li> Every item of data (Datum/Entity/Object/Resource) has Identity</li> <li> Identity is achieved via Identifiers that aren't locked at the DBMS, OS, Network, or Application levels</li> <li> Object Identifiers and Object values are independent (extricably linked by association)</li> <li> Object values should be de-referencable via Object Identifier</li> <li> Representation of de-referenced value graph (entity, attributes, and values mesh) must be negotiable (i.e. content negotiation)</li> <li>Structured query language must provide mechanism for Creation, Deletion, Updates, and Querying of data objects</li> <li> Performance & Scalability across "Closed World" (enterprise) and "Open World" (Internet & Web) realms.</li> </ol> <p>Quick recap, I am not saying that RDBMS engine technology is dead or obsolete. I am simply stating that the era of RDBMS primacy within the data access and data management value pyramid is over. </p> <p>The problem domain (conceptual model views over heterogeneous data sources) at the apex of the aforementioned pyramid has simply evolved beyond the natural capabilities of the RDBMS which is rooted in "Closed World" assumptions re., data definition, access, and management. The need to maintain domain based conceptual interaction with data is now palpable at every echelon within our "Global Village" - Internet, Web, Enterprise, Government etc.</p> <p>It is my personal view that an EAV/CR model based DBMS, with support for the seven items enumerated above, can trigger the long anticipated RDBMS downgrade. Such a DBMS would be inherently multi-model because you would need to the best of RDBMS and EAV/CR model engines in a single product, with in-built support for HTTP and other Internet protocols in order to effectively address data representation and serialization issues.</p> <h4>EAV/CR Oriented Data Access & Management Technology</h4> <p>Examples of contemporary EAV/CR frameworks that provide concrete conceptual layers for data access and data management currently include:</p> <ul> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Resource_Description_Framework" id="link-id115d1cb0"> Resource Description Framework</a> (RDF) - an EAV/CR based framework</li> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id116cf810">RDF Linked Data </a>- EAV/CR based framework that mandates de-referencable HTTP based Identifiers</li> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/ADO.NET_Entity_Framework" id="link-id13daa160">ADO.NET Entity Frameworks</a> - Microsoft .NET based EAV/CR framework</li> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/page/Core_Data" id="link-id11111838">Core Data Services </a>- Mac OS X based EAV/CR framework that evolved from NeXT's <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Enterprise_Objects_Framework" id="link-id15c27df0">Enterprise Object Frameworks</a> (EOF).</li> </ul> <p>The frameworks above provide the basis for a revised AVF pyramid, as depicted below, that reflects today's data access and management realities i.e., an Internet & Web driven global village comprised of interlinked distributed data objects, compatible with "Open World" assumptions.</p> <div> <image src="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/images/New_EAV_RDBMS_Pyramid.png"></image> </div> <h3>Related</h3> <ul> <li> <a href="http://allanslibrary.blogspot.com/2009/06/semantic-way.html" id="link-id0xb8c5e498">The Semantic Way</a> - Alan Cho's Summary of <a href="http://www.pwc.com/extweb/home.nsf/docid/1308AF8EA7929CCA852575BA00720F26" id="link-id0xb80f5e10">PwC 2009 tech forecast report on the Semantic Web</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/is_the_relational_database_doomed.php" id="link-id0xb8c20658">Is the RDBMS Doomed</a> - <a href="http://www.readwriteweb.com">ReadWriteWeb</a> Article</li> <li> <a href="http://www.metabrew.com/article/anti-rdbms-a-list-of-distributed-key-value-stores/" id="link-id0x1ab4778">Anti-RDBMS: a list of Distributed Key-Value Stores</a> - by <a href="http://www.last.fm/user/RJ" id="link-id0x5a968060">Richard Jones</a> (CTO Last.FM)</li> <li> <a href="http://dynamicorange.com/2009/01/22/blueblog-how-and-why-glue-is-using-amazon-simpledb-instead-of-a-relational-database/" id="link-id15e07c10">How & Why Glue is Using Amazon SimpleDB</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.cs.cmu.edu/afs/cs.cmu.edu/user/clamen/OODBMS/Manifesto/htManifesto/node4.html#SECTION00022000000000000000" id="link-id116cf450">Object Database Manifesto (Identity excerpt)</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.unixspace.com/context/databases.html" id="link-id150b2c20">Database Models Overview</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WEj9vqVvHPc&feature=related" id="link-id0x66b0850">Ted Nelson Explaining Irregularity and Idiosyncrasy of Data Structures</a> - ZigZag Demo </li> </ul>
The Time for RDBMS Primacy Downgrade is Nigh!
2009-06-03T22:09:58Z
2009-06-03T18:09:58.000001-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1518
<p>As I cannot post directly to Glenn's <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Blog" id="link-id149ad010">blog</a> titled: <a href="http://www.furia.com/page.cgi?type=log&id=319" id="link-id113ed070">This is Not the Near Future (Either)</a>, I have to basically respond to him here, in blog post form :-(</p> <p>What is our <a href="http://b3s.openlinksw.com/fct/facet.vsp" id="link-id10fbeec0">"Search" and "Find" demonstration</a> about? It is about how you use the "Description" of "Things" to unambiguously locate things in a database at <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web">Web</a> Scale.</p> <p>To our perpetual chagrin, we are trying to demonstrate an engine -- not UI prowess -- but the immediate response is to jump to the UI aesthetics.</p> <p>Google, Yahoo etc.. offer a simple input form for <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Full_text_search" id="link-id14296fb8">full text search</a> patterns, they have a processing window for completing full text searches across Web Content indexed on their servers. Once the search patterns are processed, you get a page ranked result set (collection of Web pages basically that claim/state: we found N pages out of a document corpus of about M indexed pages). </p> <p> <strong>Note:</strong> the estimate aspect of traditional search results in like "advertising small print" the user lives with the illusion that all possible documents on the Web (or even <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Internet" id="link-id13436b50">Internet</a>) have been searched whereas in reality: 25% of the possible total is a major stretch; since the Web and Internet are <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fractal_dimension_on_networks" id="link-id1105ec48">fractal networks</a> and <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scale-free_network" id="link-id111ad558">scale-free</a>, inherently growing at exponential rates "ad infinitum" across boundless dimensions of human comprehension.</p> <p> The power of <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id111dc7c8">Linked Data</a> ultimately comes down to the fact that the user constructs the path to what they seek via the properties of the "Things" in question. The routes are not hardwired since <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uniform_Resource_Identifier" id="link-id15cbc6f8">URI</a> de-referencing (follow your nose pattern) is available to Linked Data aware query engines and crawlers. </p> <p>We are simply trying to demonstrate how you can combine the best of full text search with the best of structured querying while reusing familiar interaction patterns from Google/Yahoo. Thus, you start with full text search, find get all the entities associated with the pattern, then use the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Entity" id="link-id1512c8a8">entity</a> types or entity properties to find what you seek.</p> <p>You state in your post:</p> <blockquote> <cite>"To state the obvious caveat, the claim OpenLink is making about this demo is not that it delivers better search-term relevance, therefore the ranking of searching results is not the main criteria on which it is intended to be assessed." </cite> </blockquote> <p> Correct. </p> <blockquote> <cite> "On the other hand, one of the things they are bragging about is that their server will automatically cut off long-running queries. So how do you like your first page of results?". </cite> </blockquote> <p> Not exactly correct. We are performing aggregates using a configurable interactive time factor. Example: tell <a href="http://myopenlink.net/dataspace/person/kidehen#this" id="link-id12fb67c0">me</a> how many entities of type: Person, with interest: <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id159bffc8">Semantic Web</a>, exist in this database within 2 seconds. Also understand that you could retry the same query and get different numbers within the same interactive time factor. It isn't your basic "query cut-off". </p> <blockquote> <cite> "And on the other other hand, the big claim OpenLink is making about this demo is that the aggregate experience of using it is better than the aggregate experience of using "traditional" search. So go ahead, use it. If you can."</cite> </blockquote> <p>Yes, "Microsoft" was a poor example for sure, the example could have been pattern: "glenn mcdonald", which should demonstrate the fundamental utility of what we are trying to demonstrate i.e., entity disambiguation courtesy of entity properties and/or entity type filtering.</p> <p> <a href="http://www.google.com/search?q=glenn+mcdonald" id="link-id15e4dbc8">Compare Googles results for: Glenn McDonald</a> with those from our demo (which dissambiguate "Glenn McDonald" via associated properties and/or types), assuming we both agree that your Web Site or Blog Home isn't the center of your entity graph or personal <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_Spaces" id="link-id15754528">data space</a> (i.e., data about you); so getting your home page at the top of the Google page rank offers limited value, in reality.</p> <p>What are we bragging about? A little more than what you attempt to explain. Yes, we are showing that we can find stuff within a processing window, but understand the following:</p> <ul> <li> Processing Time Window (or interactive time) is configurable </li> <li> Data Corpus is a Billion+ Triples (from <a href="http://challenge.semanticweb.org/" id="link-id149a25e0">Billion Triples Challenge Data Set</a>) </li> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SPARQL" id="link-id15e13180">SPARQL</a> doesn't have Aggregation capabilities by default (we have implemented <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/dataspace/dav/wiki/Main/VOSArticleBISPARQL2" id="link-id1593a550">SPARQL-BI</a> to deliver aggregates for analytics against large data sets, we even handle the TPC-H industry standard benchmark with SPARQL-BI)</li> <li> Paging isn't possible without aggregates, and doing aggregates on a Billion+ triples as part of a query processing cycle isn't trivial stuff (otherwise it would be everywhere due to inherent and obvious necessity).</li> </ul> <p>I hope I've clarified what's going on with our demo? If not, pose your challenge via examples and I will respond with solutions or simply cry out loud: "no mas!".</p> <p>As for your "Mac OX X Leopard" comments, I can only say this: I emphasized that this is a demo, the data is pretty old, and the input data has issues (i.e. some of the input data is bad as your example shows). The purpose of this demo is not about the text per se., it's about the size of the data corpus and faceted querying. We are going to have the entire <a href="http://community.linkeddata.org/dataspace/organization/lod#this" id="link-id15dfec08">LOD</a> Cloud loaded into the real thing, and in addition to that our Sponger Middleware will be enabled, and then you can take issue with data quality as per your reference to "Cyndi Lauper" (btw - it takes one property filter to find <a href="http://b3s.openlinksw.com/fct/facet.vsp?cmd=set_view&sid=552&type=text-properties&limit=20&offset=0" id="link-id1496d2a0">information about her quickly</a> using "<strong>dbpprop:name</strong>" after filtering for properties with text values).</p> <p>Of all things, this demo had nothing to do with UI and <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Information" id="link-id11009090">Information</a> presentation aesthetics. It was all about combining full text search and structured queries (sparql behind the scenes) against a huge data corpus en route to solving challenges associated with faceted browsing over large data sets. We have built a service that resides inside <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com" id="link-id118b36a8">Virtuoso</a>. The Service is naturally of the "Web Service" variety and can be used from any consumer / client environment that speaks HTTP (directly or indirectly).</p> <p>To be continued ...</p>
In Response to: This is Not the Future (Update #3)
2009-01-22T00:02:47Z
2009-01-21T19:02:47-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1517
<p>The first salvo of what we've been hinting about re. server side faceted browsing over Unlimited <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data">Data</a> within configurable Interactive Time-frames is now available for experimentation at: <a href="http://b3s.openlinksw.com/fct/facet.vsp" id="link-ide41d210">http://b3s.openlinksw.com/fct/facet.vsp</a>.</p> <h3>Simple example / demo:</h3> <p>Enter search pattern: Microsoft</p> <p>You will get the usual result from a full text pattern search i.e., hits and text excerpts with matching patterns in boldface. This first step is akin to throwing your net out to sea while fishing.</p> <p> Now you have your catch, what next? Basically, this is where traditional text search value ends since <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/regular_expression" id="link-id113b6840">regex</a> or <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/XPath" id="link-id1151c140">xpath</a>/<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/XQuery" id="link-id14565db8">xquery</a> offer little when the structure of literal text is the key to filtering or categorization based analysis of real-world entities. Naturally, this is where the value of structured querying of <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id11bc8208">linked data</a> starts, as you seek to use <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Entity" id="link-id150e7298">entity</a> descriptions (combination of attribute and relationship properties) to "Find relevant things".</p> <p>Continuing with the demo.</p> <p>Click on "Properties" link within the Navigation section of the browser page which results in a distillation and aggregation of the properties of the entities associated with the search results. Then use the "Next" link to page through the properties until to find the properties that best match what you seek. Note, this particular step is akin to using the properties of the catch (using fishing analogy) for query filtering, with each subsequent property link click narrowing your selection further.</p> <p>Using property based filtering is just one perspective on the data corpus associated with the text search pattern; thus, you can alter perspectives by clicking on the "Class" link so that you can filter you search results by entity type. Of course, in a number of scenarios you would use a combination of entity types and entity properties filters to locate the entities of interest to you. </p> <h3>A Few Notes about this demo instance of <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com" id="link-id14453088">Virtuoso</a>:</h3> <ul> <li> Lookup Data Size (Local Linked Data Corpus): 2 Billion+ Triples (<a href="http://dbpedia.org/page/Entity-attribute-value_model" id="link-id13447558">entity-attribute-value</a> tuples)</li> <li> This is a *temporary* teaser / precursor to the <a href="http://community.linkeddata.org/dataspace/organization/lod#this" id="link-id14e3bfc8">LOD</a> (Linking Open Data Cloud) variant of our Linked Data driven "Search" & "Find" service; we decided to implement this functionality prior to commissioning a larger and more up to date instance based on the entire LOD Cloud</li> <li> The browser is simply using a <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com" id="link-id138b5688">Virtuoso</a> PL function that also exists in <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web">Web</a> Service form for loose binding by 3rd parties that have a UI orientation and focus (our UI is deliberately bare boned).</li> <li>The properties and entity types (classes) links expose formal definitions and dictionary provenance <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Information" id="link-id10ecc8e0">information</a> materialized in an HTML page (of course your browser or any other HTTP user agent can negotiation alternative representations of this descriptive information)</li> <li> <a href="http://umbel.org/about/" id="link-id117b95e0">UMBEL</a> based inference rules are enabled, giving you a live and simple demonstration of the virtues of Linked Data Dictionaries for example: click on the description link of any property or class from the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Friend_of_a_friend" id="link-id1595dd88">foaf</a> (friend-of-a-friend vocabulary), <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SIOC" id="link-id151315e8">sioc</a> (semantically-interlinked-online-communities ontology), <a href="http://musicontology.com/" id="link-id15b9d6e8">mo</a> (music ontology), <a href="http://bibliontology.com/" id="link-id114257e8">bibo</a> (bibliographic data ontology) namespaces to see how the data between these lower level vocabularies or ontologies are meshed with <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Cyc" id="link-id15b9be80">OpenCyc</a>'s upper level ontology. </li> </ul> <h3>Related</h3> <ul> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/oerling/weblog/Orri%20Erling%27s%20Blog/1515" id="link-id14694eb8">Faceted Search: Unlimited Data in Interactive Time</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://blogs.usnet.private:8893/Virtuoso Anytime: No Query Is Too Complex (updated)" id="link-id1356c630">Virtuoso Anytime: No Query Is Too Complex</a> </li> </ul>
A Linked Data Web Approach To Semantic "Search" & "Find" (Updated)
2009-01-10T18:55:56Z
2009-01-10T13:55:56.000001-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1489
<h3>What is it?</h3> <p>A pre-installed edition of <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com" id="link-id14bea838">Virtuoso</a> for Amazon's EC2 Cloud platform.</p> <h3>What does it offer?</h3> From a <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web">Web</a> Entrepreneur perspective it offers: <ol> <li> Low cost entry point to a game-changing Web 3.0+ (and beyond) platform that combines <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SQL" id="link-id11309b38">SQL</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Resource_Description_Framework" id="link-id135f7988">RDF</a>, XML, and Web Services functionality</li> <li> Flexible variable cost model (courtesy of <a href="http://aws.amazon.com/devpay/" id="link-id17941018">EC2 DevPay</a>) tightly bound to revenue generated by your services</li> <li> Delivers federated and/or centralized model flexibility for you SaaS based solutions</li> <li> Simple entry point for developing and deploying sophisticated database driven applications (SQL or RDF <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id14ea6b10">Linked Data Web</a> oriented)</li> <li> Complete framework for exploiting OpenID, OAuth (including Role enhancements) that simplifies exploitation of these vital Identity and <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data">Data</a> Access technologies</li> <li>Easily implement RDF Linked Data based Mail, Blogging, Wikis, Bookmarks, Calendaring, Discussion Forums, Tagging, Social-Networking as <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_Spaces" id="link-id11519928">Data Space</a> (data containers) features of your application or service offering</li> <li>Instant alleviation of challenges (e.g. service costs and agility) associated with <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/DataPortability" id="link-id111cb610">Data Portability</a> and Open Data Access across Web 2.0 data silos</li> <li> LDAP integration for <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Intranet" id="link-id114a8270">Intranet</a> / <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Extranet" id="link-id10fe4f08">Extranet</a> style applications.</li> </ol> <p>From the DBMS engine perspective it provides you with one or more pre-configured instances of Virtuoso that enable immediate exploitation of the following services:</p> <ol> <li> RDF Database (a Quad Store with <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SPARQL" id="link-id11911bf8">SPARQL</a> & SPARUL Language & Protocol support)</li> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SQL" id="link-id110544c8">SQL</a> Database (with <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Open_Database_Connectivity" id="link-id1524c7d0">ODBC</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Java_Database_Connectivity" id="link-id14cfb658">JDBC</a>, OLE-DB, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/ADO.NET" id="link-id110ec6c8">ADO</a>.NET, and XMLA driver access)</li> <li>XML Database (XML Schema, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/XQuery" id="link-id10ebf218">XQuery</a>/<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/XPath" id="link-id142a7898">Xpath</a>, XSLT, Full Text Indexing)</li> <li>Full Text Indexing.</li> </ol> <p>From a Middleware perspective it provides:</p> <ol> <li> RDF Views (Wrappers / Semantic Covers) over SQL, XML, and other data sources accessible via SOAP or REST style Web Services</li> <li> Sponger Service for converting non RDF <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Information" id="link-id11931c60">information</a> resources into RDF <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id118f7168">Linked Data</a> "on the fly" via a large collection of pre-installed RDFizer Cartridges.</li> </ol> <p>From the Web Server Platform perspective it provides an alternative to LAMP stack components such as <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/MySQL" id="link-id10f7b780">MySQL</a> and Apace by offering</p> <ol> <li> HTTP Web Server</li> <li> WebDAV Server</li> <li> Web <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Application_server" id="link-id1268daa8">Application Server</a> (includes <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/PHP" id="link-id1585d238">PHP</a> runtime hosting)</li> <li> SOAP or REST style Web Services Deployment</li> <li> RDF Linked Data Deployment</li> <li> SPARQL (SPARQL Query Language) and SPARUL (SPARQL Update Language) endpoints</li> <li>Virtuoso Hosted PHP packages for <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/MediaWiki" id="link-id15568818">MediaWiki</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Drupal" id="link-id110bd7a8">Drupal</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/WordPress" id="link-id10f66918">Wordpress</a>, and <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/PhpBB" id="link-id13fda4d0">phpBB3</a> (just install the relevant Virtuoso Distro. Package). </li> </ol> <p>From the general System Administrator's perspective it provides:</p> <ol> <li> Online Backups (Backup Set dispatched to S3 buckets, FTP, or HTTP/WebDAV server locations)</li> <li>Synchronized Incremental Backups to Backup Set locations</li> <li>Backup Restore from Backup Set location (without exiting to EC2 shell).</li> </ol> <p>Higher level user oriented offerings include:</p> <ol> <li>OpenLink Data Explorer front-end for exploring the burgeoning Linked Data <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Giant_Global_Graph" id="link-id11646dc8">Web</a> </li> <li> Ajax based SPARQL Query Builder (iSPARQL) that enables SPARQL Query construction by Example</li> <li>Ajax based SQL Query Builder (QBE) that enables SQL Query construction by Example.</li> </ol> <p>For Web 2.0 / 3.0 users, developers, and entrepreneurs it offers it includes Distributed Collaboration Tools & Social Media realm functionality courtesy of <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/OpenLink_Data_Spaces" id="link-id11009930">ODS</a> that includes:</p> <ol> <li> Point of presence on the Linked Data Web that meshes your Identity and your Data via URIs</li> <li> System generated Social Network Profile & Contact Data via <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Friend_of_a_friend" id="link-id1185a1c0">FOAF</a>?</li> <li> System generated <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SIOC" id="link-id14791890">SIOC</a> (Semantically Interconnected Online Community) <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_Spaces" id="link-id1577cad8">Data Space</a> (that includes a Social Graph) exposing all your Web data in RDF Linked Data form</li> <li> System generated OpenID and automatic integration with FOAF</li> <li> Transparent Data Integration across Facebook, Digg, LinkedIn, FriendFeed, Twitter, and any other Web 2.0 data space equipped with RSS / Atom support and/or REST style Web Services</li> <li> In-built support for SyncML which enables data synchronization with Mobile Phones.</li> </ol> <h3>How Do I Get Going with It?</h3> <ul> <li> <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/dataspace/dav/wiki/Main/ODSInstallationEC2" id="link-id114e1600">Standard Installation Guide</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/dataspace/dav/wiki/Main/VirtEC2AMIDBpediaInstall" id="link-id110a98e8">Personal or Service Specific DBpedia Installation Guide</a> </li> </ul>
Introducing Virtuoso Universal Server (Cloud Edition) for Amazon EC2
2008-11-28T21:06:02Z
2008-11-28T16:06:02.000006-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1475
<p>Recent <a href="http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/perturbation" id="link-id1bdb9ec8">perturbations</a> in <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data">Data</a> Access and Data Management technology realms are clear signs of an imminent inflection. In a nutshell, the focus of data access is moving from the "Logical Level" (what you see if you've ever looked at a DBMS schema derived from an <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Entity" id="link-id18735f38">Entity</a> Data Model) to the "Conceptual Level" (i.e., the Entity Model becoming concrete).</p> <p>In recent times I've stumbled across Master Data Management (MDM) which is all about entities that provide holistic views of enterprise data (or what I call: <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Context_%28language_use%29" id="link-id18f07ec8">Context</a> Lenses). I've also stumbled across emerging tensions in the .NET realm between Linq to Entities and Linq to <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SQL" id="link-id19429e88">SQL</a>, where in either case the fundamental issues comes down to the optimal paths "Conceptual Level Access" over the "Logical Logical Level" when dealing with data access in the .NET realm.</p> <p> Strangely, the emerging realm of RDF <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id115b3780">Linked Data</a>, MDM, and .NET's Entity Frameworks, remain strangely disconnected.</p> <p>Another oddity is the obvious, but barely acknowledged, blurring of the lines between the "traditional enterprise employee" and the "individual <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web">Web</a> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Netizen" id="link-id0x1ffd8640">netizen</a>". The fusion between these entities is one of the most defining characteristics of how the Web is reshaping the data landscape.</p> <p>At the current time, I tend to crystalize my data access world view under the moniker: <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1474" id="link-id1544ee60">YODA</a> ("You" Oriented Data Access), based on the following:</p> <ol> <li> Entities are the new focal point of data access, management, and integration </li> <li> "You" are the entry point (Data Source Name) into this new realm of inter connected Entities that the Web exposes</li> <li> "You" the "Person" Entity is associated with many other "Things" such as "Organizations", "Other People", "Books", "Music", "Subject Matter" etc. </li> <li> "You" the "Person" needs Identity in this new global database, which is why "You" need to Identify "Yourself" using an an HTTP based Entity <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Identity_%28object-oriented_programming%29" id="link-id145d0438">ID</a> (aka. <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uniform_Resource_Identifier" id="link-id1873ad08">URI</a>) </li> <li> When "You" have an ID for "Yourself" it becomes much easier for the essence of "You" to be discovered via the Web </li> <li> When "Others" have IDs for "Themselves" on the Web it becomes much easier for "You" to serendipitously discover or explicitly "Find" things on the Web. </li> </ol> <h3>Related</h3> <ul> <li> <a href="http://www.infoq.com/news/2008/11/DLINQ-Future" id="link-id17501eb0">Is LINQ to SQL truly dead?</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1420" id="link-id10fbf920">Virtuoso, Linked Data, and Linq2Rdf</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1224" id="link-id19c44b00">Enterprise 0.0, Linked Data, and the Semantic Data Web</a> (*an old post*)</li> </ul>
Entity Oriented Data Access
2008-11-04T03:51:48Z
2008-11-03T22:51:48-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1457
<p>I just stumbled across an post from <a href="http://www.itbusinessedge.com" id="link-id10f82f50">ITBusines Edge</a> titled: <a href="http://www.itbusinessedge.com/item/?ci=48119" id="link-id10f37b90">How Semantic Technology Can Help Companies with Integration</a>. While reading the post I encountered the term: <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Master_Data_Management" id="link-id11055eb8">Master Data Manager (MDM)</a>, and wondered to myself, "what's that?" only to realize it's the very same thing I described as a <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Federated_database_system" id="link-id13985af0">Data Virtualization</a> or <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Virtual_Database" id="link-id1167c720">Virtual Database technology</a> (circa. 1998).</p> <p>Now, if re-labeling can confuse <a href="http://myopenlink.net/dataspace/person/kidehen#this" id="link-id14aaaaf0">me</a> when applied to a realm I've been intimately involved with for eons (<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Internet" id="link-id112042f0">internet</a> time). I don't want to imagine what it does for others who aren't that intimately involved with the important data access and data integration realms. </p> <p>On the more refreshing side, the article does shed some light on the potency of RDF and OWL when applied to the construction of conceptual views of heterogeneous data sources.</p> <blockquote> <cite>"How do you know that data coming from one place calculates net revenue the same way that data coming from another place does? You’ve got people using the same term for different things and different terms for the same things. How do you reconcile all of that? That’s really what semantic integration is about." </cite> </blockquote> <p>BTW - I discovered this article via another titled: <a href="http://www.itbusinessedge.com/blogs/mia/?p=485" id="link-id11134098">Understanding Integration And How It Can Help with SOA</a>, that covers SOA and Integration matters. Again, in this piece I feel the gradual realization of the virtues that RDF, OWL, and RDF <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id11048740">Linked Data</a> bring to bear in the vital realm of data integration across heterogeneous data silos.</p> <h3>Conclusion</h3> <p>A number of events, at the micro and macro economic levels, are forcing attention back to the issue of productive use of existing IT resources. The trouble with the aforementioned quest is that it ultimately unveils the global IT affliction known as: heterogeneous data silos, and the challenges of pain alleviation, that have been ignored forever or approached inadequately as clearly shown by the rapid build up of SOA horror stories in the data integration realm.</p> <p>Data Integration via conceptualization of heterogenous data sources, that result in concrete conceptual layer data access and management, remains the greatest and most potent application of technologies associated with the "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id10fa5050">Semantic Web</a>" and/or "Linked Data" monikers.</p> <h3>Related</h3> <ul> <li> <a href="http://www.infoworld.com/article/03/05/23/21FEinnovidehen_1.html" id="link-id118c9c00">InforWorld 2003 Innovator article</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://weblog.infoworld.com/udell/2006/04/28.html" id="link-id11057298">2006 Podcast Interview with Jon Udell</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Enterprise_Information_Integration" id="link-id13f89030">Enterprise Information Integration</a> </li> <li>One of <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&q=data%20integration&type=text&output=html" id="link-id11048b98">several posts</a> about our <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com" id="link-id10fef0e0">Virtuoso</a> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Virtuoso_Universal_Server" id="link-id10e5a068">Universal Server</a> and <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1406" id="link-id111d5aa8">Conceptual Model based data integration</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/wiki/main/Main/VOSHistory" id="link-id11020108">History of Virtuoso</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.mkbergman.com/me/" id="link-id1101e7b0">Mike Bergman</a>'s post titled: <a href="http://www.mkbergman.com/?p=459" id="link-id10fdb640">WOA: A New Enterprise Partner for Linked Data</a> </li> </ul>
The Trouble with Labels (Contd.): Data Integration & SOA
2008-10-12T22:54:22Z
2008-10-12T18:54:22-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1455
<p> The evolution of the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web">Web</a> into a <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/federated_database_system" id="link-id13d825f8">federated database</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Information" id="link-id11821e18">information</a> space, and <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Knowledge" id="link-id147f5d20">knowledge</a>-base hybrid continues at frenetic pace.</p> <p> As more <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id14a805a8">Linked Data</a> is injected into the Web from the <a href="http://community.linkeddata.org/dataspace/organization/lod#this" id="link-id114ebeb8">Linking Open Data community</a> and other initiatives, it's important to note that "Linked Data" is available in a variety of forms such as:</p> <ul> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data">Data</a> Model Definition oriented Linked Data (aka. Data Dictionary)</li> <li> Data Model Instance Data (aka. Instance Data)</li> <li> Linked Data oriented solutions that leverage the smart data substrate that Models and Instance Data meshes deliver.</li> </ul> <p> Note: The common glue across the different types of Linked Data remains the commitment to data object (<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Entity" id="link-id1103afe8">entity</a>) identification and access via de-referencable URIs (aka. record / entity level data source names).</p> <p> As stated in my recent post titled: <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id11743278">Semantic Web</a>: <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1444" id="link-id10f44ce0">Travails to Harmony Illustrated</a>. Harmonious intersections of instance data, data dictionaries (schemas, ontologies, rules etc.) provide a powerful substrate (smart data) for the development and deployment of "People" and/or "Machine" oriented solutions. Of course, others have commented on these matters and expressed similar views (see related section below).</p> <p> The clickable venn diagram below, provides a simple exploration path that exposes the linkage that already exists, across the different Linked Data types, within the burgeoning <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Giant_Global_Graph" id="link-id1132fe60">Linked Data Web</a>.</p> <div> <map name="LiveCloud"> <area coords="356,136,120" href="http://umbel.org/images/lod_constellation.html" shape="circle" /> <area coords="140,136,120" href="http://www4.wiwiss.fu-berlin.de/bizer/pub/lod-datasets_2008-09-18.html" shape="circle" /> <area coords="248,280,120" href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/dataspace/dav/wiki/Main/ClickableVirtSpongerCloud" shape="circle" /> </map> <img border="0" src="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/ldp_presentation/images/linked_data_people_schems_venn.png" usemap="#LiveCloud" /> </div> <h3> Related</h3> <ul> <li> <a href="http://jhingran.typepad.com/" id="link-id14aeb438">Anant Jingran</a>'s insightful <a href="http://intranet.usnet.private:8893/anant_jhingrans_musings/2008/08/future-of-database-research-is-excellent-but-what-is-the-future-of-data.html" id="link-id1158ca98">LDP Conference Trip report</a> </li> <li> Anant's recent post about the <a href="http://jhingran.typepad.com/anant_jhingrans_musings/2008/08/future-of-database-research-is-excellent-but-what-is-the-future-of-data.html" id="link-id1128fd78">future of Data</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.mkbergman.com/me/" id="link-id1114d330">Mike Bergman</a> - <a href="http://www.mkbergman.com/457/a-new-constellation-in-the-linking-open-data-lod-sky/" id="link-id114780f8">A New Constellation in the Linking Open Data (LOD) Sky</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://fgiasson.com/me/" id="link-id14aedaf0">Frederick Giasson</a> - <a href="http://fgiasson.com/blog/index.php/2008/09/04/exploding-dbpedias-domain-using-umbel" id="link-id12daa6d0">Exploding DBpedia Domain using UMBEL</a> </li> </ul>
State of the Linked Data Web
2010-03-28T22:25:19Z
2010-03-28T18:25:19-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1447
<p> In response to the "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id15971040">Semantic Web</a> Technology" application classification scheme espoused by <a href="http://www.readwriteweb.com" id="link-id16391540">ReadWriteWeb</a> (RWW), emphasized in the post titled: <a href="http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/rdf_semantic_web_apps.php" id="link-id1157eaa0">Where are all the RDF-based Semantic Web Apps?</a>, here is my attempt to clarify and reintroduce what <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/organization/openlink#this" id="link-id15a43758">OpenLink Software</a> offers (today) in relation to Semantic Web technology. </p> <p> From the RWW Top-Down category, which I interpret as: technologies that produce RDF from non RDF <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data">data</a> sources. Our product portfolio is comprised of the following; <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com" id="link-id14f05818">Virtuoso Universal Server</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/OpenLink_Data_Spaces" id="link-id162c8630">OpenLink Data Spaces</a>, <a href="http://oat.openlinksw.com" id="link-id134e1a00">OpenLink Ajax Toolkit</a>, and <a href="http://ode.openlinksw.com" id="link-id160b3bf8">OpenLink Data Explorer</a> (which includes ubiquity commands).</p> <h3>Virtuoso Universal Server functionality summary:</h3> <ol> <li>Generation of RDF <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id161d5f50">Linked Data</a> Views of <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SQL" id="link-id161d5978">SQL</a>, XML, and <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web">Web</a> Services in general </li> <li>Deployment of RDF Linked Data </li> <li>"On the Fly" generation of RDF Linked Data from Document Web <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/webarch/" id="link-id178bbc08">information resources</a> (i.e. distillation of entities from their containers e.g. Web pages) via Cartridges / Drivers</li> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SPARQL" id="link-id162c2118">SPARQL</a> query language support </li> <li>SPARQL extensions that bring SPARQL closer to SQL e.g Aggregates, Update, Insert, Delete Named Graph support (i.e. use of logical names to partition RDF data within Virtuoso's multi-model dbms engine) </li> <li>Inference Engine (currently in use re. <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/DBpedia" id="link-id14f563c0">DBpedia</a> via Yago and <a href="http://umbel.org/about/" id="link-id113273b8">UMBEL</a>)</li> <li>Host and exposes data from <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Drupal" id="link-id123d3bd8">Drupal</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/WordPress" id="link-id141adf40">Wordpress</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/MediaWiki" id="link-id1604b450">MediaWiki</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/PhpBB" id="link-id141013a8">phpBB3</a> as RDF Linked Data via in-built support for <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/PHP" id="link-id14661e58">PHP</a> runtime</li> <li> <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/dataspace/dav/wiki/Main/ODSInstallationEC2" id="link-id146c84d0">Available as an EC2 AMI</a> </li> <li>etc..</li> </ol> <h3>OpenLink Data Spaces functionality summary:</h3> <ol> <li>Simple mechanism for Linked Data <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Giant_Global_Graph" id="link-id15473770">Web</a> enabling yourself by giving you an <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/dataspace/dav/wiki/Main/GetAPersonalURIIn5MinutesOrLess" id="link-id15f6d278">HTTP based User ID</a> (a de-referencable <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uniform_Resource_Identifier" id="link-id15aaeb68">URI</a>) that is linked to a <a href="http://myopenlink.net/dataspace/person/kidehen" id="link-id15a7a840">FOAF based Profile page</a> and OpenID</li> <li>Binds all your data sources (blogs, wikis, bookmarks, photos, calendar items etc. ) to your URI so can "Find" things by only remembering your URI</li> <li>Makes your profile page and personal URI the focal point of Linked Data Web presence</li> <li>Delivers Data Portability (using data access by value or <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Reference_(computer_science)" id="link-id16212838">data access by reference</a>) across data silos (e.g. Web 2.0 style social networks)</li> <li>Allows you make annotations about anything in your own <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_Spaces" id="link-id14668010">Data Space</a>(s) on the Web without exposure to RDF markup</li> <li>A Briefcase feature that provides a WebDAV driven RDF Linked Data variant of functionality seen in Mac OS X Spotlight and WinFS with the addition of SPARQL compliance</li> <li>Automatically generates <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/RDFa" id="link-id14691440">RDFa</a> in its (X)HTML pages</li> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Blog" id="link-id14fae7b8">Blog</a>, Wiki, WebDAV File Server, Shared Bookmarks, Calendar, and other applications that look and feel like Web 2.0 counterparts but emitt RDF Linked Data amongst a plethora of data exchange formats</li> <li>Available as an EC2 AMI</li> <li>etc..</li> </ol> <h3>OpenLink Ajax Toolkit functionality summary:</h3> <ol> <li>Provides binding to SQL, RDF, XML, and Web Services via Ajax Database Connectivity Layer (you only need an <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Open_Database_Connectivity" id="link-id11550548">ODBC</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Java_Database_Connectivity" id="link-id13ae5f68">JDBC</a>, OLE-DB, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/ADO.NET" id="link-id162803e8">ADO</a>.NET, XMLA Driver, or Web Service on the backend for dynamic data access from Javascript)</li> <li>All controls are Ajax Database Connectivity bound (widgets get their data from Ajax Database Connectivity data sources)</li> <li>Bundled with Virtuoso and <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/OpenLink_Data_Spaces" id="link-id161dfe90">ODS</a> installations.</li> <li>etc.</li> </ol> <h3>OpenLink Data Explorer functionality summary</h3> <ol> <li>Distills entities associated with information resource style containers (e.g. Web Pages or files) as RDF Linked Data</li> <li>Exposes the RDF based <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Resource_Description_Framework" id="link-id12a42ed8">Linked Data graph</a> associated with information resources (see the Linked Data behind Web pages)</li> <li>Ubiquity commands for invoking the above</li> <li>Available as a <a href="http://linkeddata.uriburner.com/ode" id="link-id15a0d2b0">Hosted Service</a> or <a href="http://ode.openlinksw.com" id="link-id138b9fa8">Firefox Extension</a> </li> <li>Bundled with Virtuoso and ODS installations</li> <li>etc.</li> </ol> <h3>Note:</h3> <p>Of course you could have simply looked up <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/organization/openlink" id="link-id14ef2c10">OpenLink Software's FOAF based Profile page</a> (*note the Linked Data Explorer tab*), or simply passed the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Friend_of_a_friend" id="link-id14cbf5c8">FOAF</a> profile page <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uniform_Resource_Locator" id="link-id16453e28">URL</a> to a Linked Data aware client application such as: <a href="http://linkeddata.uriburner.com/ode" id="link-id15a80500">OpenLink Data Explorer</a>, <a href="http://zitgist.com/about/" id="link-id1586a360">Zitgist</a> <a href="http://dataviewer.zitgist.com" id="link-id16249f60">Data Viewer</a>, <a href="http://beckr.org/marbles" id="link-id15993fb0">Marbles</a>, and <a href="http://dig.csail.mit.edu/2005/ajar/release/tabulator/0.8/tab.html" id="link-id14d63048">Tabulator</a>, and obtained information. Remember, <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/organization/openlink#this" id="link-id138ba838">OpenLink Software</a> is an <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Entity" id="link-id1173e120">Entity</a> of Type: <a href="http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/Organization" id="link-id138b87b8">foaf:Organization</a>, on the burgeoning Linked Data Web :-)</p> <h3>Related</h3> <ul> <li> <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/presentations/Creating_Deploying_Exploiting_Linked_Data2/Creating_Deploying_Exploiting_Linked_Data2_TimBL_v3.html" id="link-id163a0c88">Linked Data Planet Keynote</a> (RDFa based remix edition)</li> <li> <a href="http://semanticbusiness.blogspot.com/2008/09/report-on-cusp-global-review-of.html" id="link-id11471a40">On The Cusp: A Global Review of the Semantic Web Industry.</a> </li> </ul>
Where Are All the RDF-based Semantic Web Applications?
