bc: This document describes the OpenCoin protocol which seeks to implement David Chaum's concept of "untraceable payments"
bc: Wikipedia3 is a conversion of the English Wikipedia into RDF. It's a monthly updated dataset containing around 47 million triples.
bc: This is a site for large data sets and the people who love them: the scrapers and crawlers who collect them, the academics and geeks who process them, the designers and artists who visualize them.
bc: StYLiD is a system that lets you Structure Your own Linked Data
bc: planetRDF candidate
bc: didnt check archives, front page all relevant
bc: didnt check archives, front page all relevant
ab_: RDF Molecules, HBAse, Hadoop, Proteins, clustering/distribution..
ab_: Tamarind was designed to make it as easy as possible for developers to participate in the Semantic Web by exposing their data in accordance with applicable standards and ontologies.
ab_: Python/Owl at SXSW
Freso: "Drupal lead Dries Buytaert talking about Drupal in relation to the Semantic Web and RDF from 37:10 and out."
ab_: StrokeDB is a lightweight approach to document-oriented database, currently featuring pure Ruby/JRuby implementation.
ab_: Birth of the CouchDB-meta-langauge
ab_: Birth of the CouchDB-meta-langauge
tommorris_: How to register RDF as a MIME type in Rails and use the XML writer to write out RDF/XML
tommorris_: Imagine how cool it'll be to replace that xml.instruct code with a native RDF library... :)
tommorris_: It uses respond_to { formats... } method which is the default generated code in Rails 2.0
tommorris_: Imagine how cool it'll be to replace that xml.instruct code with a native RDF library... :)
tommorris_: It uses respond_to { formats... } method which is the default generated code in Rails 2.0
curler: Middleware for enabling RDF publish/subscribe payloads over XMPP and Stomp, based on the RDF.rb library.
DanC: by Douglas Adams; first appeared in the News Review section of The Sunday Times on August 29th 1999
TedThibodeauJr: sadly, they haven't figured out how to handle chars 128-255, making it difficult-at-best to read
TedThibodeauJr: sadly, they haven't figured out how to handle chars 128-255, making it difficult-at-best to read
DanC: Kevin Marks presents at BarCampAustin3
DanC: photo of timbl on slide 2
DanC: KM says timbl treated TCP/IP as somebody else's problem and made a cloud over it
DanC: KM: net/web is like oxygen to the next gen
DanC: 10 yr timeline of social networks; ack dana boyd
DanC: "here lies email / not really dead / but used by kids / only to talk to / the man"
DanC: "URLs are people too" vs email addresses
DanC: "there are a couple standards for expressing [relationships between people]; this is the really simple one, XFN". "this standard has been around for about 5 years"
DanC: so now XFN is a standard. fair enough, I guess.
DanC: "finding me and my public friends on the web" using XFN. but not all these links are public, KM says...
DanC: OpenSocial puts a cloud around People,Actions [crud... too fast]
DanC: KM cites Douglas Adams 1999 on trust and social relationships
DanC: photo of timbl on slide 2
DanC: KM says timbl treated TCP/IP as somebody else's problem and made a cloud over it
DanC: KM: net/web is like oxygen to the next gen
DanC: 10 yr timeline of social networks; ack dana boyd
DanC: "here lies email / not really dead / but used by kids / only to talk to / the man"
DanC: "URLs are people too" vs email addresses
DanC: "there are a couple standards for expressing [relationships between people]; this is the really simple one, XFN". "this standard has been around for about 5 years"
DanC: so now XFN is a standard. fair enough, I guess.
DanC: "finding me and my public friends on the web" using XFN. but not all these links are public, KM says...
DanC: OpenSocial puts a cloud around People,Actions [crud... too fast]
DanC: KM cites Douglas Adams 1999 on trust and social relationships
danja: podcast
tommorris: Hi, I'm Tom Morris and I approve this message.
tommorris: Hi, I'm Tom Morris and I approve this message.
sbp: Providing some background and explanation to the Ambient Information article that I posted yesterday.
sbp: Responses welcome: do point out positives that I've missed! I doubt that the sum total will be enough to offset the invested effort, but I'm still curious.
DanC: "It's not prudent, perhaps even not moral (if that doesn't sound too melodramatic), to work on RDF, OWL, SPARQL, RIF, the broken ideas of distributed trust, CWM, Tabulator, Dublin Core, FOAF, SIOC, and any of these kinds of things."
sbp: Responses welcome: do point out positives that I've missed! I doubt that the sum total will be enough to offset the invested effort, but I'm still curious.
DanC: "It's not prudent, perhaps even not moral (if that doesn't sound too melodramatic), to work on RDF, OWL, SPARQL, RIF, the broken ideas of distributed trust, CWM, Tabulator, Dublin Core, FOAF, SIOC, and any of these kinds of things."
CloCkWeR1: Who wants to write the GRDDL needed to make that into foaf? :)
tommorris: Another example of the "Atom is a universal container" principle (which is a dumb principle, imo)
tommorris: Another example of the "Atom is a universal container" principle (which is a dumb principle, imo)