tommorris: A JavaScript hack built on top of DBPedia that lets you explore famous scientists and who they were influenced by.
tommorris: My contribution - writing some simple SPARQL queries.
tommorris: Lovely visualisation though - shows how the data provided by DBPedia and other things on the Linked Open Data web could be used in the classroom or in a museum setting.
tommorris: My contribution - writing some simple SPARQL queries.
tommorris: Lovely visualisation though - shows how the data provided by DBPedia and other things on the Linked Open Data web could be used in the classroom or in a museum setting.
tobyink:
tobyink: ok, it works now.
tobyink: Do a GET on <http://buzzword.org.uk/2010/counter/counter> with an HTTP Referer header of the document being counted. (Browsers automatically include the Referer when requesting images embedded with <img>.)
tobyink: Or just use e.g. <http://buzzword.org.uk/2010/counter/counter?url=http://swig.xmlhack.com/> to get a copy of the SVG/graph for a document without incrementing the counter.
tobyink: perl script that can extract data from a counter
tobyink: web page that embeds a counter
tobyink: ok, it works now.
tobyink: Do a GET on <http://buzzword.org.uk/2010/counter/counter> with an HTTP Referer header of the document being counted. (Browsers automatically include the Referer when requesting images embedded with <img>.)
tobyink: Or just use e.g. <http://buzzword.org.uk/2010/counter/counter?url=http://swig.xmlhack.com/> to get a copy of the SVG/graph for a document without incrementing the counter.
tobyink: perl script that can extract data from a counter
tobyink: web page that embeds a counter
mhausenblas: uses non-existing DC elements
mhausenblas: beside that, my XSLT doesn't like it :(
mhausenblas: why not RIF-Turtle?
Shepard: served as text/plain as well