2008-10-02T19:27:41Z
2008-10-02T15:27:41-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1441
<p>I've just read a really nice post by <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/about/html/http://bblfish.net/people/henry/card%23me" id="link-idea954a0">Henry Story</a> titled: <a href="http://blogs.sun.com/bblfish/entry/are_oo_languages_autistic" id="link-id110164a8">Are OO Languages Autistic?</a> </p> <p>In typical style, Henry walks you through his point of view using simple but powerful illustrations. Here is a key statement in his post that really struck <a href="http://myopenlink.net/dataspace/person/kidehen#this" id="link-id10f82150">me</a>:</p> <blockquote> <cite>"In order to be able to have a mental theory one needs to be able to <strong>understand that other people may have a different view of the world</strong>. On a narrow three dimensional understanding of 'view', this reveals itself in that people at different locations in a room will see different things. One person may be able to see a cat behind a tree that will be hidden to another. In some sense though these two views can easily be merged into a coherent description."</cite> </blockquote> <p>Opaque <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web">Web</a> pages (e.g., generated by Semantic Technology inside offerings that will not expose or share <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data">data</a> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Entity" id="link-id10f81420">entity</a> URIs), irrespective of how smart the underlying page generation and visualization technology may be, a fundamentally autistic and counter intuitive as we move toward a Web of <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id10cc3d80">Linked Data</a>.</p> <p>Preoccupation with the "V" aspect of the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Model-view-controller" id="link-id10fa86b0">M-V-C</a> trinity is inadvertently compounding and the problem of digital autism on the Web. Unbeknownst to the purveyors of data silos and proprietary service lock-in, digital autism on the Web ultimately implies Web business model autism.</p>
View Plurality Deficiency & Programming Language Autism
2008-09-17T14:54:48Z
2008-09-17T10:54:48.000004-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1425
<p>The title of this post is an expression of my gut reaction to the quotes below, which originate from <a href="http://leobard.twoday.net/" id="link-id104b2308">Leo Sauermann</a>'s post about the <a href="http://leobard.twoday.net/stories/5151765/" id="link-id1889d5d8">Nepomuk Semantic Desktop for KDE</a>:</p> <blockquote> <cite><strong>Ansgar Bernardi</strong>, deputy head of the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Knowledge" id="link-id16d79970">Knowledge</a> Management Department at Deutsches Forschungszentrum für Künstliche Intelligenz (DFKI, or the German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence) and Nepomuk's coordinator, explains, "The basic problem that we all face nowadays is how to handle vast amounts of <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Information" id="link-id13a01b58">information</a> at a sensible rate." According to Bernardi, Nepomuk takes a traditional approach by creating a meta-<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data">data</a> layer with well-defined elements that services can be built upon to create and manipulate the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Information" id="link-id102433e8">information</a>.</cite> </blockquote> <p> The comment above echoes my sentiments about the imminence of "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Information" id="link-id0x10dd6c20">information</a> overload" due to the vast amounts of user generated content on the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Internet" id="link-id139926b0">Internet</a> as a whole. We are going to need to process more an more data within a fixed 24 hour timeframe, while attempting to balance our professional and personal lives. Be rest assured, this is a very serious issue, and you cannot event begin to address it without a <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web">Web</a> of <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id188ebc20">Linked Data</a>.</p> <blockquote> <cite>"The first idea of building the semantic desktop arose from the fact that one of our colleagues could not remember the girlfriends of his friends," Bernard says, more than half-seriously. "Because they kept changing -- you know how it is. The point is, you have a vast amount of <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Information">information</a> on your desktop, hidden in files, hidden in emails, hidden in the names and structures of your folders. Nepomuk gives a standard way to handle such information."</cite> </blockquote> <p>If you get a personal <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uniform_Resource_Identifier" id="link-id171dd2e0">URI</a> for <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Entity" id="link-id18294318">Entity</a> "You", via a <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id188a1b10">Linked Data</a> aware platform (e.g. <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/OpenLink_Data_Spaces" id="link-id167ad840">OpenLink Data Spaces</a>) that virtualizes data across your existing Web data spaces (blogs, feed subscriptions, wikis, shared bookmarks, photo galleries, calendars, etc.), you then only have to remember your <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uniform_Resource_Identifier" id="link-id171c3ef0">URI</a> whenever you need to "Find" something, imagine that!</p> <p>To conclude, "information overload" is the imminent challenge of our time, and the keys to challenge alleviation lie in our ability to construct and maintain (via solutions) few <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Context_%28language_use%29" id="link-id1074ade0">context</a> lenses (URIs) that provide coherent conduits into the dense mesh of structured <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id0xd30b090">Linked Data</a> on the Web. </p>
The Essence of the Matter re. Information Overload
2008-08-28T19:56:20Z
2008-08-28T15:56:20-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1415
<p> <a href="http://www.jasonkolb.com/" id="link-id13ba6d90">Jason Kolb</a> (who <a href="http://www.jasonkolb.com/weblog/2008/08/the-future-of-t.html" id="link-id1524e210">initially</a> nudged me to chime in), and then <a href="http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/future_of_the_desktop.php" id="link-id13a182c0">ReadWriteWeb</a>, and of course <a href="http://www.twine.com/item/11bshgkbr-1k5/the-future-of-the-desktop" id="link-id13f1e1f0">Nova's Twine about the topic</a>, have collectively started an interesting discussion about <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web">Web</a>.vNext (3.0 and beyond) under the heading: The Future of the Desktop.</p> <p>My contribution to the developing discourse takes the form of a Q&A session. I've taken the questions posed and provided answers that express my particular points of view: </p> <blockquote> <cite>Q: Is the desktop of the future going to just be a web-hosted version of the same old-fashioned desktop metaphors we have today?</cite> </blockquote> <blockquote>A: No, it's going to be a more <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/webarch/" id="link-id1524d4a0">Web Architecture</a> aware and compliant variant exposed by appropriate metaphors.</blockquote> <br /> <blockquote> <cite>Q: The desktop of the future is going to be a hosted web service</cite> </blockquote> <blockquote>A: A vessel for exploiting the virtues of the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id10827ad0">Linked Data</a> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Giant_Global_Graph" id="link-id155bc698">Web</a>.</blockquote> <br /> <blockquote> <cite>Q: The Browser is Going to Swallow Up the Desktop</cite> </blockquote> <blockquote>A: Literally, of course not! Metaphorically, of course! And then the Browser metaphor will decomposes into function specific bits of Web interaction amenable to orchestration by its users.</blockquote> <br /> <blockquote> <cite>Q: The focus of the desktop will shift from <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Information" id="link-id1667e2e0">information</a> to attention</cite> </blockquote> <blockquote>A: No! <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Knowledge" id="link-id104bb9c8">Knowledge</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Information" id="link-id1524dd48">Information</a>, and <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data">Data</a> sharing courtesy of <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id10723640">Hyperdata</a> & Hypertext Linking.</blockquote> <br /> <blockquote> <cite>Q: Users are going to shift from acting as librarians to acting as daytraders</cite> </blockquote> <blockquote>A: They were Librarians at Web 1.0, Journalist at Web 2.0, and Analysts in Web 3.0 (i.e, analyze structured and interlinked data), and CEOs in Web 4.0 (i.e. get Agents to do stuff intelligently en route to making decisions).</blockquote> <blockquote> <br /> <cite>Q: The Webtop will be more social and will leverage and integrate collective intelligence</cite> </blockquote> <blockquote>A: The <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id13a01ed0">Linked Data</a> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Giant_Global_Graph" id="link-id106343a8">Web</a> vessel will only require you to fill in your profile (once) and then serendipitous discovery and meshing of relevant data will simply happen (the serendipity quotient will grow in line with <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id10560050">Linked Data</a> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Giant_Global_Graph" id="link-id100f4940">Web</a> density).</blockquote> <br /> <blockquote> <cite>Q: The desktop of the future is going to have powerful semantic search and social search capabilities built-in</cite> </blockquote> <blockquote>A: It is going to be able to "Find" rather than "Search" for stuff courtesy of the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id10a18a70">Linked Data</a> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Giant_Global_Graph" id="link-id10a976f0">Web</a>.</blockquote> <br /> <blockquote> <cite> Q: Interactive shared spaces will replace folders</cite> </blockquote> <blockquote>A: Data Spaces and their URIs (Data Source Names) replace everything. You simply choose the exploration metaphor that best suits you space interaction needs.</blockquote> <br /> <blockquote> <cite>Q: The Portable Desktop</cite> </blockquote> <blockquote>A: Ubiquitous Desktop i.e. do the same thing (all answers above) on any device connected to the Web.</blockquote> <br /> <blockquote> <cite>Q: The Smart Desktop</cite> </blockquote> <blockquote>A: Vessels with access to Smart Data (<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id1666e4e8">Linked Data</a> + Action driven <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Context_%28language_use%29" id="link-id171d1ff0">Context</a> sprinklings).</blockquote> <br /> <blockquote> <cite>Q: Federated, open policies and permissions</cite> </blockquote> <blockquote>A: More federation for sure, XMPP will become a lot more important, and OAuth will enable resurgence of the federated aspects of the Web and <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Internet" id="link-id100a66a8">Internet</a>.</blockquote> <br /> <blockquote> <cite>Q: The personal cloud</cite> </blockquote> <blockquote>A: <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/OpenLink_Data_Spaces" id="link-id104ba580">Personal Data Spaces</a> plugged into Clouds (<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Intranet" id="link-id15bbb970">Intranet</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Extranet" id="link-id1026d6b0">Extranet</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Internet" id="link-id140508c8">Internet</a>).</blockquote> <br /> <blockquote> <cite>Q: The WebOS</cite> </blockquote> <blockquote>A: An operating system endowed with traditional Database and Host Operating system functionality such as: RDF Data Model, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SPARQL" id="link-idd86f48">SPARQL</a> Query Language, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uniform_Resource_Identifier" id="link-id13f47268">URI</a> based <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pointer" id="link-id1055bc78">Pointer mechanism</a>, and HTTP based message Bus.</blockquote> <br /> <blockquote> <cite>Q: Who is most likely to own the future desktop?</cite> </blockquote> <blockquote>A: You! And all you need is a <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uniform_Resource_Identifier" id="link-id106b79e8">URI</a> (an ID or Data Source Name for "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Entity" id="link-id133c88a0">Entity</a> You") and a Profile Page (a place where "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Entity" id="link-id15fa8060">Entity</a> You" is Describe by You).</blockquote> <h3>One Last Thing</h3> <p>You can get a feel for the future desktop by <a href="http://ode.openlinksw.com/#Download" id="link-id165ec048">downloading</a> and then installing the <a href="http://ode.openlinksw.com/" id="link-id13baba38">OpenLink Data Explorer</a> plugin for Firefox, which allows you to switch viewing modes between Web Page and <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id13f12410">Linked Data</a> behind the page. :-)</p> <h3>Related</h3> <ul> <li> <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenLink_Data_Spaces" id="link-id12496e48">OpenLink Data Spaces</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/dataspace/dav/wiki/Main/GetAPersonalURIIn5MinutesOrLess" id="link-id1027f060">Get Yourself a URI in 5 Minutes or Less</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/presentations/DataPortability_and_DataSpaces/DataPortability_and_DataSpaces.html" id="link-id10890f70">Linked Data Spaces & Data Portability</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/presentations/Creating_Deploying_Exploiting_Linked_Data2/Creating_Deploying_Exploiting_Linked_Data2_TimBL_v3.html" id="link-id137efdf8">Linked Data Conference Keynote</a> (<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/RDFa" id="link-id1239d300">RDFa</a> based remix edition that includes vital bits from <a href="http://www.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee/card#i" id="link-id1317a048">TimBL</a>'s <a href="http://www.linkeddataplanet.com/" id="link-id165f57c8">Linked Data Planet presentation</a>).</li> </ul>
The Future of the Desktop
2008-08-21T19:59:25Z
2008-08-21T15:59:25.000001-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1413
<p>This post is in response to <a href="http://www.furia.com" id="link-id107907b8">Glenn McDonald</a>'s post titled: <a href="http://www.furia.com/page.cgi?type=log&id=308" id="link-id13dcf2d0">Whole Data</a>, where he highlights a number of issues relating to "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id1016c1f0">Semantic Web</a>" marketing communications and overall messaging, from his perspective.</p> <p> By coincidence, Glenn and I presented at this month's Cambridge <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-idd526f48">Semantic Web</a> Gathering.</p> <p>I've provided a dump of Glenn's issues and my responses below:</p> <h3>Issue - RDF</h3> <ul> <li>Ingenious <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data">data</a> decomposition idea, but: </li> <li>too low-level; the assembly language of data, where we need Java or <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Ruby_programming_language" id="link-id103f3dd0">Ruby</a> </li> <li>"resource" is not the issue; there's no such thing as "metadata", it's all data; "meta" is a perspective </li> <li>lists need to be effortless, not painful and obscure </li> <li>nodes need to be represented, not just implied; they need types and literals in a more pervasive, integrated way. </li> </ul> <h4>Response:</h4> <p>RDF is a Graph based Data Model it stands for Resource Description Framework. The Metadata data angle comes from it's <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Meta_Content_Framework" id="link-id1690df60">Meta Content Framework (MCF)</a> origins. You can express and serialize data based on the RDF Data Model using: Turtle, N3, TriX, N-Triples, and RDF/XML.</p> <h3>Issue - <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SPARQL" id="link-id10234b38">SPARQL</a> (and Freebase's MQL)</h3> <p>These are just appeasement: <br />- old query paradigm: fishing in dark water with superstitiously tied lures; only works well in carefully stocked lakes <br />- we don't ask questions by defining answer shapes and then hoping they're dredged up whole.</p> <h4>Response:</h4> <p> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SPARQL" id="link-id16e45e50">SPARQL</a>, <a href="http://www.freebase.com/view/freebase/api" id="link-id13e7d468">MQL</a>, and <a href="http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb387145.aspx" id="link-id1516fbd8">Entity-SQL</a> are Graph Model oriented Query Languages. Query Languages always accompany Database Engines. <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SQL" id="link-id13f8c100">SQL</a> is the Relational Model equivalent. </p> <h3>Issue - <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id171dee68">Linked Data</a> </h3> <p>Noble attempt to ground the abstract, but: <br />- <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uniform_Resource_Identifier" id="link-id1576d5f8">URI</a> dereferencing/namespace/<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Open_world_assumption" id="link-id15f50180">open-world</a> issues focus too much technical attention on cross-source cases where the human issues dwarf the technical ones anyway <br />- <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Friend_of_a_friend" id="link-id105df458">FOAF</a> query over the people in this room? forget it. <br />- link asymmetry doesn't scale <br />- identity doesn't scale <br />- generating RDF from non-graph sources: more appeasement, right where the win from actually converting could be biggest! </p> <h4>Response:</h4> <p>Innovative use of HTTP to deliver "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Reference_%28computer_science%29" id="link-id13eeab20">Data Access by Reference</a>" to the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id13492610">Linked Data</a> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Giant_Global_Graph" id="link-id105dfc10">Web</a>.</p> <p>When you have a Data Model, Database Engine, and Query Language, the next thing you need is a Data Access mechanism that provides "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Reference_(computer_science)" id="link-id100ef2c0">Data Access by Reference</a>". <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Open_Database_Connectivity" id="link-id16692e88">ODBC</a> and <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Java_Database_Connectivity" id="link-id1699b970">JDBC</a> (amongst others) provide "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Reference_(computer_science)" id="link-id16034b48">Data Access by Reference</a>" via Data Source Names. <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id16690118">Linked Data</a> is about the same thing (URIs are Data Source Names) with the following differences:</p> <ul> <li>Naming is scoped to the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Entity" id="link-id1195dc48">entity</a> level rather than container level</li> <li>HTTP's use within the data source naming scheme expands the referencability of the Named <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Entity" id="link-id10485760">Entity</a> Descriptions beyond traditional confines such as applications, operating systems, and database engines. </li> </ul> <h3> Issue - <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Giant_Global_Graph" id="link-id104684d0">Giant Global Graph</a> </h3> <p>Hugely motivating and powerful idea, worthy of a superhero (Graphius!), but: <br />- giant and global parts are too hard, and starting global makes every problem harder <br />- local projects become unmanageable in global <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Context_%28language_use%29" id="link-id12497088">context</a> (Cyc, Freebase data-modeling lists...). And my thus my plea, again. Forget "semantic" and "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web">web</a>", let's fix the database tech first: <br />- node/arc data-model, path-based exploratory query-model <br />- data-graph applications built easily on top of this common model; building them has to be easy, because if it's hard, they'll be bad <br />- given good database tech, good web data-publishing tech will be trivial! <br />- given good tools for graphs, the problems of uniting them will be only as hard as they have to be.</p> <h4>Response:</h4> <p> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Giant_Global_Graph" id="link-id144466d8">Giant Global Graph</a> is just another moniker for a "Web of <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id15c2c738">Linked Data</a>" or "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id14e73520">Linked Data</a> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Giant_Global_Graph" id="link-id10aef200">Web</a>".</p> <p>Multi-Model Database technology that meshes the best of the Graph & Relational Models exist. In a nutshell, this is what <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com" id="link-id13492e10">Virtuoso</a> is all about and it's existed for a very long time :-)</p> <p> <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com" id="link-id105a4f58">Virtuoso</a> is also a Virtual DBMS engine (so you can see Heterogeneous Relational Data via Graph Model <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Context_%28language_use%29" id="link-id15845110">Context</a> Lenses). Naturally, it is also a <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id109e2c78">Linked Data</a> Deployment platform (or <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id1086d650">Linked Data</a> Sever). </p> <p>The issue isn't the "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id107f1ba8">Semantic Web</a>" moniker per se., it's about how <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id0xba72818">Linked Data</a> (foundation layer of <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id101dbf50">Semantic Web</a>) gets introduced to users. As I said during the MIT Gathering: "The Web is experienced via Web Browsers primarily, so any enhancement to the Web must be exposed via traditional Web Browsers", which is why we've opted to simply add "View <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data">Linked Data</a> Sources" to the existing set of common Browser options that includes:</p> <ol> <li>View page in rendered form (default)</li> <li>View page source (i.e., how you see the markup behind the page)</li> </ol> <p>By exposing the Linked Data <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Giant_Global_Graph" id="link-id15a04b70">Web</a> option as described above, you enable the Web user to knowingly transition from the traditional Rendered (X)HTML page view to the Linked Data View (i.e., structured data behind the page). This simple "User Interaction" tweak makes the notion of exploiting a Structured Web becomes somewhat clearer.</p> <p>The Linked Data <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Giant_Global_Graph" id="link-id10a187d0">Web</a> isn't a panacea. It's just an addition to the existing Web that enrichens the things you can do with the Web. It's predominance, like any application feature, will be subject to the degrees to which it delivers tangible value or matrializes internal and external opportunity costs.</p> <p>Note: The Web isn't ubiquitous today becuase all it's users groked HTML Markup. It's ubquitity is a function of opportunity costs: there simply came a point in the Web boostrap when nobody could afford the opportunity costs associated with being off the Web. The same thing will play out with Linked Data and the broader <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id10a97330">Semantic Web</a> vision.</p> <b>Links:</b> <ol> <li> <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/presentations/Creating_Deploying_Exploiting_Linked_Data2/Creating_Deploying_Exploiting_Linked_Data2_TimBL_v3.html(15)" id="link-id137fc560">Linked Data Journey part of my Linked Data Planet Presentation Remix</a>(from slides 15 to 22 - which include bits from <a href="http://www.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee/card#i" id="link-id1048a968">TimBL</a>'s presentation)</li> <li> <a href="http://ode.openlinksw.com" id="link-id1667df98">OpenLink Data Explorer</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://ode.openlinksw.com/example.html" id="link-id137ee860">OpenLink Data Explorer Screenshots and examples</a>.</li> </ol>
Response to: Whole Data Post (Update 3)
2008-08-15T22:31:48Z
2008-08-15T18:31:48-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1405
As the <a href="http://www.w3.org/DesignIssues/LinkedData.html" id="link-id13dfe618">Linked Data meme</a> continues on it's quest to unravel the mysteries of the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id10527b30">Semantic Web</a> vision, it's quite gratifying to see that <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Federated_database_system" id="link-id104f58b0">data virtualization</a> comprehension: creating "Conceptual Views" into logically organized "Disparate & Heterogeneous <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data">Data</a> Sources" via "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Context_%28language_use%29" id="link-id14a46998">Context</a> Lenses" is taking shape, as illustrated in the "<a href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/%7Er/SemanticBusiness/%7E3/353668031/note-to-self-virtualconceptual-as-wwwsw.html" id="link-id13179dd8">note-to-self</a>" post by <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/in/davidprovost" id="link-id1403dc88">David Provost</a>.<br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />Virtualization of heterogeneous data sources is only achievable if you have a dexterous data model based "Bus" into which the data sources are plugged. RDF has offered such a model for a long time.<br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <img style="max-width: 800px;" src="http://www.w3.org/DesignIssues/diagrams/sw-clients.png" /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />When heterogeneous data sources are plugged into an RDF based integration bus e.g., customer records sourced from a variety of tables, across a plethora of databases, you can only end up with true value if the emergent entities from such an effort are coherently linked and (de)referencable; which is what <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id12b06e20">Linked Data</a>'s fundamental preoccupation with dereferencable URIs is all about. Of course, Even when you have all of the above in place, you also need to be able to construct "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Context_%28language_use%29" id="link-id103c2c80">Context</a> Lenses" i.e., <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Context_%28language_use%29" id="link-id1037a260">context</a> driven views of the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id13e48ab8">Linked Data</a> Mesh (or <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id101c7718">Linked Data</a> Spaces).<br /> <br /> <br />Additional Diagrams:<br /> <br /> <br />1. <a href="http://www.w3.org/2005/Talks/1110-iswc-tbl/#%2824%29" id="link-id10808cb8">Clients of the RDF Bus</a> <br />2. <a href="http://www.w3.org/2005/Talks/1110-iswc-tbl/#%2825%29" id="link-id11e5a300">RDF Bus Server plugins: Scripts that emit RDF</a> <br />3. <a href="http://www.w3.org/2005/Talks/1110-iswc-tbl/#%2826%29" id="link-id13ea46a0">RDF Bus Servers: RDF Data Managers (Triple or Quad Stores)</a> <br />4. <a href="http://www.w3.org/2005/Talks/1110-iswc-tbl/#%2827%29" id="link-id101d3470">RDF Bus Servers: Relational to RDF Mappers (RDF Views, Semantic Covers etc.)</a> <br />5. <a href="http://www.w3.org/2005/Talks/1110-iswc-tbl/#%2828%29" id="link-id1052c450">RDF Bus Server plugins: XML to RDF Mappers </a> <br />6. <a href="http://www.w3.org/2005/Talks/1110-iswc-tbl/#%2829%29" id="link-id10281ec0">RDF Bus Server plugins: GRDDL based XSLT stylesheets that emit RDF</a> <br />7. <a href="http://www.w3.org/2005/Talks/1110-iswc-tbl/#%2830%29" id="link-id1444faf0">RDF Bus Server plugins: Intelligent RDF Middleware</a> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />
Time for Context Lenses (Update)
2008-08-04T15:24:50Z
2008-08-04T11:24:50.000001-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1371
<p> <a href="http://vanirsystems.com/danielsblog/2008/06/04/1995/#comments" id="link-id10422580">1995</a>: "</p> <p>1995 (and the early 90’s) must have been a visionaries time of dreaming… most of their dreams are happening today.</p> <p>Watch <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Steve_Jobs" id="link-id102d3868">Steve Jobs</a> (then of <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/NeXT" id="link-id13fa5140">NeXT</a>) discuss what he thinks will be popular in 1996 and beyond at <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/OpenStep" id="link-id10df20e0">OpenStep</a> Days 1995:</p> <ul> <li> <a href="http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=odqojmB6C_Y" id="link-id103534a0">‘The Future of Objects, 3/5″ by Steve Jobs (YouTube Video)</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=j7WpcRReDlo" id="link-id13f31910">‘The Future of Objects, 4/5″ by Steve Jobs (YouTube Video)</a> </li> </ul> <p>Heres a spoiler:</p> <ul> <li>There is static <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web">web</a> document publishing</li> <li>There is dynamic web document publishing</li> <li>People will want to buy things off the web: e-commerce</li> </ul> <p>The thing that OpenStep propose is:</p> <ul> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/WebObjects" id="link-id10762ed8">WebObjects</a>: an <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Object-oriented_programming" id="link-id1107f680">Object Oriented</a> representation of <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data">Data</a> available in distributed form over the web</li> </ul> <p>What Steve was suggesting was one of the beginnings of the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data_Web" id="link-id1047b568">Data Web</a>! Yep, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Portable_Distributed_Objects" id="link-id105c5330">Portable Distributed Objects</a> and <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Enterprise_Objects_Framework" id="link-id1006c850">Enterprise Objects Framework</a> was one of the influences of the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id143cf598">Semantic Web</a> / <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id1075c898">Linked Data</a> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Giant_Global_Graph" id="link-id0x1e9ade30">Web</a>…. not surprising as <a href="http://www.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee/card#i" id="link-id10b56c80">Tim Berners-Lee</a> designed the initial web stack on a <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/NeXT" id="link-id105edcb0">NeXT</a> computer!</p> <p>I’m going to spend a little time this evening figuring out how much ‘distributed objects’ stuff has been taken from the OpenStep stuff into the Objective-<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/C_(programming_language)" id="link-id0x19fe21b8">C</a> + Cocoa environment. (<- I guess I must be quite geeky ;-))</p>" <p>(Via <a href="http://vanirsystems.com/danielsblog" id="link-id1092ed90">Daniel Lewis</a>.)</p>
1995
2008-06-06T11:54:33Z
2008-06-06T07:54:33.000010-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1364
<p> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Open_Database_Connectivity" id="link-id100eb550">ODBC</a> delivers open <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data" id="link-idffd2338">data</a> access (by reference) to a broad range of enterprise databases via a '<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/C_(programming_language)" id="link-id104fd1d8">C</a>' based API. Thanks to the <a href="http://www.iodbc.org" id="link-id104721b0">iODBC</a> and <a href="http://www.unixodbc.org" id="link-id10954990">unixODBC</a> projects, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Open_Database_Connectivity" id="link-id10494670">ODBC</a> is available across broad range of platforms beyond Windows.</p> <p> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Open_Database_Connectivity" id="link-id0xc900928">ODBC</a> identifies <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data" id="link-id10f82200">data</a> sources using <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data" id="link-id0xcaad080">Data</a> Source Names (DSNs). </p> <p> WODBC (<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web">Web</a> Open Database Connectivity) delivers open <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data">data</a> access to Web Databases / Data Spaces. The Data Source Naming scheme: <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uniform_Resource_Identifier" id="link-id1009ce40">URI</a> or IRI, is <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Hypertext_Transfer_Protocol" id="link-id101fc1b0">HTTP</a> based thereby enabling data access by reference via the Web. </p> <p><a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Open_Database_Connectivity">ODBC</a> DSNs bind ODBC client applications to Tables, Views, Stored Procedures. </p> <p>WODBC DSNs bind you to a Data <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_Spaces" id="link-id10182a88">Space</a> (e.g. my <a href="http://myopenlink.net/dataspace/person/kidehen" id="link-id105a7858">FOAF based Profile Page</a> where you can use the "Explore Data Tab" to look around if you are a human visitor) or a specific <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Entity" id="link-id10bd8578">Entity</a> within a Data <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_Spaces" id="link-id10780dc0">Space</a> (i.e <a href="http://myopenlink.net/dataspace/person/kidehen#this" id="link-id10848e08">Person Entity Me</a>).</p> <p>ODBC Drivers are built using APIs (DBMS Call Level Interfaces) provided by DBMS vendors. Thus, a DBMS vendor can chose not to release an API, or do so selectivity, for competitive advantage or market disruption purposes (it's happened!).</p> <p>WODBC Drivers are also built using APIs (Web Services associated with a Web Data <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_Spaces" id="link-id0xcbe6348">Space</a>). These drivers are also referred to as <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&q=rdf%20middleware&type=text&output=html" id="link-id16564058">RDF Middleware</a> or RDFizers. The "Web" component of WODBC ensures openness, you publish Data with URIs from your <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id1064a768">Linked Data</a> Server and that's it; your data <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_Spaces">space</a> or specific data entities are live and accessible (by reference) over the Web!</p> <p>So we have come full circle (or cycle), the Web is becoming more of a structured database everyday! What's new is old, and what's old is new! </p> <p>Data Access is everything, without "Data" there is no <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Information" id="link-id100a9de8">information</a> or <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Knowledge" id="link-id10bb67e8">knowledge</a>. Without "Data" there's not notion of vitality, purpose, or value.</p> <p>URIs make or break everything in the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id10a71638">Linked Data</a> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Giant_Global_Graph" id="link-id10494400">Web</a> just as ODBC DSNs do within the enterprise. </p> <p>I've deliberately left <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Java_Database_Connectivity" id="link-id10a05280">JDBC</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/ADO.NET" id="link-id104e4a70">ADO</a>.<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/ADO.NET" id="link-id10215668">NET</a>, and OLE-DB out of this piece due to their respective programming languages and frameworks specificity. None of these mechanisms match the platform availability breadth of ODBC.</p> <p>The Web as a true <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Model-view-controller" id="link-id108ee598">M</a>-<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Model-view-controller" id="link-id0xcda5e90">V</a>-C pattern is now crystalizing. The "M" (Model) component of M-V-C is finally rising to the realm of broad attention courtesy of the "<a href="http://www.w3.org/DesignIssues/LinkedData.html" id="link-id1024ff08">Linked Data" meme</a> and "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id1831b418">Semantic Web</a>" vision.</p> <p>By the way, M-V-C lines up nicely with Web 1.0 (Web Forms / Pages), Web 2.0 (Web Services based APIs), and Web 3.0 (Data Web, Web of Data, or <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id0xb6d0e90">Linked Data</a> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Giant_Global_Graph" id="link-id0xb22a158">Web</a>) :-)</p>
ODBC & WODBC Comparison
2008-05-20T19:46:11Z
2008-05-20T15:46:11-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1355
<p>Courtesy a post by <a href="http://community.linkeddata.org/dataspace/person/bizer#this" id="link-id10868548">Chris Bizer</a> to the <a href="http://community.linkeddata.org/dataspace/organization/lod#this" id="link-id15739748">LOD</a> community <a href="http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-lod/" id="link-id10fae0f8">mailing list</a>, here is a list of <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id140a0880">Linked Data</a> oriented talks at the upcoming <a href="http://2008.xtech.org" id="link-id12801f00">XTech</a> 2008 event (also see the <a href="http://2008.xtech.org/public/schedule/grid" id="link-id10f65940">XTech 2008 Schedule</a> which is <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id1258a4c8">Linked Data</a> friendly). Of course, I am posting this to my <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Blog" id="link-id140a29c0">Blog</a> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data" id="link-id12d5a640">Data</a> <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_Spaces" id="link-id10979b80">Space</a> with the sole purpose of adding <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data" id="link-id176be078">data</a> to the rapidly growing <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Giant_Global_Graph" id="link-id1099aec8">Giant Global Graph</a> of <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id10d72d88">Linked Data</a>, basically adding to my collection of live <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id11014000">Linked Data</a> utility demos :-)</p> <p>Here is the list:</p> <ol> <li> <a href="http://2008.xtech.org/public/schedule/detail/561" id="link-id17df4d78">Linked Data Deployment</a> (<a href="http://myopenlink.net/dataspace/person/danieljohnlewis#this" id="link-id17c47d28">Daniel Lewis</a>, <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/organization/openlink#this" id="link-id108fce00">OpenLink Software</a>)</li> <li> <a href="http://2008.xtech.org/public/schedule/detail/524" id="link-id1068c0e0">The Programmes Ontology</a> (Tom Scott, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/BBC" id="link-id1566da50">BBC</a> and all) </li> <li> <a href="http://2008.xtech.org/public/schedule/detail/528" id="link-id1072be40">SemWebbing the London Gazette</a> (Jeni Tennison, The Stationery Office) </li> <li> <a href="http://2008.xtech.org/public/schedule/detail/583" id="link-id1099e4e0">Searching, publishing and remixing a Web of Semantic Data</a> (<a href="http://community.linkeddata.org/dataspace/person/cygri#this" id="link-id17e25b78">Richard Cyganiak</a>, DERI Galway) </li> <li> <a href="http://2008.xtech.org/public/schedule/detail/477" id="link-idf9764c8">Building a Semantic Web Search Engine: Challenges and Solutions</a> (Aidan Hogan, DERI Galway) </li> <li>'<a href="http://2008.xtech.org/public/schedule/detail/550" id="link-id140a3c50">That's not what you said yesterday!</a>' - evolving your <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web">Web</a> API (<a href="http://iandavis.com/id/me" id="link-id14f8d498">Ian Davis</a>, Talis) </li> <li> <a href="http://2008.xtech.org/public/schedule/detail/527" id="link-id10c5a9c8">Representing, indexing and mining scientific data using XML and RDF: Golem and CrystalEye</a> (<a href="http://wwmm.ch.cam.ac.uk/blogs/walkingshaw/" id="link-id108c5e28">Andrew Walkingshaw</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/University_of_Cambridge" id="link-id10891560">University of Cambridge</a>)</li> </ol> <p>For the time challenged (i.e. those unable to view this post using it's permalink / <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uniform_Resource_Identifier" id="link-id10db39f0">URI</a> as a <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data" id="link-id10f29bb8">data</a> source via the <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/rdfbrowser" id="link-id10f72778">OpenLink RDF Browser</a>, <a href="http://zitgist.com/about/" id="link-id107b73b0">Zitgist</a> <a href="http://dataviewer.zitgist.com" id="link-id1686d528">Data Viewer</a>, <a href="http://www4.wiwiss.fu-berlin.de/rdf_browser" id="link-id110479e8">DISCO Hyperdata Browser</a>, or <a href="http://dig.csail.mit.edu/2005/ajar/release/tabulator/0.8/tab.html" id="link-id140ba0e8">Tabulator</a>), the benefits of this post are as follows:</p> <ul> <li>automatic <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uniform_Resource_Identifier" id="link-id172d2fc8">URI</a> generation for all linked items in this post</li> <li>automatic propagation of tags to <a href="http://del.icio.us" id="link-id10547380">del</a>.<a href="http://del.icio.us" id="link-id1093cc10">icio</a>.<a href="http://del.icio.us" id="link-id168ce3a0">us</a>, <a href="http://www.technorati.com" id="link-id17aa8af0">Technorati</a>, and <a href="http://www.pingthesemanticweb.com/about/" id="link-id10868ad8">PingTheSemanticWeb</a> </li> <li>automatic association of formal meanings to my Tags using the <a href="http://moat-project.org/ontology" id="link-id10c98608">MOAT Ontology</a> </li> <li>automatic collation and generation of statistical <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data" id="link-id10a4d1d8">data</a> about my tags using the SCOT Ontology (*missing link is a callout to SCOT <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Tag" id="link-id168b7c10">Tag</a> Ontology folks to sort the project's home page <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uniform_Resource_Locator" id="link-id11fd4118">URL</a> at the very least*) </li> <li>explicit typing of my Tags as <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SKOS" id="link-id10940eb8">SKOS</a> Concepts. </li> </ul> <p>Put differently, I cost-effectively contribute to the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Giant_Global_Graph" id="link-id10a081a8">GGG</a> across all <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&q=web%20dimensions&type=text&output=html" id="link-id10597530">Web interaction dimensions</a> (1.0, 2.0, 3.0) :-)</p>
XTech Talks covering Linked Data
2008-05-05T21:07:17Z
2008-05-05T17:07:17-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1352
<p> <a href="http://myopenlink.net/dataspace/person/danieljohnlewis#this" id="link-id12d57690">Daniel Lewis</a> has penned a post titled: <a href="http://vanirsystems.com/danielsblog/2008/04/30/clearing-up-some-misconceptions-again/" id="link-id10c99f18">Clearing up some misconceptions..again</a>, in response to <a href="http://elgg.org/bwerdmuller/foaf#elgg2" id="link-id14fe1bc8">Ben Werdmuller</a>'s post titled: <a href="http://blogs.zdnet.com/social/?p=477" id="link-id141cee58">Introducing the Open Data Definition</a>. </p> <p>The great thing about the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id105991a8">Linked Data</a> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Giant_Global_Graph" id="link-id10a6ec78">Web</a> is that it's much easier to discovery and respond to these points of view before the ink dries :-) Ben certainly needs to take a look at the <a href="http://www.w3.org/RDF/FAQ" id="link-id10f78958">Semantic Web FAQ</a> pre or post assimilation of Daniel's response.</p>
Clearing Up RDF misrepresentation once again!
2008-04-30T16:07:58Z
2008-04-30T12:07:58.000001-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1334
<p> <a href="http://myopenlink.net/dataspace/person/danieljohnlewis#this" id="link-id10820610">Daniel lewis</a> has penned a variation of post about <a href="http://vanirsystems.com/danielsblog/2008/04/10/simplified-adding-wordpress-blogs-into-the-linked-data-web-using-virtuoso/" id="link-id10827948">Linked Data enabling PHP applications</a> such as: <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/WordPress" id="link-id10426278">Wordpress</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/PhpBB" id="link-id13f431c0">phpBB3</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/MediaWiki" id="link-id10dd8760">MediaWiki</a> etc.</p> <p>Daniel simplifies my post by using diagrams to depict the different paths for <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/PHP" id="link-id10adcc08">PHP</a> based applications exposing <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id107b4e60">Linked Data</a> - especially those that already provide a significant amount of the content that drives <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web" id="link-id13b0ab48">Web</a> 2.0.</p> <p>If all the content in <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web" id="link-id0x1d499470">Web</a> 2.0 <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Information" id="link-id12bd3b10">information</a> resources are distillable into discrete <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data" id="link-id10962060">data</a> objects endowed with <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Hypertext_Transfer_Protocol" id="link-id176a30e8">HTTP</a> based IDs (URIs), with zero "<a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&q=rdf%20tax&type=text&output=html" id="link-id1098bcd8">RDF handcrafting Tax</a>", what do we end up with? A <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Giant_Global_Graph" id="link-id1372ce88">Giant Global Graph</a> of <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id0xa29f0658">Linked Data</a>; the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web">Web</a> as a Database.</p> <p>So, what used to apply exclusively, within enterprise settings re. <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Oracle_Database" id="link-id12d91448">Oracle</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/IBM_DB2" id="link-id13dd27d8">DB2</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/IBM_Informix" id="link-id108e6b98">Informix</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Ingres" id="link-id13383708">Ingres</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Sybase" id="link-idfed8aa8">Sybase</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Microsoft_SQL_Server" id="link-id10b8b190">Microsoft SQL Server</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/MySQL" id="link-id13066ea8">MySQL</a>, PostrgeSQL, Progress Open Edge, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Firebird_database_server" id="link-id104f0a78">Firebird</a>, and others, now applies to the Web. The Web becomes the "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/federated_database_system" id="link-id105a5340">Distributed Database</a> Bus" that connects database records across disparate databases (or <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data" id="link-id0xc706c68">Data</a> Spaces). These databases manage and expose records that are remotely accessible "by reference" via <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Hypertext_Transfer_Protocol" id="link-id0x1c8f7fe0">HTTP</a>.</p> <p>As I've stated at every opportunity in the past, Web 2.0 is the greatest thing that every happened to the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id13d65278">Semantic Web</a> vision :-) Without the "<a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&q=Web%202.0%20%20conundrum&type=text&output=html" id="link-id100d16d0">Web 2.0 Data Silo Conundrum</a>" we wouldn't have the cry for "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data">Data</a> Portability" that brings a lot of clarity to some fundamental Web 2.0 limitations that end-users ultimately find unacceptable.</p> <p> In the late '80s, the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SQL" id="link-idff4f0d0">SQL</a> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SQL_Access_Group" id="link-id138fbd40">Access Group</a> (now part of <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/X/Open" id="link-id104ee010">X</a>/<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/X/Open" id="link-id0xac9eab8">Open</a>) addressed a similar problem with <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Relational_database_management_system" id="link-id106d2008">RDBMS</a> silos within the enterprise that lead to the SAG <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Call_Level_Interface" id="link-id105d45d0">CLI</a> which is exists today as Open Database Connectivity.</p> <p>In a sense we now have WODBC (Web Open Database Connectivity), comprised of Web Services based CLIs and/or traditional back-end DBMS CLIs (<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Open_Database_Connectivity" id="link-id13f58708">ODBC</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Java_Database_Connectivity" id="link-id10aa81e0">JDBC</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/ADO.NET" id="link-id5fddb68">ADO</a>.<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/ADO.NET" id="link-id0x9f085a10">NET</a>, OLE-DB, or Native), Query Language (<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SPARQL" id="link-id10adb5c8">SPARQL</a> Query Language), and a Wire Protocol (<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Hypertext_Transfer_Protocol">HTTP</a> based <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/rdf-sparql-protocol/" id="link-id126fa068">SPARQL Protocol</a>) delivering Web infrastructure equivalents of <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SQL" id="link-id0x1d0a5fc8">SQL</a> and RDA, but much better, and with much broader scope for delivering profound value due to the Web's inherent openness. Today's <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/PHP" id="link-id0xc88ed68">PHP</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Python_programming_language" id="link-id10a70530">Python</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Ruby_programming_language" id="link-id13d9da18">Ruby</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Tcl" id="link-id10a3c2a8">Tcl</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Perl" id="link-id13e1b6f0">Perl</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/ASP.NET" id="link-id10810388">ASP</a>.<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/ASP.NET" id="link-id0xa22ce378">NET</a> developer is the enterprise <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/4GL" id="link-id1396a500">4GL</a> developer of yore, without enterprise confinement. We could even be talking about <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/5GL" id="link-id1077f250">5GL</a> development once the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data">Linked Data</a> interaction is meshed with dynamic languages (delivering higher levels of abstraction at the language and data interaction levels). Even the underlying schemas and basic design will evolve from <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Closed_world_assumption" id="link-id10b280c8">Closed World</a> (solely) to a mesh of Closed & <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Open_world_assumption" id="link-id104b9978">Open World</a> view schemas.</p>
Linked Data enabling PHP Applications
2008-04-10T18:12:47Z
2008-04-10T14:12:47-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1332
<p>I just listen to, and very much enjoyed (lots of chuckling) <a href="http://www.dajobe.org/" id="link-id177310c8">Dave Beckett</a>'s podcast interview on the <a href="http://talk.talis.com/" id="link-id1056ec98">Talis podcast network</a>. Clearly Dave has a bent for funny project names etc.. He also introduced "Inter-Webs" (<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web">Web</a> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data">Data</a> Spaces in my parlance) towards the end of the interview.</p> <p> <a href="http://www.mediaslate.org/wp/about/" id="link-idfc558f0">Trent Adams</a>, <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/pub/0/49b/4b5" id="link-id107137b0">Steve Greenberg</a>, and I, also had a podcast chat about <a href="http://www.mediaslate.org/wp/2008/03/29/dataportability-in-motion-podcast/" id="link-id10663ec8">Web Data Portability and Accessibility (Linked Data)</a>. I also remixed <a href="http://www.johnbreslin.com/" id="link-id104617f0">Jon Breslin</a>'s "<a href="http://www.slideshare.net/Cloud/dataportability-and-me-introducing-sioc-foaf-and-the-semantic-web/" id="link-id12ca2c70">Data Portability & Me</a>" presentation to produce: "<a href="http://www.slideshare.net/Cloud/data-accessibility-and-me-introducing-sioc-foaf-and-the-linked-data-web/" id="link-idfdf0cd8">Data Accessibility & Me</a>". </p> <p>The podcasts interviews and presentations provide contributions to the broadening discourse about Open Data Access / Connectivity on the Web.</p>
Recent Data Portability, Linked Data, and Open Data Access Podcasts
2008-04-09T17:22:23Z
2008-04-09T13:22:23.000002-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1323
<p>As per usual I am writing this post with the aim of killing a number of <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Meme" id="link-id0x1caa10d8">meme</a>-birds with a single post in relation to the emerging <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id156867c8">Linked Data Web</a>.</p> <p>*On* the ubiquitous <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web" id="link-id0x1e5a1a08">Web</a> of "Linked Documents", HREF means (by definition and usage): <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Hypertext" id="link-id16078f10">Hypertext</a> Reference to an <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Hypertext_Transfer_Protocol" id="link-id0x9e840368">HTTP</a> accessible <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data" id="link-id0x9e570ce8">Data</a> Object of Type: "Document" (an <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Information" id="link-id0xccc6ee8">information</a> resource). Of course we don't make the formal connection of Object Type when dealing with the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/World_Wide_Web">Web</a> on a daily basis, but whenever you encounter the "resource not found" condition notice the message: <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/HTTP_404" id="link-id153b4d98">HTTP/1.0 404</a> Object Not Found, from the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Hypertext_Transfer_Protocol">HTTP</a> Server tasked with retrieving and returning the resource. </p> <p>*In* the Web of "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id0x9ed9fb78">Linked Data</a>", a complimentary addition to the current Web of "Linked Documents", HREF is used to reference <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data">Data</a> Objects that are of a variety of "Types", not just "Documents". And the way this is achieved, is by using <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Surrogate_key" id="link-id153d4438">Data Object Identifiers</a> (URIs / IRIs that are generated by the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data">Linked Data</a> deployment platform) in the strict sense i.e. Data Identity (<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uniform_Resource_Identifier" id="link-id0xc9ef280">URI</a>) is separated from Data Address (<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uniform_Resource_Locator" id="link-id0x1cb62390">URL</a>). Thus, you can reference a Person Data Object (aka an instance of a Person Class) in your HREF and the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Hypertext_Transfer_Protocol" id="link-id1554e458">HTTP</a> Server returns a Description of the Data Object via a Document (again, an <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Information">information</a> resource). A document containing the Description of a Data Object typically contains HREFs to other Data Objects that expose the Attributes and Relationships of the initial Person Data Object, and it this collection of Data Objects that is technically called a "Graph" -- which is what <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Resource_Description_Framework" id="link-id0xc67a780">RDF</a> models.</p> <blockquote>What I describe above is basic stuff for anyone that's familiar with Object Database or Distributed Objects technology and concepts.</blockquote> <h2><a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uniform_Resource_Identifier">URI</a> and <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uniform_Resource_Locator">URL</a> confusion</h2> <p>The Linked Document Web is a collection of physical resources that traverse the Web Information Bus in palatable format i.e documents. Thus, Document Object Identity and Document Object Data Address can be the same thing i.e. a <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uniform_Resource_Locator" id="link-id1525d028">URL</a> can serve as the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uniform_Resource_Identifier" id="link-id16e50b50">ID/URI</a> of a Document Data Object.</p> <p>The Linked Data Web on the other hand, is a Distributed Object Database, and each Data Object must be uniquely defined, otherwise we introduce ambiguity that ultimately taints the Database itself (making incomprehensible to reasoning challenged machines). Thus we must have unique Object IDs (URIs / IRIs) for People, Places, Events, and other things that aren't Documents. Once we follow the time tested rules of Identity, People can then be associated with the things they create (<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Blog" id="link-id0xc7c3ce0">blog</a> posts, web pages, bookmarks, wikiwords etc). <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Resource_Description_Framework">RDF</a> is about expressing these graph model relationships while RDF serialization formats enables the information resources to transport these data object link ladden information resources to requesting User Agents.</p> <p>Put in more succinct terms, all documents on the Web are compound documents in reality (e.g. mast contain a least an image these days). The Linked Data Web is about a Web where Data Object IDs (URIs) enable us to distill source data from the information contained in a compound document.</p> <h2>Examples:</h2> <ol> <li><http://community.linkeddata.org/dataspace/person/kidehen2#this> - the ID (URI minted from URL via addition of #this) of a Data Object of Type Person that Identifies me. The Person definition I use comes from the FOAF vocabulary/schema/ontology/data dictionary</li> <li><http://community.linkeddata.org/dataspace/person/kidehen2> - the URI (also a URL) of a FOAF file that contains a description of the Data <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Identity_%28object-oriented_programming%29" id="link-id0xca491e0">Object ID</a>: <http://community.linkeddata.org/dataspace/person/kidehen2#this> (me)</li> <li>As an information resource <http://community.linkeddata.org/dataspace/person/kidehen2> can be dispatched from an HTTP server to a User Agent in (X)HTML, RDF/XML, N3/Turtle representations via HTTP Content Negotiation (<strong>note:</strong> Look at the "Linked Data" tab to see one example of what Data Links facilitate re. Data Discovery and Exploration)</li> <li>If I choose an <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Identity_%28object-oriented_programming%29">Object ID</a> of <http://community.linkeddata.org/dataspace/person/kidehen2/this> instead of <http://community.linkeddata.org/dataspace/person/kidehen2#this> then the HTTP Server should not return an information resource (i.e provide 200 OK response) when a User Agent requests a resource via HTTP using the URI: <http://community.linkeddata.org/dataspace/person/kidehen2/this>, because a Data Object ID (URI) and the Data Object Address (URL) cannot be the same when my Data Object isn't of Type Document; the sever has to use response code 303 to redirect the user agent to the URL of an information resource that matches the Content-type designated in the HTTP Request or determine representation based on it's own quality of service rules for the information resource associated with the Object ID (URI).</li> </ol> <p>The degree of unobtrusiveness of new technology, concepts, or new applications of existing technology, is what ultimately determines eventual uptake and <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Meme">meme</a> virulence (network effects). For a while, the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id0xc86cda0">Semantic Web</a> meme was mired in confusion and general misunderstanding due to a shortage of practical use case scenario demos. </p> <p>The emergence of the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SPARQL" id="link-id0xc614158">SPARQL</a> Query Language has provided critical infrastructure for a number of products, projects, and demos, that now make the utility of the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web">Semantic Web</a> vision mush clearly via the simplicity of Linked Data, as exemplified by the following:</p> <ol> <li> <a href="http://community.linkeddata.org/dataspace/organization/lod#this" id="link-id0xc7c19f0">Linking Open Data Community</a> - collection of People and Linked Data Spaces (across a variety of domains)</li> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/DBpedia" id="link-id0xcb1c398">DBpedia</a> - Ground zero for experiencing and comprehending Linked Data</li> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/OpenLink_Data_Spaces" id="link-id0xc16e458">OpenLink Data Spaces</a> - a simple solution for creating Linked Data Web presence via from existing Web Data Sources (Blogs, Wikis, Shared Bookmarks, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Tag" id="link-id0xc340200">Tag</a> Spaces, Web Sites, Social Networking Services, Web Services, Discussion Forums etc..)</li> <li>OpenLink <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com" id="link-id0xca83470">Virtuoso</a> - a Universal Server for generating, managing, and deploying RDF Linked Data from <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SQL" id="link-id0xcce3870">SQL</a>, XML, Web Services based data sources</li> </ol> Why Is This Post a Linked Data Demo, Again? Place the permalink of this post in a Linked Data aware user agent (<a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/rdfbrowser" id="link-id17b79488">OpenLink RDF Browser1</a>, <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/rdfbrowser2" id="link-id15957150">OpenLink RDF Browser2</a>, <a href="http://dataviewer.zitgist.com/" id="link-id15550cf8">Zitgist</a>, <a href="http://www4.wiwiss.fu-berlin.de/rdf_browser" id="link-id1565a680">DISCO</a>, <a href="http://dig.csail.mit.edu/2005/ajar/release/tabulator/0.8/tab.html" id="link-id15700350">Tabulator</a>), and the you can see the universal of interlinked data exposed by this post. The Title of this post should not be the sole mechanism for determining that it is Linked to other posts about the same topic. <h2>Related</h2> <ul> <a href="http://tomayko.com" id="link-id15c56720">Ryan Tomayko</a>'s post titled: <a href="http://tomayko.com/writings/wtf-is-an-href-anyway" id="link-id1514a328">So, What Does "HREF" Stand For, Anyway</a> </ul> <ul> <a href="http://torrez.us/who#elias" id="link-id14eec928">Elias Torre</a>'s post titled: <a href="http://torrez.us/archives/2008/03/10/563/" id="link-id15722c08">The Web FTW</a> </ul> <ul> <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/cooluris/" id="link-id1576c118">Cool URIs for the Semantic Web.</a> </ul>
So, What Does "HREF" Stand For, Anyway
2008-04-10T20:13:50Z
2008-04-10T16:13:50-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1320
<p>The new <a href="http://www.w3.org/2005/Incubator/rdb2rdf/" id="link-id17fb5440">RDB2RDF Incubator Group</a> is now official. The group is sponsored by <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Oracle_Corporation" id="link-id1c93f338">Oracle</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Hewlett-Packard" id="link-id18f4bce8">HP</a>, PartnersHealth, and <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/organization/openlink#this>" id="link-id175ed3a8">OpenLink Software</a>.</p> <h2>Goals</h2> <p>The goal of this effort is standardization of approaches (syntax and methodology) for mapping Relational Data Model instance data to RDF (Graph Data Model).</p> <h2>Benefits</h2> <p>Every record in a relational table/view/stored procedure (Table Valued Functions/Procedures) is declaratively morphed into an Entity (instance of a Class associated with a Schema/Ontology). The derived entities become part of a graph that exposes relationships and relationship traversal paths that have lower JOIN Costs than attempting the same thing directly via SQL. In a nutshell, you end up with a conceptual interface atop a logical data layer that enables a much more productive mechanism for exploring homogeneous and/or heterogeneous data without confinement at the DB instance, SQL DBMS type, host operating system, local area network, or wide area network levels.</p> <p>Just as we have to mesh the Linked Data and Document Webs, unobtrusively. It's also important that the same principles to apply to exposure of RDBMS hosted data as RDF based Linked Data.</p> <p>We all know that a large amount of data driving the IT engines of most enterprises resides in <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Relational_database" id="link-id190ee500">Relational Databases</a>. And contrary to recent <a href="http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/semantic_web_11_things_to_know.php" id="link-id175e6c58">RDBMS vs RDF database misunderstandings</a> espoused (hopefully inadvertently) by some commentators, Relational Database engines aren't going away anytime soon. Meshing Relational (logical) and Graph (conceptual) data models a natural progression along an evolutionary path towards: <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/presentations/RDF_Mapping_Presentation_W3C_workshop3/RDF_Mapping_Presentation_W3C_workshop3.html" id="link-id175e56c0">Analysis for All</a>. By the way, there is a parallel evolution occurring in others realms such as <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/ADO.NET_Entity_Framework" id="link-id13037248">Microsoft's ADO.NET's Entity Framework</a>.</p> <h2>How would I use RDB2RDF Mapping?</h2> <p>To Unobtrusively expose existing data sources as RDF Linked Data. The links that follow provide examples:</p> <ul>-- Enterprise Databases e.g. Northwind SQL Database as Linked Data (<a href="http://dataviewer.zitgist.com/?uri=http%3A//demo.openlinksw.com/Northwind/Customer/ALFKI" id="link-id176c79c0">Zitgist View</a>, <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/Northwind/Customer/ALFKI" id="link-id175ed1b8">OpenLink RDF Browser View</a>, <a href="http://www4.wiwiss.fu-berlin.de/rdf_browser/?browse_uri=http%3A%2F%2Fdemo.openlinksw.com%2FNorthwind%2FCustomer%2FALFKI%23this" id="link-id16ee5730">DISCO Browser View</a>, <a href="http://dig.csail.mit.edu/2005/ajar/release/tabulator/0.8/tab.html?uri=http://demo.openlinksw.com/Northwind/Customer/ALFKI#this" id="link-id18e35570">Tabulator View</a>)</ul> <ul>-- Content Management e.g. <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Drupal" id="link-id17687bf0">Drupal</a> hosted <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/drupal/user/demo" id="link-id179ed818">Blog Posts as Linked Data</a> </ul> <ul>-- Weblog Platform e.g. <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/WordPress" id="link-id17441650">Wordpress</a> hosted <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/wordpress/user/demo" id="link-id18fab188">Blog Posts as Linked Data</a> </ul> <ul>-- Wiki Platform e.g. <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/MediaWiki" id="link-id1c93e1c8">MediaWiki</a> hosted <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/mediawiki/user/KingsleyIdehen" id="link-id17d05448">Wikiwords as Linked Data</a> </ul> <h2>Related</h2> <ol> <li>Virtuoso's Meta Schema Language for Declaratively generating RDF Views of SQL Data (<a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/presentations/Virtuoso_RDF_Views/Virtuoso_RDF_Views_1.html#(1)" id="link-id19156058">Presentation</a>, <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/Whitepapers/pdf/Virtuoso_SQL_to_RDF_Mapping.pdf" id="link-id18bab048">White Paper</a>, <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/Whitepapers/html/rdf_views/virtuoso_rdf_views_example.html" id="link-id18e36480">Tutorial</a>, and <a href="http://docs.openlinksw.com/virtuoso/rdfviews.html" id="link-id18e34380">Online Docs</a>)</li> <li>ESW Wiki's Collection of<a href="http://esw.w3.org/topic/RdfAndSql" id="link-id18d3b5d8"> SQL-RDF Mapping Tools</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.bitaplanet.com/article.php/3696281" id="link-id12dc20e8">What the Semantic Web means for your Business </a> </li> </ol>
New W3C Incubator Group: Relational Database to RDF Mapping
2008-03-11T17:58:24Z
2008-03-11T13:58:24-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1316
<p>Increasingly, I am encountering commentary from the <a href="http://www.readwriteweb.com" id="link-id166f5440">ReadWriteWeb</a> data space that highlights critical problems solved by a <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linked_Data" id="link-id1698f0e0">Linked Data</a> Web. Unfortunately, most of the time, there is a disconnect between the problem and the solution. By this I mean: technology in the Semantic Web realm isn't seen as the solution.</p> <p>A while back, I wrote a post titled:<a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1267" id="link-id1676b440">Why we need Linked Data</a>. The aim of the post was to bring attention to the implications of <a href="http://www.johnbreslin.com/blog/2008/01/23/an-interesting-talk-by-mike-brodie/" id="link-id16f14740">exponential growth of User Generated Content</a> (typically, semi-structured and unstructured data) on the Web. The growth in question is occurring within a fixed data & information processing timeframe (i.e. there will always be 24hrs in a day), which sets the stage for Information Overload as expressed in a recent post from ReadWriteWeb titled: <a href="http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/visualizing_social_media_fatigue.php" id="link-id164a6278">Visualizing Social Media Fatigue</a>.</p> <p>The emerging "Web of Linked Data" augments the current "Web of Linked Documents", by providing a structured data corpus partitioned by containers I prefer to call: Data Spaces. These spaces enable Linked Data aware solutions to deliver immense value such as, complex data graph traversal, starting from document beachheads, that expose relevant data within a faction of the time it would take to achieve the same thing using traditional document web methods such as full text search patterns, scraping, and mashing etc.</p> <p>Remember, our DNA based data & information system far exceeds that of any inorganic system when it comes to reasoning, but it remains immensely incapable of accurately and efficiently processing huge volumes of data & information -- irrespective of data model.</p> <p>The Idea behind the Semantic Web has always been about an evolution of the Web into a structured data collective comprised of interlinked Data items and Data Containers (Data Spaces). Of course we can argue forever about the Semantics of the solution (ironically), but we can't shirk away from the impending challenges that "Information Overload" is about to unleash on our limited processing time and capabilities.</p> <p>For those looking for a so called "killer application" for the Semantic Web, I would urge you to align this quest with the "Killer Problem" of our times, because when you do so you will that all routes lead to: Linked Data that leverages existing Web Architecture. </p> <p>Once you understand the problem, you will hopefully understand that we all need some kind of "Data Junction Box" that provides a "Data Access Focal Point" for all of the data we splatter across the net as we sign up for the next greatest and latest Web X.X hosted service, or as we work on a daily basis with a variety of tools within enterprise Intranets.</p> <p>BTW - these "Data Junction Boxes" will also need to be unobtrusively bound to our individual Identities. </p>
Contd: Why we need Linked Data
2008-02-26T13:16:43Z
2008-02-26T08:16:43.000005-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1315
<p> <a href="http://vanirsystems.com/danielsblog" id="link-id13df7aa0">Daniel Lewis</a> has published another post about <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenLink_Data_Spaces" id="link-id170b4ce8">OpenLink Data Spaces</a> (ODS) functionality titled:<a href="http://vanirsystems.com/danielsblog/2008/02/09/a-few-new-features-in-openlink-data-spaces/#comments" id="link-idf6ad9e8">A few new features in OpenLink Data Spaces</a>, that exposes additional features (some hot out the oven).</p> <blockquote> <p> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/OpenLink_Data_Space" id="link-id16f42c90">OpenLink Data Spaces (<acronym title="OpenLink Data Spaces">ODS</acronym>)</a> now officially supports:</p> <ul> <li> <a href="http://apml.pbwiki.com/" id="link-id15baf3e0">Attention Profiling Markup Language (<acronym title="Attention Profiling Markup Language">APML</acronym>)</a>.</li> <li> <a href="http://moat-project.org/" id="link-iddd45db0">Meaning of a Tag (<acronym title="Meaning of a Tag">MOAT</acronym>)</a> in conjunction with <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SKOS" id="link-id14b97300">Simple Knowledge Organisation System (SKOS)</a> and <a href="http://scot-project.org/" id="link-id16e84910">Social-Semantic Cloud of Tags (<acronym title="Social-Semantic Cloud of Tags">SCOT</acronym>)</a>.</li> <li> <a href="http://oauth.net/" id="link-id13e5ae50">OAuth - an Open Authentication Protocol</a> </li> </ul> <p>Which means that OpenLink Data Spaces support all of the main standards being discussed in the DataPortability Interest Group!</p> <p> <strong><em>APML Example:</em> </strong> </p> <p>All users of ODS automatically get a dynamically created APML file, for example: <a href="http://myopenlink.net/dataspace/kidehen/apml.xml" id="link-id14b59220">APML profile</a> for <a href="http://myopenlink.net/dataspace/kidehen#this" id="link-id13dbb298">Kingsley Idehen</a> </p> <p>The URI for an APML profile is: http://myopenlink.net/dataspace/<ods-username>/apml.xml</p> <p> <em><strong>Meaning of a Tag Example:</strong> </em> </p> <p>All users of ODS automatically have tag cloud information embedded inside their <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SIOC" id="link-idf7182c8"><acronym title="Semantically Interlinked Online Communities">SIOC</acronym></a> file, for example: SIOC for Kingsley Idehen on the Myopenlink.net installation of ODS.</p> <p>But even better, MOAT has been implemented in the ODS Tagging System. This has been demonstrated in a recent test blog post by my colleague Mitko Iliev, the blog post comes up on the tag search: <a href="http://myopenlink.net/dataspace/imitko/weblog/Mitko%27s%20Weblog/tag/paris" id="link-idfc14cf0">http://myopenlink.net/dataspace/imitko/weblog/Mitko%27s%20Weblog/tag/paris</a> </p> <p>Which can be put through the <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/rdfbrowser/" id="link-id14954fc8">OpenLink Data Browser</a>:</p> <ul> <li> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/rdfbrowser/?uri=http%3A%2F%2Fmyopenlink.net%2Fdataspace%2Fimitko%2Fweblog%2FMitko%2527s%2520Weblog%2Ftag%2Fparis" id="link-id164edd88">OpenLink Data Browser with Mitko Iliev’s Paris Blog Tag</a> </li> </ul> <p> <strong><em>OAuth Example:</em> </strong> </p> <p>OAuth Tokens and Secrets can be created for any ODS application. To do this:</p> <ol> <li> you can log in to <a href="http://myopenlink.net:8890/ods/index.html" id="link-id167224c0">MyOpenlink.net</a> beta service, the <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/ods/index.html" id="link-id169733d8">Live Demo ODS installation</a>, an <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1261" id="link-id14b2d380">EC2 instance</a>, or your local installation</li> <li>then go to ‘Settings’</li> <li>and then you will see ‘OAuth Keys’</li> <li>you will then be able to choose the applications that you have instantiated and generate the token and secret for that <abbr title="application">app</abbr>.</li> </ol> <p> <strong>Related Document (Human) Links</strong> </p> <ul> <li> <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/wiki/main/Main/Ods" id="link-id16d1c2d8">OpenLink Data Spaces Official Page</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/" id="link-id16d8c500">OpenLink Software Page</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenLink_Data_Spaces" id="link-idf6b05f0">OpenLink Data Spaces Wikipedia Page</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.apml.org/" id="link-id12d8bbd0">Attention Profiling Markup Language Project Website</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://moat-project.org/" id="link-id137e7108">Meaning of a Tag Project Website</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/" id="link-id110f1028">Simple Knowledge Organisation Systems Project Website</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://scot-project.org/" id="link-id14b8d1e0">Social-Semantic Cloud of Tags Project Website</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://oauth.net/" id="link-id12da2dd0">OAuth Protocol Website</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.dataportability.org/" id="link-id13f52e08">DataPortability.org Website</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.sioc-project.org/" id="link-id15ebb6a0">Semantically Interlinked Online Communities Project Website<br /> </a> </li> </ul> </blockquote> <p>Remember (as per my <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1314" id="link-id16ea8bb8">most recent post about ODS</a>), ODS is about unobtrusive fusion of Web 1.0, 2.0, and 3.0+ usage and interaction patterns. Thanks to a lot of recent standardization in the Semantic Web realm (e.g SPARQL), we are now employ the MOAT, SKOS, and SCOT ontologies as vehicles for Structured Tagging.</p> <h2>Structured Tagging?</h2> <p>This is how we take a key <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Web_2.0" id="link-id1884ac58">Web 2.0 </a>feature (think 2D in a sense), bend it over, to create a Linked Data Web (Web 3.0) experience unobtrusively (see <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&q=web%20dimensions&type=text&output=html" id="link-id14b3d8a0">earlier posts re. Dimensions of Web</a>). Thus, nobody has to change how they tag or where they tag, just expose ODS to the URLs of your Web 2.0 tagged content and it will produce URIs (Structured Data Object Identifiers) and a lnked data graph for your Tags Data Space (nee. Tag Cloud). ODS will construct a graph which exposes tag subject association, tag concept alignment / intended meaning, and tag frequencies, that ultimately deliver "relative disambiguation" of intended Tag Meaning (i.e. you can easily discern the taggers meaning via the Tags actual Data Space which is associated with the tagger). In a nutshell, the dynamics of relevance matching, ranking, and the like, change immensely without futile timeless debates about matters such as: </p> <ul>What's the Linked Data value proposition?</ul> <ul>What's the Linked Data business model?</ul> <ul> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/XML" id="link-id105abcb0">XML</a> vs <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Resource_Description_Framework" id="link-id14b27b28">RDF</a> </ul> <ul> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/XQuery" id="link-id10572dd0">XQuery</a> vs <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SPARQL" id="link-id1326d4c8">SPARQL</a> </ul> <ul>What's the Semantic Web Killer application?</ul> <p>We can just get on with demonstrating Linked Data value using what exists on the Web today. This is the approach we are deliberately taking with ODS.</p> <h2>Related Items</h2> <ul> <a href="http://www.betaversion.org/~stefano" id="link-id170849b0">Stefano Mazzocch</a>'s <a href="http://blogs.usnet.private:8893/linotype/news/85/" id="link-idfde2e08"> response to Clay Shirky's 2005 talk</a> titled: <a href="http://conferences.oreillynet.com/cs/et2005/view/e_sess/6117" id="link-id13f45030">Ontology is Overrated: Links, Tags and Post-hoc Metadata</a> </ul> <ul> <a href="http://tomgruber.org" id="link-id16c745b8"> Tom Gruber</a>'s post titled: <a href="http://tomgruber.org/writing/ontology-of-folksonomy.htm" id="link-id13cbe7b0">Ontology of Folksonomy: A Mash-up of Apples and Oranges</a> </ul>. <p> <strong>Tip:</strong> This post is best viewed via an RDF aware User Agent (e.g. a <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/rdfbrowser" id="link-id14b325b8">Browser</a> or <a href="http://dataviewer.zitgist.com" id="link-id164bfab0">Data Viewer</a>). I say this because the permalink of this post is a URI in a Linked Data Space (My Blog) comprised of more data than meets the eye (i.e. what you see when you read this post via a Document Web Browser) :-)</p>
Additional OpenLink Data Spaces Features
2008-02-11T16:38:03Z
2008-02-11T11:38:03.000006-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1314
<p>Via post by <a href="http://vanirsystems.com/danielsblog" id="link-id1480d7c0">Daniel Lewis</a>, titled:<a href="http://vanirsystems.com/danielsblog/2008/02/08/10-reasons-to-use-openlink-data-spaces/#comments" id="link-id1320a618">10 Reasons to use OpenLink Data Spaces</a> </p> <blockquote> <p>There are quite a few reasons to use <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenLink_Data_Space" id="link-id103eb060">OpenLink Data Spaces (ODS)</a>. Here are 10 of the reasons why I use ODS:</p> <ol> <li>Its native support of DataPortability Recommendations such as <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/RSS" id="link-id18957e88">RSS</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Atom_%28standard%29" id="link-id1410a9c0">Atom</a>, <a href="http://www.apml.org/" id="link-idfde4b90">APML</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Yadis" id="link-id1328c260">Yadis</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/OPML" id="link-id10133f70">OPML</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Microformat" id="link-id16e19be0">Microformats</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Friend_of_a_friend" id="link-id12deef98">FOAF</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SIOC" id="link-id15fb99b0">SIOC</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/OpenID" id="link-id1390ae10">OpenID</a> and <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OAuth" id="link-id14dcce70">OAuth</a>.</li> <li>Its native support of Semantic Web Technologies such as: <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Resource_Description_Framework" id="link-id15fc75a0">RDF</a> and <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SPARQL" id="link-id14255238">SPARQL</a>/<a href="http://jena.hpl.hp.com/~afs/SPARQL-Update.html" id="link-id15fe2e40">SPARUL</a> for querying.</li> <li>Everything in ODS is an <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Object_%28computer_science%29" id="link-id11c204a0">Object</a> with its own <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uniform_Resource_Identifier" id="link-id14812560">URI</a>, this is due to the underlying <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Object-relational_database" id="link-idf663e08">Object-Relational</a> Architecture provided by <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Virtuoso_Universal_Server" id="link-id1484e4c8">Virtuoso</a>.</li> <li>It has all the social media components that you could need, including: <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Blog" id="link-id10120b58">blogs</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Wiki" id="link-id14d9a608">wikis</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Social_network_service" id="link-idf0b3a30">social networks</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Aggregator" id="link-id188d7c78">feed readers</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Customer_relationship_management" id="link-id134a2c48">CRM</a> and a <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Calendar" id="link-idf66af80">calendar</a>.</li> <li>It is expandable by installing pre-configured components (called VADs), or by re-configuring a <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/LAMP_%28software_bundle%29" id="link-id102e8008">LAMP</a> application to use <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Virtuoso_Universal_Server" id="link-id13fe2b68">Virtuoso</a>. Some examples of current VADs include: <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/MediaWiki" id="link-id1011d9f0">MediaWiki</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/WordPress" id="link-id13624060">Wordpress</a> and <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Drupal" id="link-id100c4510">Drupal</a>.</li> <li>It works with external webservices such as: <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Facebook" id="link-id131fe6d0">Facebook</a>, <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Del.icio.us" id="link-idfdd1580">del.icio.us</a> and <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Flickr" id="link-id1496aff0">Flickr.</a> </li> <li>Everything within OpenLink Data Spaces is <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id17114c00">Linked Data</a>, which provides more meaningful information than just plain structural information. This meaningful information could be used for complex inferencing systems, as ODS can be seen as a <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Expert_system" id="link-id15ea4108">Knowledge Base</a>.</li> <li>ODS builds bridges between the existing static-document based web (aka ‘<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Web_1.0" id="link-idf08b338">Web 1.0</a>‘), the more dynamic, services-oriented, social and/or user-orientated webs (aka ‘<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Web_2.0" id="link-idfde26e0">Web 2.0</a>‘) and the web which we are just going into, which is more data-orientated (aka ‘<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Web_3.0" id="link-idf9b7328">Web 3.0</a>’ or ‘Linked Data Web’).</li> <li>It is fully supportive of <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Cloud_computing" id="link-id189480d0">Cloud Computing</a>, and can be installed on <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Amazon_Elastic_Compute_Cloud" id="link-id10026778">Amazon EC2</a>.</li> <li>Its released free under the GNU <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/GNU_General_Public_License" id="link-id16002fb0">General Public License (GPL)</a>. [note]However, it is technically dual licensed as it lays on top of the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virtuoso_Universal_Server" id="link-id132d4238">Virtuoso Universal Server</a> which has both Commercial and GPL licensing[/note]</li> </ol> </blockquote> <p>The features above collectively provide users with a Linked Data Junction Box that may reside with corporate intranets or "out in the clouds" (Internet). You can consume, share, and publish data in a myriad of formats using a plethora of protocols, without any programming. ODS is simply about exposing the data from your Web 1.0, 2.0, 3.0 application interactions in structured from, with Linking, Sharing, and ultimately Meshing (not Mashing) in mind.</p> <p> <strong>Note:</strong> Although ODS is equipped with a broad array of Web 2.0 style Applications, you do not need to use native ODS apps in order to exploit it's power. It binds to anything that supports the relevant protocols and data formats.</p>
10 Reasons to use OpenLink Data Spaces (ODS)
2008-02-08T22:08:43Z
2008-02-08T17:08:43-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1295
<p>The W3C officially unveiled the SPARQL Query Language today via a press release titled: <a href="http://www.w3.org/2007/12/sparql-pressrelease" id="link-id10074ca8">W3C Opens Data on the Web with SPARQL</a>.</p> <h2>What is <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SPARQL" id="link-id10183f60">SPARQL</a>?</h2> <p>A query language for the burgeoning Structured & <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id10426b18">Linked Data</a> Web (aka <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-idffde090">Semantic Web</a> / <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giant_Global_Graph" id="link-id103e3688">Giant Global Graph</a>). Like <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SQL" id="link-id103365f8">SQL</a>, for the Relational Data Model, it provides a query language for the Graph based <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/RDF" id="link-id103e33e8">RDF</a> Data Model.</p> <p>It's also a <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Representational_State_Transfer" id="link-id1036a3d0">REST</a> or <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SOAP" id="link-id103b36d8">SOAP</a> based Web Service that exposes SPARQL access to RDF Data via an endpoint. </p> <p>In addition, it's also a Query Results Serialization format that includes <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/XML" id="link-id1023bc60">XML</a> and <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/JSON" id="link-id102c3f88">JSON</a> support.</p> <h2>Why is it Important?</h2> <p>It brings important clarity to the notion of the "Web as a Database" by transforming existing Web Sites, Portals, and Web Services into bona fide corpus of Mesh-able (rather than Mash-able) Data Sources. For instance, you can perform queries that join one or more of the aforementioned data sources in exactly the same manner (albeit different syntax) as you would one or more SQL Tables. </p> <h3>Example:</h3> <p>-- SPARQL equivalent of SQL SELECT * against my personal data space hosted FOAF file</p> <b><pre> SELECT DISTINCT ?s ?p ?o FROM <http://myopenlink.net/dataspace/person/kidehen> WHERE {?s ?p ?o}</pre></b> <p>-- SPARQL against my social network -- Note: My SPARQL will be beamed across all of contacts in the social networks of my contacts as long as they are all HTTP URI based within each data space</p> <b><pre>PREFIX foaf: <http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/> SELECT DISTINCT ?Person FROM <http://myopenlink.net/dataspace/person/kidehen> WHERE {?s a foaf:Person; foaf:knows ?Person}</pre></b> <p>Note: you can use the basic <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/sparql" id="link-id1007d9b8">SPARQL Endpoint</a>, <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/isparql" id="link-id102c3e08">SPARQL Query By Example</a>, or <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/sparql_demo" id="link-id10201f98">SPARQL Query Builder Demo tool</a> to experiment with the demonstration queries above.</p> <h2>How Do I use It?</h2> <p>SPARQL is implemented by RDF Data Management Systems (Triple or Quad Stores) just as SQL is implemented by Relational Database Management Systems. The aforementioned data management systems will typically expose SPARQL access via a SPARQL endpoint.</p> <h2>Where are it's implementations?</h2> <p>A SPARQL implementors Testimonial page accompanies the SPARQL press release. In addition the is a growing collection of implementations on the<a href="http://esw.w3.org/topic/SparqlImplementations" id="link-id10066ca8"> ESW Wiki Page for SPARQL compliant RDF Triple & Quad Stores</a>.</p> <h2>Is this really a big deal?</h2> <p>Yes! SPARQL facilitates an<a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/presentations/Virtuoso_Sponger_1/Virtuoso_Sponger_1.html" id="link-id101ee5b0"> unobtrusive manifestation of a Linked Data Web</a> by way of natural extension of the existing Document Web i.e these Web enclaves co-exist in symbiotic fashion. </p> <p>As <a href="http://dbpedia.org" id="link-id1037edc0">DBpedia</a> very clearly demonstrates, Linked Data makes the Semantic Web demonstrable and much easier to comprehend. Without SPARQL there would be no mechanism for <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/presentations/Virtuoso_Deploying_Linked_Data/Virtuoso_Deploying_Linked_Data.html" id="link-id10455da8">Linked Data deployment</a>, and without Linked Data there is no mechanism for Beaming Queries (directly or indirectly) across the Giant Global Graph of data hosted by Social Networks, Shard Bookmarks Services, Weblogs, Wikis, RSS/Atom/OPML feeds, Photo Galleries and other Web accessible Data Sources (Data Spaces).</p> <h2>Related items</h2> <ul> <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/cooluris/" id="link-id102021d8">Cool URIs</a> </ul> <ul> <a href="http://sites.wiwiss.fu-berlin.de/suhl/bizer/pub/LinkedDataTutorial/" id="link-id1020d5c0">Publishing Linked Data Tutorial</a> </ul> <ul a="a" href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/wiki/main/Main/ODSSIOCRef"> Detailed SPARQL Query Examples using SIOC Data Spaces</ul> <ul> <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/wiki/main/Main/ODSFOAFRef" id="link-id102c4608">Detailed SPARQL Query Examples using FOAF Data Spaces</a> </ul>
W3C's SPARQLing Data Access Ingenuity
2008-01-17T20:41:04Z
2008-01-17T15:41:04.000006-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1289
<p>As 2007 came to a close I repeatedly mulled over the idea of putting together a usual "year in review" and a set of predictions for the coming year etc. Anyway, the more I pondered, the smaller the list became. While pondering (as 2008 rolled around), the <a href="http://www.techmeme.com/080103/p154#a080103p154" id="link-id113db9a0">Blogosphere was set ablaze with the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Robert_Scoble" id="link-idfe12a58">Robert Scoble</a>'s announcement of his account suspension by Facebook</a>. Of course, many chimed in expressing views either side of the ensuing debate: <a href="http://www.scripting.com/stories/2008/01/03/scobleAndHisFacebookData.html" id="link-id161e7c48">Who is right -- Scoble or Facebook</a>. The more I assimilated the views expressed about this event, the more ironic I found the general discourse, for the following reasons:</p> <ol> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Web_2.0" id="link-id16f6f3e0">Web 2.0</a> is fundamentally about <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Web_service" id="link-id1770f3c0">Web Services</a> as the prime vehicle for interactions across "points of Web presence"</li> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Facebook" id="link-id162f3f60">Facebook</a> is a Web 2.0 hosted service for <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Social_Networking" id="link-id16e1dfc8">social networking</a> that provides Web Services APIs for accessing data in the Facebook data space. You have to do so "on the fly" within clearly defined constraints i.e you can interact with data across your social network via Facebook APIs, but you cannot cache the data (perform an export style dump of the data)</li> <li> Facebook is a main driver of the term: "social graph", but their underlying data model is relational and the Web Services response (data you get back) doesn't return a data graph, instead it returns an tree (i.e XML)</li> <li> <a href="http://blogsearch.google.com/blogsearch?hl=en&q=scoble+semantic+web&btnG=Search+Blogs" id="link-id16680d08">Scoble's had a number of close encounters with Linked Data Web | Semantic Data Web | Web 3.0 aficionados</a> in various forms throughout 2007, but still doesn't quite make the connection between Web Services APIs as part of a processing pipeline that includes structured data extraction from XML data en route to producing Data Graphs comprised of Data Objects (Entities) endowed with: <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Identity_%28object-oriented_programming%29" id="link-id16af1f98">Unique Identifiers</a>, Classification or Categorization schemes, Attributes, and Relationships prescribed by one or more shared Data Dictionaries/Schemas/Ontologies</li> <li> A global information bus that exposes a <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id16ce7c68">Linked Data</a> mesh comprised of Data Objects, Object Attributes, and Object Relationships across "points of Web presence" is what <a href="http://www.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee/card#i" id="link-id1aa304e0">TimBL</a> described in 1998 (<a href="http://www.w3.org/DesignIssues/Semantic.html" id="link-id1a822db0">Semantic Web Roadmap</a>) and more recently in 2007 (<a href="http://dig.csail.mit.edu/breadcrumbs/node/215" id="link-id181e5998">Giant Global Graph</a>)</li> <li> The Linked Data mesh (i.e Linked Data Web or GGG) is anchored by the use of HTTP to mint Location, Structure, and Value independent Object Identifiers called <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uniform_Resource_Identifier" id="link-id16eae370">URI</a>s or <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/IRI" id="link-idffe16b8">IRI</a>s. In addition, the Linked Data Web is also equipped with a query language, protocol, and results serialization format for XML and JSON called: SPARQL. </li> </ol> <p>So, unlike Scoble, I am able to make my Facebook Data portable without violating Facebook rules (no data caching outside Facebook realm) by doing the following:</p> <ol> <li> Use an RDFizer for Facebook to convert XML response data from Facebook Web Services into RDF "on the fly" Ensure that my RDF is comprised of Object Identifiers that are HTTP based and thereby dereferencable (i.e. I can use SPARQL to unravel the Linked Data Graph in my Facebook data space)</li> <li> The act of data dereferencing enables me to expose my Facebook Data as Linked Data associated with my <a href="http://myopenlink.net/dataspace/person/kidehen#this" id="link-id16b3e9d0">Personal URI</a> </li> <li> This interaction only occurs via my data space and in all cases the interactions with data work via my <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1172" id="link-id16c628b8">RDFizer middleware</a> (e.g the <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/presentations/Virtuoso_Sponger_1/Virtuoso_Sponger_1.html" id="link-id1572fb28">Virtuoso Sponger</a>) that talks directly to Facebook Web Services. </li> </ol> <p>In a nutshell, my Linked Data Space enables you to reference data in my data space via Object Identifiers (URIs), and some cases the Object IDs and Graphs are constructed on the fly via RDFization middleware.</p> <p>Here are my URIs that provide different paths to my Facebook Data Space:</p> <ul> <a href="http://myopenlink.net/dataspace/person/kidehen#this" id="link-id16f817a8"> Personal URI</a> </ul> <ul> <a href="http://myopenlink.net/proxy?url=http%3A//www.facebook.com/people/Kingsley_Idehen/605980750&force=rdf&login=kidehen" id="link-id1a8e5950">My Facebook Data Space</a> (best viewed via a <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/rdfbrowser/?uri=http%3A%2F%2Fmyopenlink.net%2Fproxy%3Furl%3Dhttp%253A%2F%2Fwww.facebook.com%2Fpeople%2FKingsley_Idehen%2F605980750%26force%3Drdf%26login%3Dkidehen" id="link-id15476588">Linked Data Browser/Viewer</a> session) </ul> <ul> <a href="http://myopenlink.net/proxy?url=http%3A//www.facebook.com/album.php%3Faid%3D14768%26id%3D605980750&force=rdf&login=kidehen" id="link-id16e3bcf0">My Facebook Photo Gallery -- WWW2007 Photo Collection</a> (also best viewed via a <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/rdfbrowser/?uri=http%3A%2F%2Fmyopenlink.net%2Fproxy%3Furl%3Dhttp%253A%2F%2Fwww.facebook.com%2Falbum.php%253Faid%253D14768%2526id%253D605980750%26force%3Drdf%26login%3Dkidehen" id="link-id16e10270">Linked Data Browser/Viewer</a> session) </ul> <p>To conclude, 2008 is clearly the inflection year during which we will final unshackle Data and Identity from the confines of "Web Data Silos" by leveraging the HTTP, SPARQL, and RDF induced virtues of Linked Data. </p> <p>Related Posts:</p> <ol> <li> <a href="http://blogs.sun.com/bblfish/entry/2008_the_rise_of_linked" id="link-id156baac0">2008 and the Rise of Linked Data</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://blogs.sun.com/bblfish/entry/data_portability_scoble_explains" id="link-id16291310">Scoble Right, Wrong, and Beyond</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://scobleizer.com/2007/11/30/talking-with-tim-berners-lee-inventor-of-the-web/" id="link-id163c9c38">Scoble interviewing TimBL</a> (note to Scoble: re-watch your interview since he made some specific points about Linked Data and URIs that you need to grasp)</li> <li>Prior Blog posts my this Blog Data Space that include the literal patterns: <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&q=scoble%20semantic%20web&type=text&output=html" id="link-id163e6cd0">Scoble Semantic Web</a> </li> </ol>
2008, Facebook Data Portability, and the Giant Global Graph of Linked Data
2008-01-07T16:44:42Z
2008-01-07T11:44:42.000007-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1267
<blockquote> <p>"The phrase Open Social implies portability of personal and social data. That would be exciting but there are entirely different protocols underway to deal with those ideas. As some people have told me tonight, it may have been more accurate to call this "OpenWidget" - though the press wouldn't have been as good. We've been waiting for data and identity portability - is this all we get?" <br /> [Source: <a href="http://blogs.usnet.private:8893/[Excerpted from: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/readwriteweb/~3/178622741/opensocial_three_big_concerns.php]" id="link-id1143a428">Read/Write Web's Commentary & Analysis of Google's OpenSocial API</a>]</p> </blockquote> <blockquote> <p>..Perhaps the world will read the terms of use of the API, and realize this is not an open API; this is a free API, owned and controlled by one company only: Google. Hopefully, the world will remember another time when Google offered a free API and then pulled it. Maybe the world will also take a deeper look and realize that the functionality is dependent on Google hosted technology, which has its own terms of service (including adding ads at the discretion of Google), and that building an OpenSocial application ties Google into your application, and Google into every social networking site that buys into the Dream. Hopefully the world will remember. Unlikely, though, as such memories are typically filtered in the Great Noise....</p>[Source: <a href="http://burningbird.net/technology/terms/" id="link-id116f8c98">Poignant commentary excerpt from <a href="http://burningbird.net" id="link-id11216e98">Shelly Power's Blog</a></a> (as always)]</blockquote> <p>The "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web" id="link-id1102bc20">Semantic Data Web</a>" vision has always been about "Data & Identity" portability across the Web. Its been that and more from day one.</p> <p>In a nutshell, we continue to exhibit varying degrees of <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Cognitive_dissonance" id="link-id121bb728">Cognitive Dissonance</a> re the following realities:</p> <ol> <li>The <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Network" id="link-id114567b0">Network</a> is the Computer (Internet/Intranet/Extranet depending on your TCP/IP usage scenarios)</li> <li>The Web is the OS (ditto) and it provides a communications subsystem (<a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s+BLOG+%5B127%5D/1231" id="link-id1212b390">Information BUS</a>) comprised of</li> <ul>- <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Hypertext_Transfer_Protocol" id="link-id11b1b760">HTTP</a> Protocol</ul> <ul>- <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uniform_Resource_Identifier" id="link-id11043020">URI</a>s (pointer system for identifying, accessing, and manipulating data)</ul> <li>HTTP based Interprocess (i.e Web Apps are processes when you discard the HTML UI and interact with the application logic containers called "Web Services" behind the pages) ultimately hit data</li> <li>Web Data is best Modeled as a Graph (RDF, Containers/Items/Item Types, Property & Value Pairs associated with something, and other labels)</li> <li>Network are Graphs and vice versa</li> <li>Social Networks are graphs where nodes are connected via social connectors ( [x]--knows-->[y] ) </li> <li>The Web is a Graph that exposes a People and Data Network (to the degree we allude to humans not being data containers i.e. just nodes in a network, otherwise we are talking about a Data Network)</li> <li>Data access and manipulation depends inherently on canonical Data Access mechanisms such as Data Source Identifiers / Names (time-tested practice in various DBMS realms)</li> <li>Data is forever, it is the basis of Information, and it is increasing exponentially due to proliferation of Web Services induced user activities (User Generated Content)</li> <li>Survival, Vitality, Longevity, Efficiency, Productivity etc.. are all depend on our ability to process data effectively in a shrinking time continuum where Data and/or Information overload is the alternative.</li> </ol> <p> The Data Web is about Presence over Eyeballs due to the following realities:</p> <ol> <li>Eyeballs are input devices for a <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/DNA" id="link-id118b29a0">DNA</a> based processing system (Humans). The aforementioned processing system can reason very well, but simply cannot effectively process masses of data or information</li> <li>Widgets offer little value long term re. the imminent data and information overload dilemma, ditto Web pages (however pretty), and any other Eyeballs-only centric Web Apps</li> <li>Computers (machines) are equipped with inorganic (non DNA) based processing power, they are equipped to process huge volumes of data and/or information, but they cannot reason</li> <li>To be effective in the emerging frontier comprised of a Network Computer and a Web OS, we need an effective mechanism that makes best use of the capabilities possessed by humans and machines, by shifting the focus to creation and interaction with points of "Data Web Presence" that openly expose "<a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Data_structure" id="link-id10e56458">Structured Linked Data</a>". </li> </ol> <p>This is why we need to inject a mesh of Linked Data into the existing Web. This is what the often misunderstood vision of the "Semantic Data Web" or "Web of Data" or "Web or Structured Data" is all about. </p> <p>As stated earlier (point 10 above), "Data is forever" and there is only more of it to come! Sociality and associated Social Networking oriented solutions are at best a spec in the Web's ocean of data once you comprehend this reality.</p> <p>Note: I am writing this post as an early implementor of <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/GData" id="link-id11349808">GData</a> and an implementor of <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id120f3a68">RDF Linked Data</a> technology and a "Web Purist". </p> <blockquote> <p>OpenSocial implementation and support across our relevant product families: <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Virtuoso_Universal_Server" id="link-id1217bf20">Virtuoso</a> (i.e the <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/Whitepapers/html/VirtSpongerWhitePaper.html" id="link-id12154258">Sponger Middleware</a> for RDF component), <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/wiki/main/Main/Ods" id="link-id11369930">OpenLink Data Spaces</a> (Data Space Controller / Services), and the <a href="http://oat.openlinksw.com/" id="link-id113e4da0">OpenLink Ajaxt Toolkit</a> (i.e OAT Widgets and Libraries), is a triviality now that the OpenSocial APIs are public. </p> </blockquote> <p>The concern I have, and the problem that remains mangled in the vast realms of Web Architecture incomprehension, is the fact that GData and GData based APIs cannot deliver Structured Linked Data in line with the essence of the Web without introducing "lock-in" that ultimately compromises the "Open Purity" of the Web. <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Facebook" id="link-id11073980">Facebook</a> and Google's <a href="http://code.google.com/apis/opensocial/docs/" id="link-id1215e020">OpenSocial</a> response to the Facebook juggernaut (i.e. open variant of the Facebook Activity Dashboard and Social Network functionality realms, primarily), are at best icebergs in the ocean we know as the "World Wide Web". The nice and predictable thing about icebergs is that they ultimately melt into the larger ocean :-)</p> On a related note, I had the pleasure of attending the <a href="http://www.w3.org/2007/03/RdfRDB/" id="link-id1106f678">W3C's RDF and DBMS Integration Workshop</a>, last week. The event was well attended by organizations with knowledge, experience, and a vested interested in addressing the issues associated with exposing none RDF data (e.g. SQL) as RDF, and the imminence of data and/or information overload covered in different ways via the following presentations: <ul>- <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/presentations/RDF_Mapping_Presentation_W3C_workshop3.ppt" id="link-id11053440">RDF Views of SQL Data</a> - <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/oerling" id="link-id1218bf70">Orri Erling </a>on behalf of OpenLink Software</ul> <ul>- <a href="http://www.michaelbrodie.com/documents/Brodie%20VLDB%202007%20V3.zip" id="link-id11eda380">Computer Science 2.0</a> (covering User Generated Content Explosion) - Michael Brodie</ul> <ul>- <a href="http://www.w3.org/2007/03/RdfRDB/talks/Finding_our_way.ppt" id="link-id113b9620">Experiences re. solving SPARQL Access to Distributed Data Sources</a> - Phil Ashworth </ul> <ul>- <a href="http://www.w3.org/2007/03/RdfRDB/program" id="link-id11265180">Other presentations</a> </ul>.
Reminder: Why We Need Linked Data!
2007-11-02T22:52:34Z
2007-11-02T18:52:34-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1265
<p>A new release of Virtuoso is now available in both <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/wiki/main/" id="link-id1282d260">Open Source</a> and <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com" id="link-id1317deb0">Commercial</a> variants. The main features and Enhancements associated with this release include:</p> <ul> * 64-bit Integer Support</ul> <ul> * RDF Sink Folders for WebDAV - enabling RDF Quad Store population by simply dropping RDF files into WebDAV or via HTTP (meaning you can use CURL as an RDF in put mechanism for instance)</ul> <ul>* Additional Sponger Cartridges from Audio binary files (i.e ID3 tag extraction and Music Ontology mapping which exposes the fine details of music as RDF based Structured Data; one for the DJs & Remixers out there!)</ul> <ul>* New Sponger Cartridges for Facebook, Freebase, Wikipedia, GRDDL, RDFa, eRDF and more</ul> <ul>* Support for PHP 5.2 runtime hosting (Virtuoso is a bona fide deployment platform for: Wordpress, MediaWiki, phpBB, Drupal etc.)</ul> <ul>* Enhanced UI for managing <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data" id="link-id12837b20">RDF Linked Data</a> deployment (covering Multi Homed domains, Virtual Directories associated with URL-rewrite rules</ul> <ul>* Demonstration Database includes <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/virtuoso/Whitepapers/html/rdf_views/virtuoso_rdf_views_example.html" id="link-id130c2830">SQL-RDF Views </a>& SQL Table samples for the THALIA Web Data Integration benchmark and test-suite</ul> <ul>* Tutorial Application includes Linked Data style SQL-RDF Views for the Northwind SQL DBMS schema (which is the same as the standard Virtuoso demo atabase schema)</ul> <ul>* SQL-RDF Views implementation of the TPC-D benchmark (Yes, we can run this grueling SQL benchmark via RDF views of SQL Data!)</ul> <ul>* A new Amazon EC2 Image for Virtuoso that enables you to instantiate a fully configured instance comprising the Virtuoso core,<a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/wiki/main/Main/OdsIndex" id="link-id126c5eb8"> OpenLink Data Spaces</a> platform and the <a href="http://sourceforge.net/projects/oat" id="link-id1341cb68">OpenLink Ajax Toolkit</a> (OAT) (we now have bona fide Data Spaces in the Clouds as an addition to the emerging Semantic Data Web mesh).</ul> <p>Download Lnks: </p> <ul>* <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/wiki/main/Main/VOSDownload" id="link-id12745128">Open Source Edition</a> </ul> <ul>* <a href="http://download.openlinksw.com/download/product_matrix.vsp?p=f_os&fm=26&fam=2&df=16" id="link-id12f15ed0">Commercial Edition</a> </ul>
Virtuoso 5.0.2 Released!
2007-10-08T14:27:27Z
2007-10-08T10:27:27-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1261
<p>I've written extensively on the subject of <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&q=data%20spaces&type=text&output=html" id="link-id134c2280">Data Spaces</a> in relation to the <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&q=data%20web%0D%0A&type=text&output=html" id="link-id105aef90">Data Web</a> for while. I've also written sparingly about <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/wiki/main/Main/OdsIndex" id="link-id105bd100">OpenLink Data Spaces</a> (a Data Web Platform that build using Virtuoso). On the other hand, I haven't shed much light on installation and deployment of OpenLink Data Spaces.</p> <p> <a href="http://blog.jonudell.net" id="link-id14347f20">Jon Udell</a> recently penned a post titled: <a href="http://blog.jonudell.net/2007/09/21/the-fourth-platform/" id="link-id1439ed48">The Fourth Platform</a>. The post arrives at a spookily coincidental time (this happens quite often between Jon and I as demonstrated last year during our <a href="http://weblog.infoworld.com/udell/gems/ju_idehen.mp3" id="link-id107d17a8">podcast</a>; the "Fourth" in his Innovators Podcast series).</p> <p>The platform that Jon describes is "Cloud Based" and comprised of Storage and Computation. I would like to add Data Access and Management (native and virtual) under the fourth platform banner with the end product called: "Cloud based Data Spaces". </p> <p>As I write, we are releasing a Virtuoso AMI (Amazon Image) labeled: virtuoso-dataspace-server. This edition of<a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com" id="link-id13543210"> Virtuoso</a> includes the OpenLink Data Spaces Layer and all of the OAT applications we've been developing for a while.</p> <h2>What Benefits Does this offer?</h2> <ol> <li>Personal Data Spaces in the Cloud - a place where you can control and consolidate data across your Blogs, Wikis, RSS/Atom Feed Subscriptions, Shared Bookmarks, Shared Calendars, Discussion Threads, Photo Galleries etc</li> <li>All the data in your Data <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_Spaces">Space</a> is <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SPARQL" id="link-id1149a4f8">SPARQL</a> or <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/GData" id="link-id107a9f28">GData</a> accessible.</li> <li>All of the data in your Personal Data Space is <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Linked_Data">Linked Data</a> from the get go. Each Item of data is <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uniform_Resource_Identifier">URI</a> addressable</li> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SIOC" id="link-id104f4160">SIOC</a> support - your Blogs, Wikis, Bookmarks etc.. are based on the SIOC ontology for Semantically Interlinking Online Communities (think: Open social-graph++) </li> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Friend_of_a_friend" id="link-id105beb78">FOAF</a> support - your FOAF Profile page provides a URI that is an in-road to all Data in your Data Space.</li> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/OpenID" id="link-id1144e138">OpenID</a> support - your Personal Data Space ID is usable wherever OpenID is supported. OpenID and FOAF are integrated as per latest FOAF specs</li> <li>Two Integration with Facebook - You can access your Data Space from Facebook or access Facebook from your Data Space</li> <li>Unified Storage - The WebDAV based filesystem provides Cloud Storage that's integrated with Amazon S3; It also exposes all of your Data Space data via a traditional filesystem UI (think virtual Spotlight); You can also mount this drive to your local filesystem via your native operating system's WebDAV support</li> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/SyncML" id="link-id11128f48">SyncML</a> - you can sync calendar and contact details with your Data Space in the cloud from your Mobile phone.</li> <li>A practical Semantic Data Web solution - based on Web Infrastructure and doesn't require you to do anything beyond exposing URIs for data in your Data Spaces.</li> </ol> <h2> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Amazon_Elastic_Compute_Cloud" id="link-id115d1920">EC2</a>-AMI Details:</h2> <ul>AMI ID: ami-e2ca2f8b</ul> <ul>Manifest file: virtuoso-images/virtuoso-dataspace-server.manifest.xml</ul> <h2>Installation Guide:</h2> <ol> <li>Get an Amazon Web Services (AWS) account</li> <li>Signup for S3 and EC2 services</li> <li>Install the EC2 plugin for Firefox</li> <li>Start the EC2 plugin</li> <li>Locate the row containing <b>ami-7c31d515 Manifest virtuoso-test/virtuoso-cloud-beta-9-i386.manifest.xml </b>(sort using the AMI ID or Manifest Columns or search on pattern: virtuoso, due to name flux)</li> <li>Start the Virtuoso Data Space Server AMI</li> <li>Wait 4-5 minutes (*take a few minutes to create the pre-configured Linux Image*)</li> <li>Connect to http://<public_dns_name_of_your_instance>http://your-ec2-instance-cname:8890/ Log in with user/password dba/dba</public_dns_name_of_your_instance> </li> <li>Go to the Admin UI (Virtuoso Conductor) and change the PWDs for the 'dba' and 'dav' accounts (*Important!*)</li> <li>Give the "SPARQL" user "SPARQL_UPDATE" privileges (required if you want to exploit the in-built Sponger Middleware)</li> <li>Click on the <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/OpenLink_Data_Spaces">ODS</a> (OpenLink Data Spaces) link to start an Personal Editon of OpenLink Data Spaces (or go to: http://your-ec2-instance-cname/dataspace/ods/index.html)</li> <li>Log-in using the username and password credentials for the 'dav' account (or register a new user note: OpenID is an option here also) Create an Data Space Application Instance by clicking on a Data Space App. Tab</li> <li>Import data from your existing Web 2.0 style applications into OpenLink Data Spaces e.g. subscribe to a few RSS/Atom feeds via the "Feeds Manager" application or import some Bookmarks using the "Bookmarks" application</li> <li>Then look at the imported data in Linked Data form via your ODS generated URIs based on the patterns: http://your-ec2-instance-cname/dataspace/person/your-ods-id#this (URI for You the Person), http://your-ec2-instance-cname/dataspace/person/your-ods-id (FOAF File URI), http://your-ec2-instance-cname/dataspace/your-ods-id (SIOC File URI)<br /> </li> </ol> <h2> (OAT) from your Data Space instance</h2>Install the OAT VAD package via the Admin UI and then apply the URI patterns below within your browser:<br /> <ol> <li>http://<public_dns_name_of_your_instance>:8890/oatdemo - Entire OAT Demo Collection</public_dns_name_of_your_instance> </li> <li>http://<public_dns_name_of_your_instance>:8890/rdfbrowser - RDF Browser</public_dns_name_of_your_instance> </li> <li>http://<public_dns_name_of_your_instance>:8890/isparql - SPARQL Query Builder (iSPARQL)</public_dns_name_of_your_instance> </li> <li>http://<public_dns_name_of_your_instance>:8890/qbe - SQL Query Builder (iSQL)</public_dns_name_of_your_instance> </li> <li>http://<public_dns_name_of_your_instance>:8890/formdesigner - Forms Builder (for building Meshups based on RDF, SQL, or Web Servives Data Souces)</public_dns_name_of_your_instance> </li> <li>http://<public_dns_name_of_your_instance>:8890/dbdesigner - SQL DB Schema Designer (note a Visual SQL-RDF Mapper is also on it's way</public_dns_name_of_your_instance> </li> <li>http://<public_dns_name_of_your_instance>:8890/DAV/JS/ - To view the OAT Tree (there are some experimental demos that are missing from the main demo app etc..) </public_dns_name_of_your_instance> </li> </ol> <p>There's more to come!</p>
Fourth Platform: Data Spaces in The Cloud (Update)
2008-10-26T21:59:33Z
2008-10-26T17:59:33-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1249
<p> <a href="http://www.ivan-herman.net/Ivan_Herman">Ivan Herman</a> just posted another nice example of practical <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/RDFa">RDFa</a> usage in a blog post titled: <a href="http://ivanherman.wordpress.com/2007/09/03/yet-another-rdfa-processor…/">Yet Another RDFa Proccessor</a>. In his post, Ivan exposes a <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Uniform_Resource_Identifier">URI</a> for his<a href="http://www.ivan-herman.net/foaf.html"> FOAF-in-RDFa file</a>.</p> <p>Since I am <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1243">aggressively tracking RDFa developments</a>, I decided to quickly view <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/home/demo/Public/Queries/DataWeb/ivan_herman_foaf_via_rdfa.wqx">Ivan's FOAF-in-RDFa file via the OpenLink RDF Browser</a>. The full implications are best understood when you click on each of the Browser's Tabs -- each providing a different perspective on this interesting addition to the Semantic Data Web (note: the <a href="http://www.w3.org/2005/04/fresnel-info/">Fresnel</a> Tab which demonstrates declarative UI templating using N3).</p> <h3>What's Going on Here?</h3> <p>The <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/JS/rdfbrowser/index.html">OpenLink RDF Browser</a> is a <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rich_internet_application">Rich Internet Application</a> built using OAT (<a href="http://oat.openlinksw.com">OpenLink Ajax Toolkit</a>). In my case, I am deploying the RDF Browser from a <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com">Virtuoso</a> instance, which implies that the Browser is able to use the <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/blog/~kidehen/?id=1172">Virtuoso Sponger</a> Middleware (exposed as a REST Service at the Virtuoso instance endpoint: /proxy); which includes an RDFa Cartridge comprised of a metadata extractor and an <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/RDF_Schema">RDF Schema</a> / <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Web_Ontology_Language">OWL Ontology</a> mapper. That's it!</p>
Yet Another RDFa Demo
2008-02-05T01:44:37Z
2008-02-04T20:44:37.000009-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1241
<p>An update for RSS crawlers that don't have synchronization capability etc..</p> <p>"Reasonable Humans" continue to struggle with the congruency of social-networking and the Semantic Web. Funnily enough, our less capable counterparts (in the reasoning department) don't have such struggles. Here is my little interaction with an IRC Bot called "<a href="http://inamidst.com/phenny/">Phenny</a>" (possibly mother of the Agent Web or Web of Agents or Web 4.0):</p> <blockquote> <pre></pre><p> <b>kidehen:</b> .w web<br /> <br /> <b>phenny:</b> web n. 1: An intricate network suggesting something that was formed by weaving or interweaving<br /> <b>phenny:</b> web n. 2: An intricate trap that entangles or ensnares its victim<br /> <b>phenny:</b> web v. 1: Construct or form a web, as if by weaving.</p> <b><br />kidehen:</b> .w network<br /> <p> <b>phenny:</b> network n. 1: An interconnected system of things or people<br /> <b>phenny:</b> network n. 2: (broadcasting) a communication system consisting of a group of broadcasting stations that all transmit the same programs<br /> <b>phenny:</b> network v. 1: Communicate with and within a group.</p> <br /> <p> <br /> <b>kidehen:</b> .w social<br /> <br /> <b>phenny:</b> social n. 1: A party of people assembled to promote sociability and communal activity<br /> <b>phenny:</b> social a. 1: Relating to human society and its members<br /> <b>phenny:</b> social a. 2: Living together or enjoying life in communities or organized groups.</p> <p> <br /> <b>kidehen:</b> .w semantic<br /> <br /> <b>phenny:</b> semantic a. 1: Of or relating to meaning or the study of meaning.<br /> </p> <br /> <p> <b>kidehen:</b> .w graph<br /> <br /> <b>phenny:</b> graph n. 1: A visual representation of the relations between certain quantities plotted with reference to a set of axes<br /> <b>phenny:</b> graph v. 1: Represent by means of a graph<br /> <b>phenny:</b> graph v. 2: Plot upon a graph.</p> <p>Note: <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graph_theory">Wikipedia's Graph definition</a> is the one the applies to RDF :-)</p> </blockquote> <p>To conclude, the whole <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Semantic_Web">Semantic Data Web</a> vision and Open <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Social_Networking">social-networking</a> go hand-in-hand. You can't attain "Open social-networking" without appreciating the underlying <a href="http://rdfabout.com/quickintro.xpd">core concepts</a> (<a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&q=structured%20data&type=text&output=html">Structured Data</a>, <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/rdf-concepts/#section-Concepts">Graphs, and Triples</a>). There is no way around the reality that all <a href="http://www.tei-c.org/P4X/GD.html">networks are graphs</a>. Of course, this doesn't imply that solution users (end-users) have to master <a href="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Graph_theory">graph theory</a> en route to network participation and exploitation. It simply implies that solution developers need some graph data model appreciation, or a graph data model aware platform, when developing social-networking solutions that seek to leverage the Web.<br /> </p>Funnily enough, my session with the Phenny Bot was triggered by a prior session between <a href="http://metacognition.info/index.html">Chimezie Ogbuji</a> (who also trains a Bot called "<a href="http://metacognition.info/Emeka/index.html">Emeka</a>" that does SPARQL) and said Bot:<blockquote> <p></p> <pre></pre> <p> <br /> <b>chimezie:</b> .w tautology<br /> <br /> <b>phenny:</b> tautology n. 1: (logic) a statement that is necessarily true<br /> <b>phenny:</b> tautology n. 2: Useless repetition.<br /> </p> <p> <br /> <b>chimezie:</b> .ety tautology<br /> <br /> <b>phenny:</b> "1579, from L.L. tautologia 'representation of the same thing' (c.350), from Gk. tautologia, from tautologos 'repeating what has been said,' from tauto 'the same' + -logos 'saying,' related to legein 'to say' (see lecture)." - http://etymonline.com/?term=tautology</p> </blockquote> <p>That lead me to the following sequence (preceding the initial IRC session dump in this post):</p> <blockquote> <pre></pre> <p> <b>kidehen:</b> .w conflagration<br /> <br /> <b>phenny:</b> conflagration n. 1: A very intense and uncontrolled fire.<br /> <br /> </p> <b>kidehen:</b> .w imbroglio<br /> <p> <b>phenny:</b> imbroglio n. 1: An intricate and confusing interpersonal or political situation<br /> <br /> <b>phenny:</b> imbroglio n. 2: A very embarrassing misunderstanding.<br /> </p> <br /> <p> <b>kidehen:</b> .w buzzword<br /> <br /> <b>phenny:</b> buzzword n. 1: Stock phrases that have become nonsense through endless repetition.<br /> </p> </blockquote> <p>In sense, proposing the Semantic Data Web as a solution to open social-networiing challenges, more often than not results in your "No Semantic Web here" <b>imbroglio</b>. In a sense, the shortest path to a <b>buzzword</b> fueled <b>conflagration</b> :-) </p>
Social-Networking & Semantic Web (update)
2007-08-15T22:14:36Z
2007-08-15T18:14:36.000003-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1234
<p>I stumbled across an article titled: <a href="http://www.openarchives.org/ore/documents/CompoundObjects-200705.html">Thoughts on Compound Documents</a>, from the <a href="http://www.openarchives.org/">Open Archives initiative</a> (OAI). The article discusses the increasingly popular topic of deploying structured data containers on the Web.</p> <p>This article, <a href="http://www.mkbergman.com/?p=389">like the one from Mike</a>, and our soon to be released Linked Data Deployment white paper, collectively address the main topic without inadvertent distraction by the misnomer: non-information resource. For instance, the OAI article uses the term: Generic Resource instead of Non-informaton Resource.</p> <p>The Semantic Data Web is here, but we need to diffuse this reality across a broader spectrum of Web communities, so as to avoid unnecessary uptake inertia that can arise due basic incomprehension of key concepts such as <a href="http://linkeddata.org">Linked Data</a> deployment.</p>
Another Paper Discussing RDF Data Publishing
2007-07-25T02:02:56Z
2007-07-24T22:02:56-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1231
<p> <a href="http://www.wiwiss.fu-berlin.de/suhl/ueber_uns/team/chris_bizer.htm">Chris Bizer</a>, <a href="http://richard.cyganiak.de/">Richard Cyganiak</a>, and <a href="http://kmi.open.ac.uk/people/tom/html">Tom Heath</a> have just published a <a href="http://sites.wiwiss.fu-berlin.de/suhl/bizer/pub/LinkedDataTutorial/">Linked Data Publishing Tutorial</a> that provides a guide to the mechanics of Linked Data injection into the Semantic Data Web.</p> <p> On different, but related, thread, <a href="http://www.mkbergman.com">Mike Bergman</a> recently penned a post titled: <a href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/AI3_AdaptiveInformation/~3/134989485/">What is the Structured Web?</a>. Both of these public contributions shed light on the "Information BUS" essence of the World Wide Web by describing the evolving nature of the payload shuttled by the BUS. </p> <h3>What is an Information BUS? </h3> <p>Middleware infrastructure for shuttling "Information" between endpoints using a messaging protocol.</p> <p>The Web is the dominant Information BUS within the Network Computer we know as the "Internet". It uses HTTP to shuttle information payloads between "Data Sources" and "Information Consumers" - what happens when we interact with Web via User Agents / Clients (e.g Browsers). </p> <h3>What are Web Information Payloads?</h3> <p>HTTP transported streams of contextualized data. Hence the terms: "Information Resource" and "Non Information" when reading material related to <a href="http://www.w3.org/2001/tag/doc/httpRange-14/2007-05-31/HttpRange-14#iddiv2104118728">http-range-14 and Web Architecture</a>. For example, an (X)HTML document is a specific data context (representation) that enables us to perceive, or comprehend, a data stream originating from a Web Server as a Web Page. On the other hand, if the payload lacks contextualized data, a fundamental Web requirement, then the resource is referred to as a "Non Information" resource. Of course, there is really no such thing as a "Non Information" resource, but with regards to Web Architecture, it's the short way of saying: "the Web Transmits Information only". That said, I prefer to refer to these "Non Information" resources as "Data Sources", are term well understood in the world of Data Access Middleware (ODBC, JDBC, OLEDB, ADO.NET etc.) and Database Management Systems (Relational, Objec-Relational, Object etc).</p> <p>Examples of Information Resource and Data Source URIs:</p> <ul> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/Northwind/Customer/ALFKI">http://demo.openlinksw.com/Northwind/Customer/ALFKI</a> (Information Resource)</ul> <ul> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/sparql?query=CONSTRUCT+{+%3Chttp%3A//demo.openlinksw.com/Northwind/Customer/ALFKI%23this%3E+%3Fp+%3Fo+}+FROM+%3Chttp%3A//demo.openlinksw.com/Northwind%3E+WHERE+{+%3Chttp%3A//demo.openlinksw.com/Northwind/Customer/ALFKI%23this%3E+%3Fp+%3Fo+}&format=application/rdf%2Bxml">http://demo.openlinksw.com/Northwind/Customer/ALFKI#this</a> (Data Source)</ul> <p>Explanation: The Information Resource is a conduit to the Entity identified by Data Source (an entity in my RDF Data Space that is the Subject or Object of one of more Triple based Statements. The triples in question can that can be represented as an RDF resource when transmitted over the Web via an Information Resource that takes the form of a SPARQL REST Service URL or a Physical RDF based Information Resource URL). </p> <h3>What about Structured Data?</h3> <p>Prior to the emergence of the Semantic Data Web, the payloads shuttled across the Web Information BUS comprised primarily of the following:</p> <ol> <li>HTML - Web Resource with presentation focused structure (Web 1.0 dominant payload form)</li> <li>XML - Web Resource with structure that separates presentation and data (Web 2.0's dominant payload form).</li> </ol> <p>The Semantic Data Web simply adds <a href="http://blogs.usnet.private:8893/Resource_Description_Framework">RDF</a> to the payload formats that shuttle the Web Information BUS. RDF addresses formal data structure which XML doesn't cover since it is semi-structured (distinct data entities aren't formally discernible). In a nutshell, an RDF payload is basically a conceptual model database packaged as an Information Resource. It's comprised of granular data items called "Entities", that expose fine grained properties values, individual and/or group characteristics (attributes), and relationships (associations) with other Entities.</p> <h3>Where is this all headed? </h3> <p>The Web is in the final stages of the 3rd phase of it's evolution. A phase characterized by the shuttling of structured data payloads (RDF) alongside less data oriented payloads (HTML, XHTML, XML etc.). As you can see, <a href="http://linkeddata.org">Linked Data</a> and Structured Data are both terms used to describe the addition of more data centric payloads to the Web. Thus, you could view the process of creating a Structured Web of Linked Data as follows:</p> <ol> <li>Identify or Create Structured Data Sources</li> <li>Name these Data Sources using Data Source URIs</li> <li>Expose Structured Data Sources to the Web as Linked Data using Information Resource (conduit) URIs</li> </ol> <h3>Conclusions</h3> <p>The Semantic Data Web is an evolution of the current Web (an Information Space) that adds structured data payloads (RDF) to current, less data oriented, structured payloads (HTML, XHTML, XML, and others).</p> <p>The Semantic Data Web is increasingly seen as an inevitability because it's rapidly reaching the point of critical mass (i.e. network effect kick-in). As a result, Data Web emphasis is moving away from: "What is the Semantic Data Web?" To: "How will Semantic Data Web make our globally interconnected village an even better place?", relative to the contributions accrued from the Web thus far. Remember, the initial "Document Web" (Web 1.0) bootstrapped because of the benefits it delivered to blurb-style content publishing (remember the term electronic brochure-ware?). Likewise, in the case of the "Services Web" (Web 2.0), the bootstrap occurred because it delivered platform independence to Web Application Developers - enabling them to expose application logic behind Web Services. It is my expectation that the Data Integration prowess of the Data Web will create a value exchange realm for data architects and other practitioners from the database and data access realms.</p> <h3>Related Items</h3> <ol> <li> <a href="http://www.mkbergman.com/?p=153">Mike Bergman's post about Semi-Structured Data</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&q=structured%20data&type=text&output=html">My Posts covering Structured and Un-Structured Containers</a> </li> </ol>
Linked Data & The Web Information BUS
2007-08-08T22:26:55Z
2007-08-08T18:26:55-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1224
<p>Last week we <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/press/virt_501.htm">officially released Virtuoso 5.0.1</a> (in Commercial and Open Source Editions). The press release provided us with an official mechanism and timestamp for the current Virtuoso feature set.</p> <p>A vital component of the new Virtuoso release is the finalization of our SQL to RDF mapping functionality -- enabling the declarative mapping of SQL Data to RDF. Additional technical insight covering other new features (delivered and pending) is provided by <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblogs/oerling/">Orri Erling</a>, as part of a series of post-Banff posts.</p> <h2>Why is SQL to RDF Mapping a Big Deal?</h2> <p>A majority of the world's data (especially in the enterprise realm) resides in SQL Databases. In addition, Open Access to the data residing in said databases remains the biggest challenge to enterprises for the following reasons:</p> <ol> <li> SQL Data Sources are inherently heterogeneous because they are acquired with business applications that are in many cases inextricably bound to a particular DBMS engine </li> <li> Data is predictably dirty </li> <li> DBMS vendors ultimately hold the data captive and have traditionally resisted data access standards such as ODBC (*trust me they have, just look at the unprecedented bad press associated with ODBC the only truly platform independent data access API. Then look at how this bad press arose..*) </li> </ol> <p> Enterprises have known from the beginning of modern corporate times that data access, discovery, and manipulation capabilities are inextricably linked to the "Real-time Enterprise" nirvana (hence my use of 0.0 before this becomes 3.0).</p> <p>In my experience, as someone whose operated in the data access and data integration realms since the late '80s, I've painfully observed enterprises pursue, but unsuccessfully attain, full control over enterprise data (the prized asset of any organization) such that data-, information-, knowledge-workers are just a click away from commencing coherent platform and database independent data drill-downs and/or discovery that transcend intranet, internet, and extranet boundaries -- serendipitous interaction with relevant data, without compromise!</p> <p>Okay, situation analysis done, we move on.. </p> <p>At our most recent (<a href="http://esw.w3.org/topic/CambridgeSemanticWebGatherings/Meeting/2007-06-12_Gathering">12th June</a>) monthly <a href="http://esw.w3.org/topic/CambridgeSemanticWebGatherings">Semantic Web Gathering</a>, I unveiled to <a href="http://www.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee/card#i">TimBL</a> and a host of other attendees a simple, but powerful, demonstration of how <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linked_Data">Linked Data</a>, as an aspect of the <a href="http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/apr2007/tc20070409_961951.htm">Semantic Data Web</a>, can be applied to enterprise data integration challenges.</p> <h2>Actual SQL to RDF Mapping Demo / Experiment</h2> <h4>Hypothesis</h4> A SQL Schema can be effectively mapped declaratively to RDF such that SQL Rows morph into RDF Instance Data (Entity Sets) based on the Concepts & Properties defined in a Concrete Conceptual Data Model oriented Data Dictionary (<a href="http://www.w3schools.com/rdf/rdf_schema.asp">RDF Schema</a> and/or <a href="http://www.w3schools.com/rdf/rdf_owl.asp">OWL Ontology</a>). In addition, the solution must demonstrate how "Linked Data in the Web" is completely different from "Data on the Web" or "Linked Data on the Web" (btw - <a href="http://kasei.us/people/Tom_Heath/">Tom Heath</a> eloquently unleashed this point in his recent <a href="http://blogs.talis.com/nodalities/2007/06/tom_heath_talks_with_talis_abo.php">podcast interview with Talis</a>). <h4>Apparatus</h4> An Ontology - in this case we simply derived the <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/home/demo/Public/Queries/SQLRDFIntegraton/Explore_Northwind_Ontology.isparql">Northwind Ontology</a> from the XML Schema based CSDL (<a href="http://blogs.msdn.com/adonet/archive/2007/01/30/entity-data-model-part-1.aspx">Conceptual Schema Definition Language</a>) used by Microsoft's public <a href="http://astoria.mslivelabs.com/Default.aspx">Astoria demo</a> (specifically the <a href="http://astoria.mslivelabs.com/termsOfUseNorthwind.aspx?returnURL=Northwind">Northwind Data Services demo</a>). SQL Database Schema - <a href="http://www.microsoft.com/library/media/1033/technet/images/prodtechnol/sql/2000/maintain/sscpop07_big.gif">Northwind</a> (comes bundled with ACCESS, SQL Server, and Virtuoso) comprised of tables such as: <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/schemas/northwind#Customer">Customer</a>, <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/schemas/northwind#Employee">Employee</a>, <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/schemas/northwind#Product">Product</a>, <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/schemas/northwind#Category">Category</a>, <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/schemas/northwind#Supplier">Supplier</a>, <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/schemas/northwind#Shipper">Shipper</a> etc. <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/virtuoso/">OpenLink Virtuoso</a> - SQL DBMS Engine (although this could have been any <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_Database_Connectivity">ODBC</a> or <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Java_Database_Connectivity">JDBC</a> accessible Database), <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/virtuoso/Whitepapers/pdf/Virtuoso_SQL_to_RDF_Mapping.pdf">SQL-RDF Metaschema Language</a>, HTTP URL-rewriter, WebDAV Engine, and DBMS hosted XSLT processor Client Tools -<a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/isparql/"> iSPARQL Query Builder</a>, <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/JS/rdfbrowser/index.html">RDF Browser</a> (which could also have been <a href="http://www.w3.org/2005/ajar/tab">Tabulator</a> or<a href="http://sites.wiwiss.fu-berlin.de/suhl/bizer/ng4j/disco/"> DISCO</a> or a standard Web Browser) <h4>Experiment / Demo</h4> <ol> <li> Declaratively map the Northwind SQL Schema to RDF using the Virtuoso Meta Schema Language (see: <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/home/demo/Public/Queries/SQLRDFIntegraton/northwind_sql_rdf.sql">Virtuoso PL based Northwind_SQL_RDF script</a>) </li> <li> Start browsing the data by clicking on the URIs that represent the RDF Data Model Entities resulting from the SQL to RDF Mapping </li> </ol> <h4>Observations</h4> <ol> <li> Via a single Data Link click I was able to obtain specific information about the Customer represented by the URI <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/Northwind/Customer/ALFKI">"ALFKI"</a> (act of URI Dereferencing as you would an Object ID in an Object or Object-Relational Database) </li> <li> Via a <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/home/demo/Public/Queries/SQLRDFIntegraton/Explore_Northwind.isparql">Dynamic Data Page </a> I was able to explore all the entity relationships or specific entity data (i.e Exploratory or Entity specific dereferencing) in the Northwind Data Space </li> <li> I was able to perform similar exploration (as per item 2) using our <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/home/demo/Public/Queries/SQLRDFIntegraton/Explore_Northwind_Customer_ALFKI.wqx">OpenLink Browser. </a> </li> </ol> <h4>Conclusions</h4> <p>The vision of data, information, or knowledge at your fingertips is nigh! Thanks to the infrastructure provided by the Semantic Data Web (URIs, <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resource_Description_Framework">RDF Data Model</a>, variety of RDF Serialization Formats[<a href="http://www.dajobe.org/2004/01/turtle/">1</a>][<a href="http://www.w3.org/DesignIssues/Notation3">2</a>][<a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/2002/WD-rdf-syntax-grammar-20020325/">3</a>], and Shared Data Dictionaries / Schemas / Ontologies [<a href="http://xmlns.com/foaf/spec/">1</a>][<a href="http://rdfs.org/sioc/spec/">2</a>][<a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/swbp-skos-core-guide/">3</a>][<a href="http://musicontology.com/">4</a>][<a href="http://bblfish.net/work/atom-owl/2006-06-06/AtomOwl.html">5</a>]) it's now possible to Virtualize enterprise data from the Physical Storage Level, through the Logical Data Management Levels (Relational), up to a Concrete Conceptual Model (Graph) without operating system, development environment or framework, or database engine lock-in.</p> <h2>Next Steps</h2> <p>We produce a shared ontology for the CRM and Business Reporting Domains. I hope this experiment clarifies how this is quite achievable by converting XML Schemas to RDF Data Dictionaries (RDF Schemas or Ontologies). Stay tuned :-) </p> <p>Also watch <a href="http://news.com.com/1606-2-6189377.html">TimBL amplify and articulate Linked Data value</a> in a recent interview.</p> <h2>Other Related Matters</h2> <p>To deliver a mechanism that facilitates the crystallization of this reality is a contribution of boundless magnitude (as we shall all see in due course). Thus, it is easy to understand why even "her majesty", the queen of England, simply had to get in on the act and <a href="http://www.royal.gov.uk/output/Page1880.asp">appoint TimBL to the "British Order of Merit</a>" :-)</p> <p>Note: All of the demos above now work with IE & Safari (a "remember what Virtuoso is epiphany") by simply putting Virtuoso's DBMS hosted XSLT engine to use :-) This also applies to my earlier collection of demos from the <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&q=hello%20data%20web&type=text&output=html">Hello Data Web</a> and other <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&q=.isparql&type=text&output=html">Data Web & Linked Data related demo style posts</a>.</p>
Enterprise 0.0, Linked Data, and Semantic Data Web
2008-02-05T04:19:26Z
2008-02-04T23:19:26.000001-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1204
<p> <a href="http://fgiasson.com/">Frederick Giasson</a> has put out a number of interesting posts (via his <a href="http://fgiasson.com/blog/">blog</a>) about a conceptual <a href="http://fgiasson.com/blog/index.php/2007/05/24/the-music-data-space">Music Data Space</a> (one of many Data Spaces that will ultimately permeate the Semantic Data Web). Anyway, While reading his initial post covering <a href="http://fgiasson.com/blog/index.php/2007/05/22/browsing-musicbrainzs-dataset-via-uri-dereferencing">Music Domain URIs and Linked Data</a>, it occurred to me that by only exposing the raw RDF instance data (RDF/XML format in this case) via URIs for: Diana Ross, Paul McCartney, The Beatles, and Madonna, the essence of the post may not be revealed to all, so I've knocked up a few demos to illustrate the core message:</p> <p> <b>Note</b>: the enhanced hyperlink (typed data link) lookup presents options to perform an Explore (all data about subject across Domains in the data space i.e. data links to and from Subject), Dereference (specific data in the Subject's Domain i.e. data links originating from subject).</p> <ol> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.openlinksw.com:8890/DAV/home/demo/dataweb/linked_data_pages/Diana_Ross.isparql">Diana Ross</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.openlinksw.com:8890/DAV/home/demo/dataweb/linked_data_pages/Paul_McCartney.isparql">Paul McCartney</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.openlinksw.com:8890/DAV/home/demo/dataweb/linked_data_pages/The_Beatles.isparql">The Beatles</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.openlinksw.com:8890/DAV/home/demo/dataweb/linked_data_pages/Madonna.isparql">Madonna</a> </li> </ol> <p>I built these Linked Data Pages by simply doing the following:</p> <ol> <li>Open up our <a href="http://oat.openlinksw.com">OAT</a> based <a href="http://dbpedia.openlinksw.com:8890/isparql">iSPARQL (Interactive SPARQL Query By Example)</a> Tool</li> <li>Paste a URI of Interest into the Data Source URI input field</li> <li>Execute the Query (hitting the ">" button) </li> <li>Saving the Query to WebDAV as a Linked Data Page (or what I initial called Dynamic Data Web pages in my Hello Data Web series of posts).</li> <li>Share your Data, Information, Knowledge with others via URIs (as shown in the section above). </li> </ol>
Exploring a Music Data Space via Linked Data
2008-02-05T04:20:47Z
2008-02-04T23:20:47.000003-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1187
<p> <a href="http://www.mkbergman.com">Mike Bergman</a> has written a very detailed <a href="http://www.mkbergman.com/?p=355">article about OpenLink Software and it's product portfolio</a> that basically answers the question: What has OpenLink been Up To?</p> <p>As the company's founder, it was quite compelling to read a third party article that accurately navigates and articulates the depth of work that we've undertaken since <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/wiki/main/Main/VOSHistory">that seminal moment in 1997</a> when we decided to extend our product portfolio beyond the <a href="http://uda.openlinksw.com">Universal Data Access Drivers</a> family.</p> <p>Of course I also take this opportunity to slip in another Semantic Data Web demo :-) Thus, take a look at this mother of all blog posts from Mike via the following:</p> <ol> <li> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/JS/rdfbrowser/index.html?uri=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.mkbergman.com%2F%3Fp%3D355">OpenLink RDF Browser Session</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.openlinksw.com:8890/DAV/home/demo/dbpedia/Dynamic_Pages/Mike_Bergman_Reviews_OpenLink_Software.isparql">Dynamic Data Web Page</a> </li> </ol> <p>Note: In both cases above, you use the "Explore" or "Dereference" options of the Data Link (typed hyperlink) to traverse the RDF data that has been materialized "on the fly" courtesy of <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/blog/~kidehen/?id=1172">Virtuoso's in-built RDF Middleware</a> (called the Sponger).</p> <p>BTW - I am assembling a collection of interesting <a href="http://dbpedia.org">DBpedia</a> based Dynamic pages that showcase the depth of knowledge available from <a href="http://wikipedia.org">Wikipedia</a>. If you're a current or future technology entrepreneur (or VC trying to grok the Semantic Web) then you certainly need to look at:</p> <ol> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.openlinksw.com:8890/DAV/home/demo/dbpedia/Dynamic_Pages/All_About_Venture_Capital.isparql">Venture Capital</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.openlinksw.com:8890/DAV/home/demo/dbpedia/Dynamic_Pages/All_About_Venture_Capital_Firms.isparql">Venture Capital Firms</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.openlinksw.com:8890/DAV/home/demo/dbpedia/Dynamic_Pages/All_About_Venture_Capitalists.isparql">Venture Capitalists</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.openlinksw.com:8890/DAV/home/demo/dbpedia/Dynamic_Pages/Entrepreneurs_By_Nationality.isparql">Entrepreneurs By Nationality</a> </li> </ol>
What's OpenLink Software been Up To?
2008-02-05T01:47:40Z
2008-02-04T20:47:40.000001-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1185
<b>Web Data Spaces</b> <p>Now that broader understanding of the Semantic Data Web is emerging, I would like to revisit the issue of "<a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&q='data%20spaces'&type=text&output=html">Data Spaces</a>".</p> <p>A Data Space is a place where Data Resides. It isn't inherently bound to a specific Data Model (<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Network_model">Concept Oriented</a>, <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Relational_model">Relational</a>, <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hierarchical_database">Hierarchical</a> etc..). Neither is it implicitly an access point to Data, Information, or Knowledge (the perception is purely determined through the experiences of the user agents interacting with the Data Space.</p> <p>A Web Data Space is a Web accessible Data Space.</p> <p>Real world example:</p> <p>Today we increasing perform one of more of the following tasks as part of our professional and personal interactions on the Web:</p> <ol> <li>Blog via many service providers or personally managed weblog platforms</li> <li>Create Event Calendars via <a href="http://upcoming.com">Upcoming.com</a> and <a href="http://eventful.com">Eventful</a> </li> <li>Maintain and participate in Social Networks (e.g. <a href="http://facebook.com">Facebook</a>, <a href="http://orkut.com">Orkut</a>, <a href="http://myspace.com">MySpace</a>)</li> <li>Create and Participate in Discussions (note: when you comment on blogs or wikis for instance, you are participating in, or creating, a conversation)</li> <li>Track news by subscribing to <a href="http://web.resource.org/rss/1.0/">RSS 1.0</a>, <a href="http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/rss/rss.html">RSS 2.0</a>, or <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atom_(standard)">Atom</a> Feeds</li> <li>Share Bookmarks & Tags via <a href="http://del.icio.us">Del.icio.us</a> and other Services</li> <li>Share Photos via <a href="http://flickr.com">Flickr</a> </li> <li>Buy, Review, or Search for books via <a href="http://amazon.com">Amazon</a> </li> <li>Participates in auctions via <a href="http://ebay.com">eBay</a> </li> <li>Search for data via <a href="http://google.com">Google</a> (of course!)</li> </ol> <p> <a href="http://www.johnbreslin.com/">John Breslin</a> has nice a <a href="http://www.johnbreslin.com/blog/wp-content/20051015a.gif">animation depicting the creation of Web Data Spaces</a> that drives home the point.</p> <b>Web Data Space Silos</b> <p> Unfortunately, what isn't as obvious to many netizens, is the fact that each of the activities above results in the creation of data that is put into some context by you the user. Even worse, you eventually realize that the service providers aren't particularly willing, or capable of, giving you unfettered access to your own data. Of course, this isn't always by design as the infrastructure behind the service can make this a nightmare from security and/or load balancing perspectives. Irrespective of cause, we end up creating our own "Data Spaces" all over the Web without a coherent mechanism for accessing and meshing these "Data Spaces".</p> <b>What are Semantic Web Data Spaces?</b> <p>Data Spaces on the Web that provide granular access to RDF Data.</p> <b>What's OpenLink Data Spaces (ODS) About?</b> <blockquote> <p>Short History</p> <p>In anticipation of this the "Web Data Silo" challenge (an issue that we tackled within internal enterprise networks for years) we commenced the development (circa. 2001) of a distributed collaborative application suite called OpenLink Data Spaces (ODS). The project was never released to the public since the problems associated with the deliberate or inadvertent creation of Web Data silos hadn't really materialized (silos only emerged in concreted form after the emergence of the Blogosphere and Web 2.0). In addition, there wasn't a clear standard Query Language for the RDF based Web Data Model (i.e. the SPARQL Query Language didn't exist).</p> </blockquote> <p> Today, ODS is delivered as a packaged solution (in Open Source and Commercial flavors) that alleviates the pain associated with Data Space Silos that exist on the Web and/or behind corporate firewalls. In either scenario, ODS simply allows you to create Open and Secure Data Spaces (via it's suite of applications) that expose data via SQL, RDF, XML oriented data access and data management technologies. Of course it also enables you to integrates transparently with existing 3rd party data space generators (Blogs, Wikis, Shared Bookmrks, Discussion etc. services) by supporting industry standards that cover:</p> <ol> <li> Content Publishing - Atom, <a href="http://www.sixapart.com/developers/product_documentation/movable_type/">Moveable Type</a>, <a href="http://www.xmlrpc.com/metaWeblogApi">MetaWeblog</a>, Blogger protocols </li> <li> Content Syndication Formats - RSS 1.0, RSS 2.0, Atom, OPML etc. </li> <li> Data Management - <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SQL">SQL</a>, <a href="http://www.w3.org/RDF/">RDF</a>, XML, Free Text </li> <li> Data Access - SQL, <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/rdf-sparql-query/">SPARQL</a>, GData, Web Services (SOAP or REST styles), WebDAV/HTTP </li> <li> Semantic Data Web Middleware - <a href="http://www.w3.org/2004/01/rdxh/spec">GRDDL</a>, <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/xslt">XSLT</a>, SPARQL, XPath/XQuery, HTTP (Content Negotiation) for producing RDF from non RDF Data ((X)HTML, Microformats, XML, Web Services Response Data etc). </li> </ol> <p>Thus, by installing ODS on your Desktop, Workgroup, Enterprise, or public Web Server, you end up with a very powerful solution for creating Open Data access oriented presence on the "Semantic Data Web" without incurring any of the typically assumed "RDF Tax".</p> <p>Naturally, ODS is built atop <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com">Virtuoso</a> and of course it exploits Virtuoso's feature-set to the max. It's also beginning to exploit functionality offered by the OpenLink Ajax Toolkit (<a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/JS/demo/index.html">OAT</a>).</p>
Semantic Web Data Spaces
2007-04-13T22:19:29Z
2007-04-13T18:19:29.000001-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1165
<p>A defining characteristic of the Data Web (Context Oriented Web 3.0) is that it facilitates Meshups rather than Mashups.</p> <p>Quick Definitions:</p> <ul> Mashups - Brute force joining of disparate Web Data</ul> <ul> Meshups - Natural joining of disparate Web Data </ul> <p> Reasons for the distinction:</p> <ul>Mashups are Data Model oblivious.</ul> <ul>Meshups are Data Model driven.</ul> <p>Examples:</p> <ul> Mashups are based on RSS 2.0 most of the time (RSS 2.0 is at best a Tree Structure that contains untyped or meaning challenged links.</ul> <ul> Meshups are RDF based and the data is self describing since the links are typed (posses inherent meaning thereby providing context).</ul> <p>So what? You may be thinking.</p> <p>For starters, I can quite easily Mesh data from Googlebase (which emits RSS 2.0 or Atom) and other data sources with the Mapping Services from Yahoo!</p> <p>I can achieve this in minutes without writing a single line of code. I can do it because of the Data Model prowess of RDF (self-describing instance-data), the data interchange and transformation power of XML and XSLT respectively, the inherent power of XML based Web Services (REST or SOAP), and of course, having a Hybrid Server product like <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virtuoso_Universal_Server">Virtuoso</a> at my disposal that delivers a cross platform solution for exploiting all of these standards coherently.</p> <p>I can share the self-describing describing data source that serves my Meshup. Try reusing the data presented by a Mashup via the same URL that you used to locate Mashup to get my drift.</p> <p>Demo Links:</p> <ol> <li> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/JS/rdfbrowser/index.html#http%3A%2F%2Fdemo.openlinksw.com%2FDAV%2Fhome%2Fdemo%2FPublic%2FQueries%2FDataWeb%2Fgoogle_base_jobs_dataspace.isparql">Googlebase Query URL as an RDF Data Source</a> </li> <li>Perform a simple Data Mesh by adding (via link copy and paste) this <a href="http://upcoming.org/search/?q=ajax&scope=allmetros&type=Events">Upcoming.org Query Services URL for Ajax Events</a> to the RDF Browsers list of Data Sources (paste into the Data Source URI input field).</li> </ol> <p>What does this all mean?</p> <p>"Context" is the catalyst of the burgeoning Data Web (Semantic Web Layer - 1). It's the <a href="http://sramanamitra.com/blog/729">emerging appreciation of "Context"</a> that is driving the growing desire to increment Web versions from 2.0 to 3.0. It also the the very same "Context" that has been a preoccupation of <a href="http://www.w3.org/2001/sw/Activity">Semantic Web vision</a> since its inception.</p> <p>The journey towards a more Semantic Web is all inclusive (all "ANDs" and no "ORs" re. participation).</p> <p>The Semantic Web is <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/blog/~kidehen/?id=887">self-annotating</a>. Web 2.0 has provided a huge contribution to the self annotation effort: on the Web we now have Data Spaces for Bookmarks (e.g del.icio.us), Image Galleries ( e.g Flickr), Discussion Forums (remember those comments associated with blog posts? ditto the pingbacks and trackbacks?), People Profiles (FOAF, XFN, del.icio.us, and those crumbling walled-gardens around many Social Networks), and more..</p> <p>A Web without granular access to Data is simply not a Web worth having (think about the menace of click-fraud and spam).</p>
Data Web, Googlebase, and Yahoo!
2007-03-22T23:14:55Z
2007-03-22T19:14:55-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1161
<blockquote> <cite><p>(Via <a href="http://www.readwriteweb.com/">Read/Write Web</a>.)</p> <p> <a href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/readwriteweb/~3/102869973/web_30_when_web_sites_become_web_services.php">Web 3.0: When Web Sites Become Web Services</a>: "</p> ..... <h2>Conclusion</h2> <p>As more and more of the Web is becoming remixable, the entire system is turning into both a platform and the database. Yet, such transformations are never smooth. For one, scalability is a big issue. And of course legal aspects are never simple.'</p> <p>But it is not a question of <i>if</i> web sites become web services, but <i>when</i> and <i>how</i>. APIs are a more controlled, cleaner and altogether preferred way of becoming a web service. However, when APIs are not avaliable or sufficient, scraping is bound to continue and expand. As always, time will be best judge; but in the meanwhile we turn to you for feedback and stories about how <i>your</i> businesses are preparing for 'web 3.0'.</p> </cite> </blockquote> <p> We are hitting a little problem re. Web 3.0 and Web 2.0, naturally :-) Web 2.0 is one of several (present and future) <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/blog/~kidehen/?id=1037">Dimensions of Web Interaction</a> that turns Web Sites into Web Services Endpoints; <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&q=web+dimensions">a point I've made repeatedly</a> [<a href="http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/points_of_prese.php">1</a>] [<a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/blog/~kidehen/?date=2005-10-04">2</a>] [<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Web_2.0&oldid=11544998">3</a>] [<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Web_2.0&oldid=11679210">4</a>] across the blogosphere, in addition to my early futile attempts to make the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Web_2">Wikipedia's Web 2.0 article</a> meaningful (circa 2005), as per the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Web_2.0/Archive_1">Wikipedia Web 2.0 Talk Page </a>excerpt below:</p> <blockquote> <cite><p>Web 2.0 is a web of executable endpoints and well formed content. The executable endpoints and well formed content are accessible via URIs. Put differently, Web 2.0 is a web defined by URIs for invoking Web Services and/or consuming or syndicating well formed content.</p> <p>Hopefully, someone with more time on their hands will expand on this ( I am kinda busy)</p>. <p>BTW - Web 2.0 being a platform doesn't distinguish it in anyway from Web 1.0. They are both platforms, the difference comes down to platform focus and mode of experience.</p> </cite> </blockquote> <p> <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Web_3.0">Web 3.0</a> is about <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/blog/~kidehen/?id=1030">Data Spaces</a>: Points of Semantic Web Presence that provide granular access to Data, Information, and Knowledge via <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conceptual_schema">Conceptual Data Model</a> oriented Query Languages and/or APIs.</p> <p>The common denominator across all the current and future Web Interaction Dimensions is HTTP. While their differences are as follows:</p> <ul> Web 1.0 - Browser (HTTP + (X)HTML) </ul> <ul> Web 2.0 - Presence (Web Service Endpoints for REST or SOAP over HTTP) </ul> <ul>Web 3.0 - Presence (Query Languages, <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Database_model">Data Models</a>, and HTTP based Query Oriented Web Service Endpoints) </ul> <p>Examples of Web 3.0 Infrastructure:</p> <ol> <li>Query Languages: <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/rdf-sparql-query/">SPARQL</a>, <a href="http://code.google.com/apis/base/query-lang-spec.html">Googlebase Query Language</a>, <a href="http://developers.facebook.com/documentation.php?v=1.0&doc=fql">Facebook Query Language</a> (FQL), and many others to come</li> <li>Query Language aligned Web Services (Query Services): <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/rdf-sparql-protocol/">SPARQL Protocol</a>, <a href="http://code.google.com/apis/gdata/overview.html#About">GData</a>, or REST style Web services such as<a href="http://developers.facebook.com/documentation.php?v=1.0&method=fql.query"> Facebook's service for FQ</a>L.</li> <li>Data Models: Concrete Conceptual Data Model (which RDF happens to deliver for Web Data)</li> </ol> <p>Web 3.0 is not purely about Web Sites becoming Web Services endpoints. It is about the "M" (Data Model) taking it's place in the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Model-view-controller">MVC pattern</a> as applied to the Web Platform.</p> <p>I will repeat myself yet again: </p> <blockquote> <cite>The Devil is in the Details of the Data Model. Data Models make or break everything. You ignore data at your own peril. No amount of money in the bank will protect you from Data Ignorance! A bad Data Model will bring down any venture or enterprise, the only variable is time (where time is directly related to your increasing need to obtain, analyze, and then act on data, over repetitive operational cycles, that have ever decreasing intervals). </cite> </blockquote> <p>This applies to the Real-time enterprise of Information and/or knowledge workers and Real-time Web Users alike.</p> <p>BTW -<a href="http://www.youtube.com/v/xHWTLA8WecI"> Data Makes Shifts Happen</a> (spotter: <a href="http://www.vecosys.com">Sam Sethi</a>). </p>
Web 3.0: When Web Sites Become Web Services
2007-03-20T12:27:37Z
2007-03-20T08:27:37-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1158
<p>Here are some examples of using <a href="http://simile.mit.edu/exhibit/" id="link-id0xa014fae8">Exhibit</a> against <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resource_Description_Framework" id="link-id0xa257aae0">RDF</a> via <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SPARQL" id="link-id0xa0ab8fc8">SPARQL</a> on the fly:</p> <ol> <li> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/VAD/ajax-tools/exhibit-sparql/flickr_semweb_tags.html" id="link-id0xa2ad8550">Flickr photos tagged under rdf and semanticweb</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/VAD/ajax-tools/exhibit-sparql/del_icio_us_tags.html" id="link-id0x9e814cf8">Del.icio.us tags for semanticweb</a> </li> </ol> <p>The examples above combine <a href="http://oat.openlinksw.com" id="link-id0x9ee07e88">OAT</a> and Exhibit. OAT handles the binding to SPARQL.</p> <p>Here is a pure OAT variation of the prior examples that includes an enhanced anchor (hyperlink) feature that enables a variety of traversal behaviors and actions against the same RDF Data:</p> <ol> <li> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/home/demo/Public/Queries/flickr_semanticweb_rdf_dataspace.isparql.xml" id="link-id0x9ee87f70">Dynamic Data Web Page for Flickr photos tagged under rdf and semanticweb</a> (click on a URI associated with a jpeg to see metadata for a given picture)</li> <li> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/home/demo/Public/Queries/delicious_semantic_dataspace.isparql.xml" id="link-id0xa014e408">Del.icio.us tags for semanticweb</a>.</li> </ol> <p>Note: Use the "dereference option" (retrieve/get data associated with URI) for maximum effect. The "explore" is useful after you've dereferenced a few URIs. Also note that columns are resizable, like those in a spreadsheet, which also implies dynamic sorting capability.</p>
Exhibit & SPARQL
2008-03-20T04:14:10Z
2008-03-20T00:14:10-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1148
<blockquote> <p> <a href="http://www.johnbreslin.com/blog/2007/03/01/linking-personal-posted-content-across-communities/#comments">Linking personal posted content across communities</a>: "</p> <p>With the help of Kingsley, Uldis and I have been looking at how <a href="http://sioc-project.org/">SIOC</a> can be used to link the content that a single person posts to a number of community sites. The picture below shows an example of stuff that I’ve created on Flickr, YouTube, etc. through my various user identities on those sites (these match some <a href="http://wiki.sioc-project.org/index.php/TypesModule">SIOC types</a> that we want to add to a separate module). We can also say that each Web 2.0 content item is a user-contributed post, with some attached or embedded content (e.g. a file or maybe just some metadata). This is part of a new discussion on the <a href="http://groups.google.com/group/sioc-dev">sioc-dev</a> mailing list, and we’d value your contributions.</p> <p> <img id="image1178" src="http://www.johnbreslin.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2007/03/20070228a.png" alt="20070228a.png" /> </p> <p>Edit: The inner layer is a person (semantically described in FOAF), the next layer is their user accounts (described in FOAF, SIOC) and the outer layer is the posted content - text, files, associated metadata - on community sites (again described using SIOC). </p> No Tags" <p>(Via <a href="http://www.johnbreslin.com/blog">John Breslin - Cloudlands</a>.)</p> </blockquote> <p>The point that John is making about the Data Web and Interlinked <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&q='data%20spaces'&type=text&output=html">Data Spaces</a> exposed via <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uniform_Resource_Identifier">URI</a>s (e.g Personal URIs), crystallizes a number of very important issues about the Data Web that may remain unclear. I am hoping that by digesting the post excerpt above, in conjunction with the items below, aids the pursuit of clarity and comprehension about the all important Data Web (Semantic Web - Layer 1):</p> <ol> <li> <a href="http://kidehen.idehen.net/dataspace/kidehen">Your OpenID can be Your Personal URI</a> (as noted by <a href="http://blogs.sun.com/bblfish/">Henry Story</a>'s post about: <a href="http://blogs.sun.com/bblfish/entry/openid_for_blogs_sun_com">The Many Uses of OpenID</a>). That that's what I have courtesy of OpenLink Data Spaces (ODS)</li> <li>The above only works unobtrusively (i.e. OpenID and Personal sharing a URI) if Content Negotiation is exploited on the Client and Server sides.</li> <li> <a href="http://www.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee/card.rdf">TimBL</a>'s call out to <a href="http://www.w3.org/DesignIssues/LinkedData.html">Share Your Data and Link to Other Data</a> via URIs via post titled: <a href="http://dig.csail.mit.edu/breadcrumbs/node/71">Give Yourself a URI</a>.</li> <li> <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/swbp-vocab-pub/">W3C's Best Practice Recipes for Publishing RDF Vocabularies</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/2004/REC-webarch-20041215/#dereference-uri">W3C's Architecture of the World Wide Web - Vol 1</a> which covers URI Dereferencing (HTTP GET-ing the data that a URI points to)</li> <li> <a href="http://www4.wiwiss.fu-berlin.de/is-group/page/persons/Person6">Richard Cyganiak</a>'s post titled: <a href="http://dowhatimean.net/2007/02/debugging-semantic-web-sites-with-curl">Debugging Semantic Web Sites with Curl</a>.</li> </ol> <p>Examples of some of these principles in practice:</p> <ol> <li>Chris Bizer, Tobias Gaub, and Richard's Javascript based<a href="http://sites.wiwiss.fu-berlin.de/suhl/bizer/ng4j/semwebclient/"> Semantic Web Client Library</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://sites.wiwiss.fu-berlin.de/suhl/bizer/ng4j/disco/">DISCO RDF Browser</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://oat.openlinksw.com">OpenLink Ajax Toolkit</a>'s (OAT) <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/JS/tests/rdfbrowser/index.html">RDF Browser</a> </li> <li>OpenLink <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/isparql">Interactive SPARQL Query by Example</a> (iSPARQL QBE)</li> <li>Dynamic Data Web Pages from my prior posts [<a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/blog/~kidehen/?id=1144">1</a>][<a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/blog/~kidehen/index.vspx?page=&id=1145">2</a>][<a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/blog/~kidehen/index.vspx?page=&id=1146">3</a>]</li> <li> <a href="http://dbpedia.org/docs/">dbpedia</a> (Wikipedia as a Data Web oriented Data Source)</li> <li>And of course this blog post's permalink is a bona fide dereferencable URI.</li> </ol> <p>And of course there is more to come such as Grandma's Semantic Web Browser which is coming from <a href="http://fgiasson.com/blog/index.php/2007/02/18/zitgist_a_semantic_web_search_engine">Zitgist LLC</a> (pronounced: Zeitgeist) a joint venture of OpenLink Software and <a href="http://fgiasson.com/blog/">Frederick Giasson</a>.</p>
Personal URIs & Data Spaces
2007-03-02T14:14:02Z
2007-03-02T09:14:02.000004-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1140
<blockquote> <p> <a href="http://blog.jonudell.net/2007/02/15/xmp-and-microformats-revisited/#comments">XMP and microformats revisited</a>: "</p> <div class="snap_preview"> <p> Yesterday I exercised poetic license when I suggested that Adobe’s <a href="http://www.adobe.com/products/xmp/overview.html">Extensible metadata platform (XMP)</a> was not only the spiritual cousin of microformats like <a href="http://microformats.org/wiki/hcalendar">hCalendar</a> but also, perhaps, more likely to see widespread use in the near term. My poetic license was revoked, though, in a couple of comments: </p> <blockquote> <p> <a href="http://gondwanaland.com/mlog/2007/02/14/xmp-microformat/">Mike Linksvayer</a>: How someone as massively clued-in as Jon Udell could be so misled as to describe XMP as a microformat is beyond me. </p> </blockquote> <blockquote> <p> <a href="http://dannyayers.com/2007/02/15/microsoft-vista-slipup">Danny Ayers</a>: Like Mike I don’t really understand Jon’s references to microformats - I first assumed he meant XMP could be replaced with a uF. </p> </blockquote> <p> Actually, I’m serious about this. If I step back and ask myself what are the essential qualities of a microformat, it’s a short list: </p> <ol> <li>A small chunk of machine-readable metadata,</li> <li>embedded in a document.</li> </ol> <p> Mike notes: </p> <blockquote> <p> XMP is embedded in a binary file, completely opaque to nearly all users; microformats put a premium on (practically require) colocation of metadata with human-visible HTML. </p> </blockquote> <p> Yes, I understand. And as someone who is composing this blog entry as XHTML, in emacs, using a semantic CSS tag that will enable me to search for quotes by Mike Linksvayer and find the above fragment, I’m obviously all about metadata coexisting with human-readable HTML. And I’ve been applying this technique since <a href="http://webservices.xml.com/lpt/a/1223">long before</a> I ever heard the term microformats — my own term was originally microcontent. </p> <p>(Via <a href="http://blog.jonudell.net">Jon Udell</a>.)</p> <p>I believe Jon is acknowledging the fact that the propagation of metadata in "Binary based" Web data sources is no different to the microformats based propagation that is currently underway in full swing across the "Text based" Web data sources realm. He is reiterating the fact that the Web is self-annotating (exponentially) by way of Metadata Embedding. And yes, what he describes is a similar to Microformats in substance and propagation style :-)</p> <p>Here is what I believe Jon is hoping to see:</p> <ol> <li> Binary files become valid data sources for Metadata oriented query processing. Technically I mean a binary file becomes a valid data source from which RDF Instance could be generated on the fly. </li> <li>Enhanement or unveiling of the Data Web by way of meshups that combine metadata from an array or data sources (not just the XML, (X)HTML, or RDF variety)</li> <li>The ability to use an array of query languages and techniques to construct these meshups</li> </ol> <p>My little "<a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/blog/%7Ekidehen/index.vspx?page=&id=1137">Hello Data Web!</a>" meme was about demonstrating a view that Danny has sought for a while: unobtrusive <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/grddl-scenarios/">meshing of microformats and RDF via GRDDL and SPARQL</a> binding that simply eliminates the often perceived "RDF Tax". Danny, Jon, myself, and many others have always understood that making the Data Web (Web of RDF Instance Data) more of a Force (Star Wars style) is the key to unravelling the power of the "Web as a Database". Of course, we also tend the describe our nirvana in different ways that sometimes obscures the fundamental commonality of vision that we all share.</p> <p> Personally, I believe everyone should simply "feel the force" or observe "the bright and dark sides of the force" that is <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resource_Description_Framework">RDF</a>. When this occurs en masse there will be a global epiphany (similar to what happened around the time of the initial unveiling of the Web of Hypertext). Jon's meme brings the often overlooked realm of binary based metadata sources into the general discourse.</p> <p>JBinary Files as bona fide Data Web URIs (i.e. Metadata Sources) is much closer than you think :-) I should have my "Hello Data Web of Binary Data Sources" unveiled very soon!</p> </div> </blockquote>
XMP and microformats revisited
2007-02-17T17:43:05Z
2007-02-17T12:43:05.000001-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1119
<p> <a href="http://www.innovationcreators.com">Rob Boothby</a> aptly describes the <a href="http://www.innovationcreators.com/2007/01/you_must_reach_out_to_win_in_a.html">recipe for success in a networked world</a>.</p> <p>Our loosely coupled webs of hypertext, services, and data present an intriguing realm of perpetually expanding and contracting clusters (aka conversations as exemplified by <a href="http://labs.digg.com/swarm/">digg swarms</a>). The only issue we have today is that you cannot perceive the aforementioned realm through the lenses of the Hypertext- or Interactive-Web or the API oriented Services-Web. Which is why we need a new frontier in the web innovation continuum. A frontier that unveils, with clarity, the somewhat unperceived realm of "People and Data Networks" en route to simplifying "<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Network_effect">Network Effects</a>" exploitation: spotting, connecting to, and constructing conversation clusters.</p> <p>Once again, this is what the Semantic Web facilitates by delivering a Data Model that exposes these "People & Data Networks". When you write a blog post, comment on a blog post, share bookmarks, tag resources, share and tag photos etc. You are contributing links and nodes to this network :-)</p>
Network Effects Exploitation the Key to Success!
2007-01-11T23:01:02Z
2007-01-11T18:01:02-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1104
<p> <a href="http://apassant.net/blog/post/2006/12/22/The-Music-Ontology">The Music Ontology</a>: "</p> <p>A new and exciting project in the Semantic Web area: <a href="http://pingthesemanticweb.com/ontology/mo/" hreflang="en">The Music Ontology</a>, by <a href="http://fgiasson.com" hreflang="en">Frederic Giasson</a> (PTSW, TalkDigger).</p> <p>Its goal is to provide a vocabulary to describe Artists, Releases, Songs and so on in RDF. It is mainly based on the <a href="http://www.ldodds.com/projects/musicbrainz/schema/mb.html" hreflang="en">MusicBrainz Metadata Vocabulary</a>, but with new improvements as defining relationships between artists and links to external services. And, most important thing, a lot of triples from the current <a href="http://musicbrainz.com" hreflang="en">MusicBrainz</a> database should be available in a few weeks. A <a href="http://www.fuzzlogic.com/flex/" hreflang="en">mailing-list</a> has been launched for discussions and improvements.</p> <p>I was waiting for this kind of vocabulary (and data) for some time (as I never took time to look as <a href="http://musicbrainz.org/doc/Database" hreflang="en">MBz database export</a>) especially to easilly find all covers of a given song. From another point of view, I'll be happy to use it to represent - and query - various releases of a given record (using the <code>mo:other_release_of property</code>), especially for vynil <a href="http://www.fuzzlogic.com/flex/g/2155.php" hreflang="en">records with reissues</a> (so what about a <code>mo:reissue</code> property ?) with different colors, inner sleeve ...</p> <p>Well, finally what about converting the <a href="http://www.fuzzlogic.com/flex/" hreflang="en">FLEX book</a> in RDF to query this huge punk and hardcore database (and use its URIs for want-lists) ?</p>" <p>(Via <a href="http://apassant.net/blog/">Alexandre Passant - Terraces</a>.)</p>
The Music Ontology
2006-12-26T16:18:28Z
2006-12-26T11:18:28.000005-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1100
<p>The W3C RDF Data Access Working Group recently released an initial public Working Draft specification for "<a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/2004/WD-rdf-dawg-uc-20040602/"><font color="#000000">RDF Data Access Use Cases and Requirements</font></a>". Naturally, this triggered discussion on the RDF mailing list along the following lines:</p> <blockquote dir="ltr" style="margin-right: 0px;"> <p>In section, 4.1 Human-friendly Syntax, you say<font size="4"><b> </b></font>"There must be a text-based form of the query language which can be read and written by users of the language", and you list the status as "pending".</p> <p>As background for section 4.1, you may be interested in <a href="http://www.aifb.uni-karlsruhe.de/WBS/pha/rdf-query/">RDFQueryLangComparison1</a> (original text replaced with live link).<br /> <br />It shows how to write queries in a form that includes English meanings.<br /> <br />The example queries can be run by pointing a browser to <a eudora="autourl" href="http://www.reengineeringllc.com/" title="http://www.reengineeringllc.com/">www.reengineeringllc.com</a> .<br /> <br />Perhaps importantly, given the intricacy of RDF for nonprogrammers, one can get an English explanation of the result of each query.<br /> <br />-- Dr. Adrian Walker of <a href="https://www.reengineeringllc.com/ibl_login.html#about">Internet Business Logic </a> </p> </blockquote> <p dir="ltr">The Semantic Web continues to take shape, and Infonauts (information centric agents) are already taking <a href="http://www.reengineeringllc.com/IBL_tutorial_part1.html">shape</a>.</p> <p dir="ltr">A great thing about the net is the "back to the future" nature of most Web and Internet technology. For instance we are now frenzied about Service Oriented Architecture (SOA), Event Drivent Architecture (EDA), Loose Coupling of Composite Services etc. Basically rehashing the CORBA vision.</p> <p dir="ltr">I see the Semantic Web playing a similar role in relation to artificial intelligence. </p> <p dir="ltr">BTW - It still always comes down to data, and as you can imagine <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/virtuoso">Virtuoso</a> will be playing its usual role of alleviating the practical implementation and ulization challenges of all of the above :-)</p> <p dir="ltr"> </p>
Comparison of RDF Query Languages
2006-12-14T20:53:29Z
2006-12-14T15:53:29-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1095
<p>A quick dump that demonstrates how I integrate tags and links from del.icio.us with links from my local bookmark database via one of my public Data Spaces (this demo uses the <a href="http://myopenlink.net:8890/dataspace/kidehen">kidehen Data Space</a>).</p> <p> <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/rdf-sparql-query/">SPARQL</a> (query language for the Semantic Web) basically enables me to query a collection of typed links (predicates/properties/attributes) in my Data Space (<a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/wiki/main/Main/OdsIndex">ODS</a> based of course) without breaking my existing local bookmarks database or the one I maintain at del.icio.us.</p> <p>I am also demonstrating how <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Web_2.0">Web 2.0</a> concepts such as <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tags">Tagging</a> mesh nicely with the more formal concepts of Topics in the Semantic Web realm. The key to all of this is the ability to generate <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/rdf-primer/">RDF Data Model</a> Instance Data based on <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Upper_ontology_(computer_science)">Shared Ontologies</a> such as <a href="http://rdfs.org/sioc/spec/">SIOC</a> (from <a href="http://www.semanticweb.org/">DERI</a>'s <a href="http://sioc-project.org/">SIOC Project</a>) and <a href="http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/">SKOS</a> (again showing that <a href="http://tomgruber.org/writing/ontology-of-folksonomy.htm">Ontologies and Folksonomies</a> are complimentary).</p> <p>This demo also shows that Ajax also works well in the Semantic Web realm (or <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/blog/~kidehen/?id=1037">web dimension of interaction 3.0</a>) especially when you have a toolkit with Data Aware controls (for SQL, RDF, and XML) such as OAT (<a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/JS/demo/index.html">OpenLink Ajax Toolkit</a>). For instance, we've successfully used this to build a <a href="http://myopenlink.net:8890/isparl/">Visual Query Building Tool for SPARQL</a> (alpha) that really takes a lot of the pain out of constructing SPARQL Queries (there is much more to come on this front re. handling of DISTINCT, FILTER, ORDER BY etc..). </p> <p>For now, take a look at the SPARQL Query dump generated by this <a href="http://myopenlink.net:8890/DAV/home/kidehen/gallery/my_photos/sparql_qbe_sioc_skos_shot1.png">SIOC & SKOS SPARQL QBE Canvas Screenshot</a>. </p> <p>You can cut and paste the queries that follow into the Query Builder or use the screenshot to build your variation of this query sample. Alternatively, you can simply click on *<a href="http://myopenlink.net:8890/sparql?default-graph-uri=http%3A%2F%2Fmyopenlink.net%2Fdataspace&query=PREFIX+rdf%3A+%3Chttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.w3.org%2F1999%2F02%2F22-rdf-syntax-ns%23%3E%0D%0APREFIX+sioc%3A+++%3Chttp%3A%2F%2Frdfs.org%2Fsioc%2Fns%23%3E%0D%0APREFIX+dct%3A+%3Chttp%3A%2F%2Fpurl.org%2Fdc%2Felements%2F1.1%2F%3E%0D%0APREFIX+skos%3A+%3Chttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.w3.org%2F2004%2F02%2Fskos%2Fcore%23%3E%0D%0A%0D%0ASELECT+distinct+%3Fforum_name%2C+%3Fowner%2C+%3Fpost%2C+%3Ftitle%2C+%3Flink%2C+%3Furl+%3Ftag%0D%0AFROM+%3Chttp%3A%2F%2Fmyopenlink.net%2Fdataspace%3E%0D%0AWHERE+%7B%0D%0A++++++++%3Fforum+a+sioc%3AForum.%0D%0A++++++++%3Fforum+sioc%3Atype+%22bookmark%22.%0D%0A++++++++%3Fforum+sioc%3Aid+%3Fforum_name.%0D%0A++++++++%3Fforum+sioc%3Ahas_member+%3Fowner.%0D%0A++++++++%3Fowner+sioc%3Aid+%22kidehen%22.%0D%0A++++++++%3Fforum+sioc%3Acontainer_of+%3Fpost+.%0D%0A++++++++%3Fpost++dct%3Atitle+%3Ftitle+.%0D%0A++++++++optional+%7B+%3Fpost+sioc%3Atopic+%3Ftopic.%0D%0A+++++++++++++++++++%3Ftopic+a+skos%3AConcept%3B%0D%0A+++++++++++++++++++++++++skos%3AprefLabel+%3Ftag.+%7D%0D%0A++++++++optional%7B+%3Fpost+sioc%3Alink+%3Flink++%7D+.%0D%0A++++++++optional%7B+%3Fpost+sioc%3Alinks_to+%3Furl+%7D%0D%0A++++++%7D%0D%0AORDER+BY+%3Ftitle&format=text%2Fhtml">This</a>* <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/rdf-sparql-protocol/">SPARQL Protocol</a> URL to see the query results in a basic HTML Table. And one last thing, you can grab the <a href="http://myopenlink.net:8890/DAV/home/kidehen/SPARQL/tagging_sioc_skos_delicios_my_bookmarks.rq">SPARQL Query File</a> saved into my <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/wiki/main/Main/OdsBriefcase">ODS-Briefcase</a> (the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WebDAV">WebDAV</a> repository aspect of my Data Space). </p> <p> <b>Note the following SPARQL Protocol Endpoints:</b> </p> <ol> <li> <a href="http://myopenlink.net:8890/sparql/">MyOpenLink Data Space</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://myopenlink.net:8890/isparql/">Experimental Data Space SPARQL Query Builder</a> (you need to register at http://myopenlink.net:8890/ods to use this version)</li> <li> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/sparql/">Live Demo Sever</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/isparql/">Demo Server SPARQL Query Builder</a> (use: demo for both username and pwd when prompted)</li> </ol> <p>My beautified Version of the SPARQL Generated by QBE (you can cut and paste into "Advanced Query" section of QBE) is presented below:</p> <pre> PREFIX rdf: <http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#> PREFIX sioc: <http://rdfs.org/sioc/ns#> PREFIX dct: <http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/> PREFIX skos: <http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#> <br /> SELECT distinct ?forum_name, ?owner, ?post, ?title, ?link, ?url, ?tag FROM <http://myopenlink.net/dataspace> WHERE { ?forum a sioc:Forum; sioc:type "bookmark"; sioc:id ?forum_name; sioc:has_member ?owner. ?owner sioc:id "kidehen". ?forum sioc:container_of ?post . ?post dct:title ?title . optional { ?post sioc:link ?link } optional { ?post sioc:links_to ?url } optional { ?post sioc:topic ?topic. ?topic a skos:Concept; skos:prefLabel ?tag}. } </pre> <p>Unmodified dump from the QBE (this will be beautified automatically in due course by the QBE):</p> <pre> PREFIX rdf: <http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#> PREFIX sioc: <http://rdfs.org/sioc/ns#> PREFIX dct: <http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/> PREFIX skos: <http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#> <br /> SELECT ?var8 ?var9 ?var13 ?var14 ?var24 ?var27 ?var29 ?var54 ?var56 WHERE { graph ?graph { ?var8 rdf:type sioc:Forum . ?var8 sioc:container_of ?var9 . ?var8 sioc:type "bookmark" . ?var8 sioc:id ?var54 . ?var8 sioc:has_member ?var56 . ?var9 rdf:type sioc:Post . OPTIONAL {?var9 dc:title ?var13} . OPTIONAL {?var9 sioc:links_to ?var14} . OPTIONAL {?var9 sioc:link ?var29} . ?var9 sioc:has_creator ?var37 . OPTIONAL {?var9 sioc:topic ?var24} . ?var24 rdf:type skos:Concept . OPTIONAL {?var24 skos:prefLabel ?var27} . ?var56 rdf:type sioc:User . ?var56 sioc:id "kidehen" . } } </pre> <p> Current missing items re. Visual QBE for SPARQL are:</p> <ol> <li> Ability to Save properly to WebDAV so that I can then expose various saved SPARQL Queries (.rq file) from my Data Space via URIs </li> <li> Handling of DISTINCT, FILTERS (note: OPTIONAL is handled via dotted predicate-links) </li> <li>General tidying up re. click event handling etc. </li> </ol> Note: You can even open up your own account (using our <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/ods">Live Demo</a> or <a href="http://myopenlink.net:8890/ods">Live Experiment Data</a> Space servers) which enables you to repeat this demo by doing the following (post registration/sign-up): <ol> <li>Export some bookmarks from your local browser to the usual HTML bookmarks dump file</li> <li>Create an ODS-Bookmarks Instance using your new ODS account</li> <li>Use the ODS-Bookmark Instance to import your local bookmarks from the HTML dump file</li> <li>Repeat the same import sequence using the ODS-Bookmark Instance, but this time pick the del.icio.us option</li> <li>Build your query (change 'kidehen' to your ODS-user-name)</li> <li>That's it you now have Semantic Web presence in the form of a Data Space for your local and del.icio.us hosted bookmarks with tags integrated</li> </ol> <p>Quick Query Builder Tip: You will need to import the following (using the Import Button in the Ontologies & Schemas side-bar); </p> <ol> <li> <a href="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#">http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#</a> (<a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/rdf-primer/">RDF</a>)</li> <li> <a href="http://rdfs.org/sioc/ns#">http://rdfs.org/sioc/ns#</a> (<a href="http://rdfs.org/sioc/spec/">SIOC</a>)</li> <li> <a href="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/">http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/</a> (<a href="http://dublincore.org/">Dublin Core</a>)</li> <li> <a href="http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#">http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#</a> (<a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/2005/WD-swbp-skos-core-guide-20050510/">SKOS</a>)</li> </ol> <p>Browser Support: The SPARQL QBE is SVG based and currently works fine with the following browsers; Firefox 1.5/2.0, Camino (Cocoa variant of Firefox for Mac OS X), Webkit (Safari pre-release / advanced sibling), Opera 9.x. We are evaluating the use of the Adobe SVG plugin re. IE 6/7 support.</p> <p>Of course this should be a screencast, but I am the middle of a plethora of things right now :-) </p>
SPARQL, Ajax, Tagging, Folksonomies, Share Ontologies and Semantic Web
2006-12-13T20:09:50Z
2006-12-13T15:09:50-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1072
<a href="http://fgiasson.com"> Frederick Giasson</a> continues <a href="http://fgiasson.com/blog/index.php?title=the_first_three_dimensions_of_the_web_in&more=1&c=1&tb=1&pb=1">the conversation about the Web Experience Dimensions</a> in a new post --the first of several-- that chronicles the evolution of Pingthesemanticweb.com and Talk Digger, from Interactive-Web (Web 1.0) sites to Data-Web oriented Data Spaces:<br /> <br />On a related front, I also came across an e-Government Data Reference Model presentation (<a href="http://web-services.gov/scopedrmit210172005.ppt">PPT</a>) by <a href="http://www.project10x.com/pages/team.html">Mills Davis</a> from the <a href="http://colab.cim3.net/cgi-bin/wiki.pl?DRMImplementationThroughIterationandTestingPilotProjects">Colab Wiki</a> that illustrates the aforementioned Web Dimensions (even though his presentation didn't have dimensionality of the Web in mind) in one of its graphics (which I've yanked and placed into this post so that it has a URI courtesy of <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/wiki/main/Main/OdsIndex">ODS</a> <img src="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/images/smileys/01.gif" />):<br /> <br /> <img src="http://www.openlinksw.com/blog/%7Ekidehen/briefcase/Public/graphics/drm-smart-search.png" /> <br /> <br /> Notes:<br />=====<br /> <span style="font-weight: bold;">Conceptual</span> - Data-Web (*we are starting to comprehend and use this dimension* aka Semantic Web Layer 1)<br /> <br /> <span style="font-weight: bold;">Logical Theory </span>- To follow when we let loose the intelligent agents that enrichen the Data Web experience<br /> <br /> <span style="font-weight: bold;">Philosophy</span> - by way of <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Axiology">Axiology </a>(sometime in the future, but note, we are talking Internet time :-) )<br /> <br />I also stumbled across another graphic that actually provides visual delineation of the value propositions of XML (Structure) and RDF (Context):<br /> <img src="http://colab.cim3.net/file/work/SICoP/EPADRM2.0/ombdrm2.gif" /> <br />Notes:<br />=====<br /> <br /> <span style="font-weight: bold;">Description</span> - <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/xml-infoset/#intro">XML</a> <br /> <br /> <span style="font-weight: bold;">Context</span> - <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/rdf-concepts/">RDF</a> <br /> <br /> <span style="font-weight: bold;">Sharing</span> - Access Points (e.g <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/rdf-sparql-query/">SPARQL</a>, <a href="http://www.xmla.org/faq.asp">XMLA,</a> <a href="http://code.google.com/apis/gdata/">GData</a> Generic Query oriented Web Service Endpoints)<br />
Contd: Web Dimensionality
2006-10-25T22:19:40Z
2006-10-25T18:19:40.000001-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1064
<p>A new technical white paper about our declarative language for SQL Schema to RDF Ontology Mapping has just been published.</p> <h2>What is this?</h2> <p>A declarative language adapted from SPARQL's graph pattern language (N3/Turtle) for mapping SQL Data to RDF Ontologies. We currently refer to this as a Graph Pattern based RDF VIEW Definition Language.</p> <h2>Why is it important?</h2> <p>It provides an effective mechanism for exposing existing SQL Data as virtual RDF Data Sets (Graphs) negating the data duplication associated with generating physical RDF Graphs from SQL Data en route to persistence in a dedicated Triple Store. </p> <p>Enterprise applications (traditional and web based) and most Web Applications (Web 1.0 and Web 2.0) sit atop relational databases, implying that SQL/RDF model and data integration is an essential element of the burgeoning "Data Web" (Semantic Web - Layer 1) comprehension and adoption process.</p> <p>In a nutshell, this is a quick route for non disruptive exposure of existing SQL Data to SPARQL supporting RDF Tools and Development Environments.</p> <h2>How does it work?</h2> <h3>RDF Side</h3> <ol> <li>locate one or more Ontologies (e.g FOAF, SIOC, AtomOWL, SKOS etc.) that effectively defines the Concepts (Classes) and Terms (Predicates) to be exposed via your RDF Graph</li> <li>Using the Virtuoso's RDF View Definition Language declare a International Resource Identifier (or URI) for your Graph. Example:<pre>CREATE GRAPH IRI("http://myopenlink.net/dataspace")</pre> </li> <li>Then create Classes (Concepts), Class Properties/Predicates (Memb), and Class Instances (Inst) for the new Graph. Example: <pre>CREATE IRI CLASS odsWeblog:feed_iri "http://myopenlink.net/dataspace/kidehen/weblog/MyFeeds" ( in memb varchar not null, in inst varchar not null)</pre> </li> </ol> <h3>SQL Side</h3> <ol> <li>If Virtuoso isn't your SQL Data Store, Identify the ODBC or JDBC SQL data source(s) containing the SQL data to be mapped to RDF and then link the relevant tables into Virtuoso's Virtual DBMS Layer</li> <li>Then use the RDF View Definition Language's graph pattern feature to generate SQL to RDF Mapping Template for your Graph. As shown in this <a href="http://www.usnet.private:8889/wiki/main/Main/VOSSQLRDF#MappingOdsBlogToAtomOwlExample">ODS Weblog -> AtomOWL Mapping example</a>.</li> </ol>
Virtuoso's SQL Schema to RDF Ontology Mapping Language (1.0)
2006-11-17T23:24:25Z
2006-11-17T18:24:25-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1048
<p>I have written extensively about "<a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&q=presence%0D%0A&type=text&output=html">Presence</a>", "<a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&q=%27data%20spaces%27&type=text&output=html">Data Spaces</a>", and "<a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&q=open%20data%20access&type=text&output=html">Open Access to Data</a>". What I haven't emphasized is how "Identity" brings this together, primarily becuase I didn't have something to demonstrate, or point to, coherently etc..</p> <p>Anyway, we now have <a href="http://openid.net/">OpenID</a> support in OpenLink Data Spaces (ODS) which coincides nicely with the <a href="http://www.openidenabled.com/software">growing support of OpenID</a> across the web. </p> <p>The beauty of OpenID support in ODS is that I now have a URL that meshes with my identity (at least in line with what I have chosed to share with the public via the Web). For instance, http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com is my OpenID as well as my personal URI (you look closer at this link and you have a map of my Data Space).</p> <p>To really understand what I am getting at here you should open up <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinkswl.com">My OpenID URL</a> using one of the following:</p> <ol> <li> <a href="http://sioc-project.org/firefox">Semantic Radar</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://simile.mit.edu/piggy-bank/">PiggyBank</a> </li> <li> <a href="http://esw.w3.org/topic/SIOC/Implementations">SIOC Enabled Wiki</a> </li> </ol> <p> To be continued.... </p> <p> </p>
OpenID meets Data Spaces etc..
2006-09-26T05:42:04Z
2006-09-26T01:42:04.000001-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1036
<p>Another example of <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&q=%27data%20spaces%27&type=text&output=html">Data Spaces</a> in action by <a href="http://www.johnbreslin.com/blog">John Breslin</a>.. In this case John visualizes the connections that are exploitable by creating SIOC (<a href="http://rdfs.org/sioc/">Semantically-Interlinked Online Communities</a>) instance data from existing Distributed Collaborative Application profiles (<a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&q=web%202.0&type=text&output=html">Web 2.0</a> in current parlance). Of course, SIOC is an Ontology for RDF data since it describes the Concepts and Terms for a a network mesh of online communities. Which by implication provides another insight into the realization that the Web we know has always been a "Web of Databases" (federation of Graph Model Databases encapsulated in Data Spaces). The emergence of <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&q=sparql%0D%0A&type=text&output=html">SPARQ</a>L as the standard <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/rdf-sparql-query/">Query Language for querying RDF Data Sets</a>, alongside the SPARQL Protocol for transmitting SPARQL Queries over HTTP, and the SPARQL Query Results Serialization formats (XML or JSON) Results Serialization Format), basically set the stage truly open and flexible data access across Web Data Space clusters such as: the Blogosphere, Wikispehere, Usenetverse, Linkspaces, Boardscapes, and others.</p> <p> For additional clarity re. my comments above, you can also look at the <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/wiki/main/Main/ODSSIOCRef">SPARQL & SIOC Usecase samples document</a> for our <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/wiki/main/Main/OdsIndex">OpenLink Data Spaces platform</a>. Bottom line, the Semantic Web and SPARQL aren't <a href="http://morenews.blogspot.com/2006/09/myth-of-web-20.html"> BORING.</a> In fact, quite the contrary, since they are essential ingredients of a more powerful Web than the one we work with today!</p> <p>Enjoy the rest of John's post:</p> <blockquote> <p> <a href="http://www.johnbreslin.com/blog/2006/09/07/creating-connections-between-discussion-clouds-with-sioc/#comments">Creating connections between discussion clouds with SIOC</a>: </p> <p>(Extract from our forthcoming <a href="http://blogtalk.net/Main/Program"> BlogTalk</a> paper about browsers for SIOC.)</p> <p> <a class="imagelink" title="20060907b.png" href="http://www.johnbreslin.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2006/09/20060907a.png"><img id="image515" alt="20060907b.png" src="http://www.johnbreslin.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2006/09/20060907b.png" /> </a> </p> <p>SIOC provides a unified vocabulary for content and interaction description: a semantic layer that can co-exist with existing discussion platforms. Using SIOC, various linkages are created between the aforementioned concepts, which allow new methods of accessing this linked data, including:</p> <ul> <li> <strong>Virtual Forums</strong>. These may be a gathering of posts or threads which are distributed across discussion platforms, for example, where a user has found posts from a number of blogs that can be associated with a particular category of interest, or an agent identifies relevant posts across a certain timeframe.</li> <li> <strong>Distributed Conversations</strong>. Trackbacks are commonly used to link blog posts to previous posts on a related topic. By creating links in both directions, not only across blogs but across all types of internet discussions, conversations can be followed regardless of what point or URI fragment a browser enters at.</li> <li> <strong>Unified Communities</strong>. Apart from creating a web page with a number of relevant links to the blogs or forums or people involved in a particular community, there is no standard way to define what makes up an online community (apart from grouping the people who are members of that community using FOAF or OPML). SIOC allows one to simply define what objects are constituent parts of a community, or to say to what community an object belongs (using sioc:has_part / part_of): users, groups, forums, blogs, etc.</li> <li> <strong>Shared Topics</strong>. Technorati (a search engine for blogs) and BoardTracker (for bulletin boards) have been leveraging the free-text tags that people associate with their posts for some time now. SIOC allows the definition of such tags (using the subject property), but also enables hierarchial or non-hierarchial topic definition of posts using sioc:topic when a topic is ambiguous or more information on a topic is required. Combining with other Semantic Web vocabularies, tags and topics can be further described using the SKOS organisation system.</li> <li> <strong>One Person, Many User Accounts</strong>. SIOC also aims to help the issue of multiple identities by allowing users to define that they hold other accounts or that their accounts belong to a particular personal identity (via foaf:holdsOnlineAccount or sioc:account_of). Therefore, all the posts or comments made by a particular person using their various associated user accounts across platforms could be identified.</li> </ul> </blockquote>
Creating connections between discussion clouds with SIOC
2008-02-05T04:22:26Z
2008-02-04T23:22:26.000001-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1034
<p> Open Data Access and Web 2.0 have a very strange relationship that continues to blur the lines of demarcation between where Web 2.0 ends and where Web.Next (i.e Web 3.0, Semantic/Data Web, Web of Databases etc.) starts. But before I proceed, let me attempt to define Web 2.0 one more time: </p> <p style="text-align: center;"> <em>A phase in the evolution web usage patterns that emphasizes Web Services based interaction between “Web Users” and “Points of Web Presence” over traditional “Web Users” and “Web Sites” based interaction. Basically, a transition from visual site interaction to presence based interaction.</em> </p> <p> BTW - Dare Obasanjo also commented about Web usage patterns in his post titled: <a href="http://www.25hoursaday.com/weblog/PermaLink.aspx?guid=929a7fd6-1dfc-43f4-a549-d2c9fa873655">The Two Webs</a>. Where he concluded that we had a dichotomy along the lines of: HTTP-for-APIs (2.0) and HTTP-for-Browsers (1.0). Which <a href="http://weblog.infoworld.com/udell">Jon Udell</a> evolved into: HTTP-Services-Web and HTTP-Intereactive-Web during our recent <a href="http://weblog.infoworld.com/udell/gems/ju_idehen.mp3">podcast conversation</a>. </p> <p> With definitions in place, I will resume my quest to unveil the aforementioned Web 2.0 Data Access Conundrum: </p> <ul> <li>Emphasis on XML's prowess in the realms of Data and Protocol Modeling alongside Data Representation. Especially as SOAP or REST styles of Web Services and various XML formats (RSS 0.92/1.0/1.1/2.0, Atom, OPML, OCS etc.) collectively define the Web 2.0 infrastructure landscape</li> <li>Where a modicum of Data Access appreciation and comprehension does exist it is inherently compromised by business models that mandate some form of “Walled Gardens” and “Data Silos”</li> <li>Mash-ups are a response to said “Walled Gardens” and “Data Silos” . Mash-ups by definition imply combining things that were not built for recombination.</li> </ul> <p> As you can see from the above, Open Data access isn't genuinely compatible with Web 2.0. </p> <p> We can also look at the same issue by way of the popular M-V-C (Model View Controller) pattern. Web 2.0 is all about the “V” and “C” with a modicum of “M” at best (data access, open data access, and flexible open data access are completely separate things). The “C” items represent application logic exposed by SOAP or REST style web services etc. I'll return to this later in this post. </p> <p> What about Social Networking you must be thinking? Isn't this a Web 2.0 manifestation? Not at all (IMHO). The Web was developed / invented by Tim Berners-Lee to leverage the “Network Effects” potential of the Internet for connecting <a href="http://www.w3.org/History/1989/Image1.gif">People and Data</a>. Social Networking on the other hand, is simply one of several ways by which construct network connections. I am sure we all accept the fact that connections are built for many other reasons beyond social interaction. That said, we also know that through social interactions we actually develop some of our most valuable relationships (we are social creatures after-all). </p> <p> The Web 2.0 Open Data Access impedance reality is ultimately going to be the greatest piece of tutorial and usecase material for the Semantic Web. I take this position because it is human nature to seek Freedom (in unadulterated form) which implies the following: </p> <ul> <li>Access Data from a myriad of data sources (irrespective of structural differences at the database level)</li> <li>Mesh (not Mash) data in new and interesting ways</li> <li>Share the meshed data with as many relevant people as possible for social, professional, political, religious, and other reasons</li> <li>Construct valuable networks based on data oriented connections</li> </ul> <p> Web 2.0 by definition and use case scenarios is inherently incompatible with the above due to the lack of Flexible and Open Data Access. </p> <p> If we take the definition of Web 2.0 (above) and rework it with an appreciation Flexible and Open Data Access you would arrive at something like this: </p> <p style="text-align: center;"> <em>A phase in the evolution of the web that emphasizes interaction between “Web Users” and “Web Data” facilitated by Web Services based APIs and an Open & Flexible Data Access Model “. </em> </p> <p> <em> <br /> </em>In more succinct form: </p> <p style="text-align: center;"> <em>A pervasive network of people connected by data or data connected by people.</em> </p> <p> <em> <br /> </em>Returning to M-V-C and looking at the definition above, you now have a complete of ”M“ which is enigmatic in Web 2.0 and the essence of the Semantic Web (Data and Context). </p> <p> To make all of this possible a palatable Data Model is required. The model of choice is the Graph based RDF Data Model - not to be mistaken for the RDF/XML serialization which is just that, a data serialization that conforms to the aforementioned RDF data model. </p> <p> <strong>The Enterprise Challenge</strong> </p> <p> Web 2.0 cannot and will not make valuable inroads into the the enterprise because enterprises live and die by their ability to exploit data. Weblogs, Wikis, Shared Bookmarking Systems, and other Web 2.0 distributed collaborative applications profiles are only valuable if the data is available to the enterprise for meshing (not mashing). </p> <p> A good example of how enterprises will exploit data by leveraging networks of people and data (social networks in this case) is shown in this nice presentation by Accenture's Institute for High Performance Business titled: <a href="http://www.accenture.com/xdoc/en/AccentureSNA.swf">Visualizing Organizational Change</a>. </p> <p> Web 2.0 commentators (for the most part) continue to ponder the use of Web 2.0 within the enterprise while forgetting the congruency between enterprise agility and exploitation of people & data networks (The very issue emphasized in this original <a href="http://www.w3.org/History/1989/proposal.html">Web vision document by Tim Berners-Lee</a>). Even worse, they remain challenged or spooked by the Semantic Web vision because they do not understand that Web 2.0 is fundamentally a Semantic Web precursor due to Open Data Access challenges. Web 2.0 is one of the greatest demonstrations of why we need the Semantic Web at the current time. </p> <p> Finally, juxtapose the items below and you may even get a clearer view of what I am an attempting to convey about the virtues of Open Data Access and the inflective role it plays as we move beyond Web 2.0: </p> <p> <a href="http://www.w3.org/History/1989/proposal.html">Information Management Proposal </a>- <a href="http://www.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee/">Tim Berners-Lee</a> <br /> <a href="http://www.accenture.com/xdoc/en/AccentureSNA.swf">Visualizing Organizational Change</a> - <a href="http://www.accenture.com/Global/High_Performance_Business/default.htm">Accenture Institute of High Performance Business</a> </p>
Web 2.0's Open Data Access Conundrum (Update)
2006-11-16T21:11:45Z
2006-11-16T16:11:45-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1032
<p> Open Data Access and Web 2.0 have a very strange relationship that continues to blur the lines of demarcation between where Web 2.0 ends and where Web.Next (i.e Web 3.0, Semantic/Data Web, Web of Databases etc.) starts. But before I proceed, let me attempt to define Web 2.0 one more time: </p> <p style="text-align: center;"> <em>A phase in the evolution web usage patterns that emphasizes Web Services based interaction between “Web Users” and “Points of Web Presence” over traditional “Web Users” and “Web Sites” based interaction. Basically, a transition from visual site interaction to presence based interaction.</em> </p> <p> BTW - Dare Obasanjo also commented about Web usage patterns in his post titled: <a href="http://www.25hoursaday.com/weblog/PermaLink.aspx?guid=929a7fd6-1dfc-43f4-a549-d2c9fa873655">The Two Webs</a>. Where he concluded that we had a dichotomy along the lines of: HTTP-for-APIs (2.0) and HTTP-for-Browsers (1.0). Which <a href="http://weblog.infoworld.com/udell">Jon Udell</a> evolved into: HTTP-Services-Web and HTTP-Intereactive-Web during our recent <a href="http://weblog.infoworld.com/udell/gems/ju_idehen.mp3">podcast conversation</a>. </p> <p> With definitions in place, I will resume my quest to unveil the aforementioned Web 2.0 Data Access Conundrum: </p> <ul> <li>Emphasis on XML's prowess in the realms of Data and Protocol Modeling alongside Data Representation. Especially as SOAP or REST styles of Web Services and various XML formats (RSS 0.92/1.0/1.1/2.0, Atom, OPML, OCS etc.) collectively define the Web 2.0 infrastructure landscape</li> <li>Where a modicum of Data Access appreciation and comprehension does exist it is inherently compromised by business models that mandate some form of “Walled Gardens” and “Data Silos”</li> <li>Mash-ups are a response to said “Walled Gardens” and “Data Silos” . Mash-ups by definition imply combining things that were not built for recombination.</li> </ul> <p> As you can see from the above, Open Data access isn't genuinely compatible with Web 2.0. </p> <p> We can also look at the same issue by way of the popular M-V-C (Model View Controller) pattern. Web 2.0 is all about the “V” and “C” with a modicum of “M” at best (data access, open data access, and flexible open data access are completely separate things). The “C” items represent application logic exposed by SOAP or REST style web services etc. I'll return to this later in this post. </p> <p> What about Social Networking you must be thinking? Isn't this a Web 2.0 manifestation? Not at all (IMHO). The Web was developed / invented by Tim Berners-Lee to leverage the “Network Effects” potential of the Internet for connecting <a href="http://www.w3.org/History/1989/Image1.gif">People and Data</a>. Social Networking on the other hand, is simply one of several ways by which construct network connections. I am sure we all accept the fact that connections are built for many other reasons beyond social interaction. That said, we also know that through social interactions we actually develop some of our most valuable relationships (we are social creatures after-all). </p> <p> The Web 2.0 Open Data Access impedance reality is ultimately going to be the greatest piece of tutorial and usecase material for the Semantic Web. I take this position because it is human nature to seek Freedom (in unadulterated form) which implies the following: </p> <ul> <li>Access Data from a myriad of data sources (irrespective of structural differences at the database level)</li> <li>Mesh (not Mash) data in new and interesting ways</li> <li>Share the meshed data with as many relevant people as possible for social, professional, political, religious, and other reasons</li> <li>Construct valuable networks based on data oriented connections</li> </ul> <p> Web 2.0 by definition and use case scenarios is inherently incompatible with the above due to the lack of Flexible and Open Data Access. </p> <p> If we take the definition of Web 2.0 (above) and rework it with an appreciation Flexible and Open Data Access you would arrive at something like this: </p> <p style="text-align: center;"> <em>A phase in the evolution of the web that emphasizes interaction between “Web Users” and “Web Data” facilitated by Web Services based APIs and an Open & Flexible Data Access Model “. </em> </p> <p> <em> <br /> </em>In more succinct form: </p> <p style="text-align: center;"> <em>A pervasive network of people connected by data or data connected by people.</em> </p> <p> <em> <br /> </em>Returning to M-V-C and looking at the definition above, you now have a complete of ”M“ which is enigmatic in Web 2.0 and the essence of the Semantic Web (Data and Context). </p> <p> To make all of this possible a palatable Data Model is required. The model of choice is the Graph based RDF Data Model - not to be mistaken for the RDF/XML serialization which is just that, a data serialization that conforms to the aforementioned RDF data model. </p> <p> <strong>The Enterprise Challenge</strong> </p> <p> Web 2.0 cannot and will not make valuable inroads into the the enterprise because enterprises live and die by their ability to exploit data. Weblogs, Wikis, Shared Bookmarking Systems, and other Web 2.0 distributed collaborative applications profiles are only valuable if the data is available to the enterprise for meshing (not mashing). </p> <p> A good example of how enterprises will exploit data by leveraging networks of people and data (social networks in this case) is shown in this nice presentation by Accenture's Institute for High Performance Business titled: <a href="http://www.accenture.com/xdoc/en/AccentureSNA.swf">Visualizing Organizational Change</a>. </p> <p> Web 2.0 commentators (for the most part) continue to ponder the use of Web 2.0 within the enterprise while forgetting the congruency between enterprise agility and exploitation of people & data networks (The very issue emphasized in this original <a href="http://www.w3.org/History/1989/proposal.html">Web vision document by Tim Berners-Lee</a>). Even worse, they remain challenged or spooked by the Semantic Web vision because they do not understand that Web 2.0 is fundamentally a Semantic Web precursor due to Open Data Access challenges. Web 2.0 is one of the greatest demonstrations of why we need the Semantic Web at the current time. </p> <p> Finally, juxtapose the items below and you may even get a clearer view of what I am an attempting to convey about the virtues of Open Data Access and the inflective role it plays as we move beyond Web 2.0: </p> <p> <a href="http://www.w3.org/History/1989/proposal.html">Information Management Proposal </a>- <a href="http://www.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee/">Tim Berners-Lee</a> <br /> <a href="http://www.accenture.com/xdoc/en/AccentureSNA.swf">Visualizing Organizational Change</a> - <a href="http://www.accenture.com/Global/High_Performance_Business/default.htm">Accenture Institute of High Performance Business</a> </p>
Web 2.0's Open Data Access Conundrum
2006-11-16T20:51:43Z
2006-11-16T15:51:43-05:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1030
<p>Note: An updated version of a previously unpublished blog post:</p> <p> Continuing from <a href="http://weblog.infoworld.com/udell/2006/04/28.html">our recent Podcast conversation</a>, Jon Udell sheds further insight into the essence of our conversation via a “Strategic Developer” column article titled: <a href="http://www.infoworld.com/cgi-bin/redirect?source=rss&url=http://www.infoworld.com/article/06/05/03/77873_19OPstrategic_1.html">Accessing the web of databases</a>. </p> <p> Below, I present an initial dump of a DataSpace FAQ below that hopefully sheds light on the DataSpace vision espoused during my podcast conversation with Jon. </p> <p> What is a DataSpace? <br /> </p> <p>A moniker for Web-accessible atomic containers that manage and expose Data, Information, Services, Processes, and Knowledge. </p> <p> What would you typically find in a Data Space? Examples include: </p> <ul> <li>Raw Data - SQL, HTML, XML (raw), XHTML, RDF etc.<br /> <br /> </li> <li>Information (Data In Context) - XHTML (various microformats), Blog Posts (in RSS, Atom, RSS-RDF formats), Subscription Lists (OPML, OCS, etc), Social Networks (FOAF, XFN etc.), and many other forms of applied XML.</li> </ul> <ul> <li>Web Services (Application/Service Logic) - REST or SOAP based invocation of application logic for context sensitive and controlled data access and manipulation.</li> </ul> <ul> <li>Persisted Knowledge - Information in actionable context that is also available in transient or persistent forms expressed using a Graph Data Model. A modern knowledgebase would more than likely have RDF as its Data Language, RDFS as its Schema Language, and OWL as its Domain Definition (Ontology) Language. Actual Domain, Schema, and Instance Data would be serialized using formats such as RDF-XML, N3, Turtle etc).</li> </ul> <p> How do Data Spaces and Databases differ? <br />Data Spaces are fundamentally problem-domain-specific database applications. They offer functionality that you would instinctively expect of a database (e.g. AICD data management) with the additonal benefit of being data model and query language agnostic. Data Spaces are for the most part DBMS Engine and Data Access Middleware hybrids in the sense that ownership and control of data is inherently loosely-coupled. </p> <p>How do Data Spaces and Content Management Systems differ?<br />Data Spaces are inherently more flexible, they support multiple data models and data representation formats. Content management systems do not possess the same degree of data model and data representation dexterity. </p> <p>How do Data Spaces and Knowledgebases differ?<br />A Data Space cannot dictate the perception of its content. For instance, what I may consider as knowledge relative to my Data Space may not be the case to a remote client that interacts with it from a distance, Thus, defining my Data Space as Knowledgebase, purely, introduces constraints that reduce its broader effectiveness to third party clients (applications, services, users etc..). A Knowledgebase is based on a Graph Data Model resulting in significant impedance for clients that are built around alternative models. To reiterate, Data Spaces support multiple data models. </p> <p> What Architectural Components make up a Data Space? </p> <ul> <li>ORDBMS Engine - for Data Modeling agility (via complex purpose specific data types and data access methods), Data Atomicity, Data Concurrency, Transaction Isolation, and Durability (aka ACID).<br /> <br /> </li> <li>Virtual Database Engine - for creating a single view of, and access point to, heterogeneous SQL, XML, Free Text, and other data. This is all about Virtualization at the Data Access Level.</li> </ul> <ul> <li>Web Services Platform - enabling controlled access and manipulation (via application, service, or protocol logic) of Virtualized or Disparate Data. This layer handles the decoupling of functionality from monolithic wholes for function specific invocation via Web Services using either the SOAP or REST approach.</li> </ul> <br />Where do Data Spaces fit into the Web's rapid evolution?<br />They are an essential part of the burgeoning Data Web / Semantic Web. In short, they will take us from data “Mash-ups” (combining web accessible data that exists without integration and repurposing in mind) to “Mesh-ups” (combining web accessible data that exists with integration and repurposing in mind).<p> Where can I see a DataSpace along the lines described, in action? </p> <p> Just look at my blog, and take the journey as follows: </p> <ul> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/blog/%7Ekidehen/">Front Door</a> (Web 1.0)</li> <li>Lounge (Web 2.0) via <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/GData/127">GData</a> or <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/weblog/public/search.vspx?blogid=127&type=text&kwds=%27semantic+web%27&OpenSearch">OpenSearch</a> </li> <li>Floor Plan via <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/about.rdf">FOAF</a> or <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/sioc.rdf">SIOC</a> RDF Data Sets (Graphs)</li> <li>Rest of the house (beyond Web 2.0) sending <a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/wiki/main/Main/VOSODSSparqlSamples">SPARQL Queries</a> to a <a href="http://myopenlink.net:8890/sparql/">SPARQL Endpoint</a>.<br /> </li> </ul> <p> What about other Data Spaces? </p> <p> There are several and I will attempt to categorize along the lines of query method available: <br />Type 1 (Free Text Search over HTTP): <br />Google, MSN, Yahoo!, Amazon, eBay, and most Web 2.0 plays . </p> <p> Type 2 (Free Text Search and XQuery/XPath over HTTP) <br />A few blogs and Wikis (Jon Udell's and a few others)</p>Type 3 (RDF Data Sets and SPARQL Queryable):<br /> <ul> <li> <a href="http://esw.w3.org/topic/SIOC/EnabledSites">SIOC enabled sites</a> (aka points of semantic web presence)<br /> </li> <li> <a href="http://pingthesemanticweb.com/">PingTheSemantic</a> <br /> </li> </ul>Type 4 (Generic Free Text Search, OpenSearch, GData, XQuery/XPath, and SPARQL):<br />Points of Semantic Web presence such as the Data Spaces at: <br /> <ul> <li> <a href="http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com">My Blog Data Space</a> (as stated earlier in this post)<br /> </li> <li> <a href="http://myopenlink.net:8890/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com">My General Data Space</a> - (ditto; note that this is currently experimental)<br /> </li> </ul> <p>What About Data Space aware tools?<br /> <br /> </p> <ul> <li> <a href="http://demo.openlinksw.com/DAV/JS/oat/index.html/">OpenLink Ajax Toolkit </a>- provides Javascript Control level binding to Query Services such as XMLA for SQL, GData for Free Text, OpenSearch for Free Text, SPARQL for RDF, in addition to service specific Web Services (Web 2.0 hosted solutions that expose service specific APIs)</li> <li> <a href="http://rdfs.org/sioc/firefox">Semantic Radar </a>- a Firefox Extension</li> <li> <a href="http://pingthesemanticweb.com/">PingTheSemantic</a> - the Semantic Webs equivalent of Web 2.0's weblogs.com</li> <li> <a href="http://simile.mit.edu/piggy-bank/">PiggyBank</a> - a Firefox Extension</li> </ul> <p> </p>
Data Spaces and Web of Databases
2006-09-04T22:58:56Z
2006-09-04T18:58:56.000001-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1018
<blockquote> <p> <a href="http://morenews.blogspot.com/2006/07/goggle-vs-semantic-web.html">Goggle vs Semantic Web</a>: "<a href="http://news.com.com/2100-1025_3-6095705.html?part=rss&tag=6095705&subj=news">Google exec challenges Berners-Lee</a> 'At the end of the keynote, however, things took a different turn. Google Director of Search and AAAI Fellow Peter Norvig was the first to the microphone during the Q&A session, and he took the opportunity to raise a few points.<br /> <br />'What I get a lot is: 'Why are you against the Semantic Web?' I am not against the Semantic Web. But from Google's point of view, there are a few things you need to overcome, incompetence being the first,' Norvig said. Norvig clarified that it was not Berners-Lee or his group that he was referring to as incompetent, but the general user.'<br /> <br />Related: <a href="http://blogmatrix.semantic.blogmatrix.com/:entry:blogmatrix-2006-07-17-0005/">Google Base -- summing up</a>."</p> <p>(Via <a href="http://morenews.blogspot.com">More News</a>.)</p> </blockquote> <p>When will we drop the ill conceived notion that end-users are incompetent?</p> <p> Has it every occurred to software developers and technology vendors that incompetent, dumb, and other contemptuous end-user adjectives simply reflect the inability of most technology products to surmount end-user "Interest Activation Thresholds"?</p> <p>Interest Activation Threshold (IAT)? What's That?</p> <p>I have a fundamental personal belief that all human beings are intelligent. Our ability to demonstrate intelligence, or be perceived as intelligent, is directly proportional to our interest level in a given context. In short, we have "Ambivalence Quotients" (AQs) just as we have "Intelligence Quotients" (IQs).</p> <p>An interested human being is an inherently intelligent entity. The abstract nature of human intelligence also makes locating the IQ and AQ on/off buttons a mercurial quest at the best of times.</p> <p>Technology end-users exhibit high AQs, most of the time due to the inability of most technology products to truly engage, and ultimately stimulate genuine interest, by surmounting IAT and reducing AQ.</p> <p>Ironically, when a technology vendor is lagging behind its competitors in the "features arms race" it is common place to use the familiar excuse: "our end-users aren't asking for this feature". </p> <p> <b>Note To Google:</b> </p> <p>Ambivalence isn't incompetence. If end-users were genuinely incompetent, how is that they run rings around your page rank algorithms by producing google-friendly content at the expense of valuable context? What about the <a href="http://ebiquity.umbc.edu/blogger/2006/07/25/revealed-how-google-manages-click-fraud/">deteriorating value of Adsense due to click fraud</a>? Likewise, the continued erosion of the value of your once exemplary "keyword based search" service? As we all know, necessity is the mother of invention, so when users develop high AQs because there is nothing better, we end up with a forced breech of "IAT"; which is why the issues that I mention remain long term challenges for you. Ironically, the so called "incompetents" are already outsmarting you, and you don't seem to comprehend this reality or its inevitable consequences.</p> <p>Finally, how you are going to improve value without integrating the Semantic Web vision into your R&D roadmap? I can tell you categorically that you have little or no wiggle room re. this matter, especially if you want to remain true to your: "don't be evil" mantra. My guess is that you will incorporate Semantic Web technologies sooner rather than later (Google Co-op is a big clue). I would even go as far as predicting a Google hosted SPARQL Query Endpoint alongside your GData endpints during the next 6-12 months (if even that long). I believe that your GData protocol (like the rest of Web 2.0) will ultimately accelerate your appreciation of the data model dexterity that RDF brings to loosely coupled knowledge networks espoused by the Semantic Web vision.</p> <p> <b>Google & Semantic Web Paradox</b> </p> <p> The Semantic Web vision has the RDF graph data model at its core (and for good reason), but even more confusing for me, as I process Google sentiments about the Semantic Web, is the fact that RDF's actual creator (Ramanathan Guha aka. Guha) currently works at Google. There's a strange disconnect here IMHO.</p> <p>If I recall correctly, Google wants to organize the worlds data and information, leaving the knowledge organization to someone else which is absolutely fine. What is increasingly irksome, is the current tendency to use corporate stature to generate Fear, Uncertainty, and Doubt when the subject matter is the "Semantic Web".</p> <p> BTW - I've just read <a href="http://fgiasson.com/blog/index.php?title=norvig_and_berners_lee_on_the_semantic_w_06&more=1&c=1&tb=1&pb=1">Frederick Giasson's perspective on the Google Semantic Web paradox</a> which ultimately leads to the same conclusions regarding Google's FUD stance when dealing with matters relating to the Semantic Web. </p> <p>I wonder if anyone is tracking the google hits for "<a href="http://www.google.com/search?q=google+fud+semantic+web&start=0&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8&client=firefox-a&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official">fud google semantic web</a>"?</p>
Google vs Semantic Web
2006-07-29T23:55:57Z
2006-07-29T19:55:57-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com
http://www.openlinksw.com/dataspace/kidehen@openlinksw.com/weblog/kidehen@openlinksw.com%27s%20BLOG%20%5B127%5D/1009
<blockquote> <p> <a href="http://vzach.blogspot.com/2006/07/web-20-self-experiment.html">Web 2.0 Self-Experiment</a>: "</p> <blockquote>I shopped for everything except food on eBay. When working with foreign-language documents, I used translations from Babel Fish. (This worked only so well. After a Babel Fish round-trip through Italian, the preceding sentence reads, 'That one has only worked therefore well.') Why use up space storing files on my own hard drive when, thanks to certain free utilities, I can store them on Gmail's servers? I saved, sorted, and browsed photos I uploaded to Flickr. I used Skype for my phone calls, decided on books using Amazon's recommendations rather than 'expert' reviews, killed time with videos at YouTube, and listened to music through customizable sites like Pandora and Musicmatch. I kept my schedule on Google Calendar, my to-do list on Voo2do, and my outlines on iOutliner. I voyeured my neighborhood's home values via Zillow. I even used an online service for each stage of the production of this article, culminating in my typing right now in Writely rather than Word. (Being only so confident that Writely wouldn't somehow lose my work -- or as Babel Fish might put it, 'only confident therefore' -- I backed it up into Gmail files.</blockquote> <a href="http://www.technologyreview.com/read_article.aspx?id=17061&ch=infotech">Interesting article</a>, Tim O'Reilly's response is <a href="http://radar.oreilly.com/archives/2006/07/levels_of_the_game.html">here</a>" <p>(Via <a href="http://vzach.blogspot.com">Valentin Zacharias (Student)</a>.)</p> </blockquote> <p>Tim O'Reilly's response provides the following hierarchy for Web 2.0 based on The what he calls: "Web 2.0-ness":</p> <blockquote> <p>level 3: The application could ONLY exist on the net, and draws its essential power from the network and the connections it makes possible between people or applications. These are applications that harness network effects to get better the more people use them. EBay, craigslist, Wikipedia, del.icio.us, Skype, (and yes, Dodgeball) meet this test. They are fundamentally driven by shared online activity. The web itself has this character, which Google and other search engines have then leveraged. (You can search on the desktop, but without link activity, many of the techniques that make web search work so well are not available to you.) Web crawling is one of the fundamental Web 2.0 activities, and search applications like Adsense for Content also clearly have Web 2.0 at their heart. I had a conversation with Eric Schmidt, the CEO of Google, the other day, and he summed up his philosophy and strategy as "Don't fight the internet." In the hierarchy of web 2.0 applications, the highest level is to embrace the network, to understand what creates network effects, and then to harness them in everything you do.</p> <p> Level 2: The application could exist offline, but it is uniquely advantaged by being online. Flickr is a great example. You can have a local photo management application (like iPhoto) but the application gains remarkable power by leveraging an online community. In fact, the shared photo database, the online community, and the artifacts it creates (like the tag database) is central to what distinguishes Flickr from its offline counterparts. And its fuller embrace of the internet (for example, that the default state of uploaded photos is "public") is what distinguishes it from its online predecessors.</p> <p> Level 1: The application can and does exist successfully offline, but it gains additional features by being online. Writely is a great example. If you want to do collaborative editing, its online component is terrific, but if you want to write alone, as Fallows did, it gives you little benefit (other than availability from computers other than your own.) </p> <p> Level 0: The application has primarily taken hold online, but it would work just as well offline if you had all the data in a local cache. MapQuest, Yahoo! Local, and Google Maps are all in this category (but mashups like housingmaps.com are at Level 3.) To the extent that online mapping applications harness user contributions, they jump to Level 2.</p> </blockquote> <p>So, in a sense we have near conclusive confirmation that Web 2.0 is simply about APIs (typically service specific Data Silos or Walled-gardens) with little concern, understanding, or interest in truly open data access across the burgeoning "<a href="http://www.infoworld.com/article/06/05/03/77873_19OPstrategic_1.html">Web of Databases</a>". Or the<a href="http://www.w3.org/2005/Talks/0623-sb-IEEEStorConf/"> Web of "Databases and Programs"</a> that I prefer to describe as "<a href="http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/wiki/main/Main/DataSpaceFAQ">Data Spaces</a>"</p> <p>Thus, we can truly begin to conclude that Web 3.0 (Data Web) is the addition of Flexible and Open Data Access to Web 2.0; where the Open Data Access is achieved by leveraging Semantic Web deliverables such as the RDF Data Model and the SPARQL Query Language :-)</p>
Web 2.0 Self-Experiment aids Web 3.0 comprehension
2006-07-18T05:17:43Z
2006-07-18T01:17:43-04:00
Kingsley Uyi Idehen
kidehen@openlinksw.com