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Kingsley Uyi Idehen
Lexington, United States

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RDF Browsers & RDF Data Middleware

Frederick Giasson penned an interesting post earlier today that highlighted the RDF Middleware services offered by Triplr and the Virtuoso Sponger

Some Definitions (as per usual):

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).

In this post I would like to provide a similar perspective on this ability to treat non RDF as RDF from RDF Browser perspective.

First off, what's an RDF Browser?

An RDF Browser is a piece of technology that enables you to Browse RDF Data Sources 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".).

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):

  1. Tabulator
  2. DISCO - Hyperdata Browser
  3. OpenLink Ajax Toolkit's RDF Browser (a component of the OAT Javascript Toolkit)

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 URI dereferencing (HTTP GETing the data exposed by the Data Pointer). Thus you can cut&paste the following into each of the aforementioned RDF Browsers:

  1. Triplr's RDF Data (Triples) extractions from Dan Connolly's Home Page
  2. The Virtuoso Sponger's RDF Data (Triples) extractions from Dan Connolly's Home Page

Since we are all time challenged (naturally!) you can also just click on these permalinks for the OAT RDF Browser demos:

  1. Permalink for Triplr's RDF Data (Triples) extractions from Dan Connolly's Home Page
  2. Permalink for the Virtuoso Sponger's RDF Data (Triples) extractions from Dan Connolly's Home Page
# PermaLink Comments [0] TrackBack [90]
03/28/2007 19:17 GMT Modified: 05/05/2007 09:38 GMT
RDF Browsers & RDF Data Middleware

Frederick Giasson penned an interesting post earlier today that highlighted the RDF Middleware services offered by Triplr and the Virtuoso Sponger

Some Definitions (as per usual):

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).

In this post I would like to provide a similar perspective on this ability to treat non RDF as RDF from RDF Browser perspective.

First off, what's an RDF Browser?

An RDF Browser is a piece of technology that enables you to Browse RDF Data Sources 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".).

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):

  1. Tabulator
  2. DISCO - Hyperdata Browser
  3. OpenLink Ajax Toolkit's RDF Browser (a component of the OAT Javascript Toolkit)

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 URI dereferencing (HTTP GETing the data exposed by the Data Pointer). Thus you can cut&paste the following into each of the aforementioned RDF Browsers:

  1. Triplr's RDF Data (Triples) extractions from Dan Connolly's Home Page
  2. The Virtuoso Sponger's RDF Data (Triples) extractions from Dan Connolly's Home Page

Since we are all time challenged (naturally!) you can also just click on these permalinks for the OAT RDF Browser demos:

  1. Permalink for Triplr's RDF Data (Triples) extractions from Dan Connolly's Home Page
  2. Permalink for the Virtuoso Sponger's RDF Data (Triples) extractions from Dan Connolly's Home Page
# PermaLink Comments [0] TrackBack [90]
03/28/2007 19:17 GMT Modified: 05/05/2007 09:38 GMT
RDF Browsers & RDF Data Middleware

Frederick Giasson penned an interesting post earlier today that highlighted the RDF Middleware services offered by Triplr and the Virtuoso Sponger

Some Definitions (as per usual):

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).

In this post I would like to provide a similar perspective on this ability to treat non RDF as RDF from RDF Browser perspective.

First off, what's an RDF Browser?

An RDF Browser is a piece of technology that enables you to Browse RDF Data Sources 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".).

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):

  1. Tabulator
  2. DISCO - Hyperdata Browser
  3. OpenLink Ajax Toolkit's RDF Browser (a component of the OAT Javascript Toolkit)

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 URI dereferencing (HTTP GETing the data exposed by the Data Pointer). Thus you can cut&paste the following into each of the aforementioned RDF Browsers:

  1. Triplr's RDF Data (Triples) extractions from Dan Connolly's Home Page
  2. The Virtuoso Sponger's RDF Data (Triples) extractions from Dan Connolly's Home Page

Since we are all time challenged (naturally!) you can also just click on these permalinks for the OAT RDF Browser demos:

  1. Permalink for Triplr's RDF Data (Triples) extractions from Dan Connolly's Home Page
  2. Permalink for the Virtuoso Sponger's RDF Data (Triples) extractions from Dan Connolly's Home Page
# PermaLink Comments [0] TrackBack [90]
03/28/2007 19:17 GMT Modified: 05/05/2007 09:38 GMT
RDF Browsers & RDF Data Middleware

Frederick Giasson penned an interesting post earlier today that highlighted the RDF Middleware services offered by Triplr and the Virtuoso Sponger

Some Definitions (as per usual):

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).

In this post I would like to provide a similar perspective on this ability to treat non RDF as RDF from RDF Browser perspective.

First off, what's an RDF Browser?

An RDF Browser is a piece of technology that enables you to Browse RDF Data Sources 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".).

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):

  1. Tabulator
  2. DISCO - Hyperdata Browser
  3. OpenLink Ajax Toolkit's RDF Browser (a component of the OAT Javascript Toolkit)

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 URI dereferencing (HTTP GETing the data exposed by the Data Pointer). Thus you can cut&paste the following into each of the aforementioned RDF Browsers:

  1. Triplr's RDF Data (Triples) extractions from Dan Connolly's Home Page
  2. The Virtuoso Sponger's RDF Data (Triples) extractions from Dan Connolly's Home Page

Since we are all time challenged (naturally!) you can also just click on these permalinks for the OAT RDF Browser demos:

  1. Permalink for Triplr's RDF Data (Triples) extractions from Dan Connolly's Home Page
  2. Permalink for the Virtuoso Sponger's RDF Data (Triples) extractions from Dan Connolly's Home Page
# PermaLink Comments [0] TrackBack [90]
03/28/2007 19:17 GMT Modified: 05/05/2007 09:38 GMT
RDF Browsers & RDF Data Middleware

Frederick Giasson penned an interesting post earlier today that highlighted the RDF Middleware services offered by Triplr and the Virtuoso Sponger

Some Definitions (as per usual):

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).

In this post I would like to provide a similar perspective on this ability to treat non RDF as RDF from RDF Browser perspective.

First off, what's an RDF Browser?

An RDF Browser is a piece of technology that enables you to Browse RDF Data Sources 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".).

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):

  1. Tabulator
  2. DISCO - Hyperdata Browser
  3. OpenLink Ajax Toolkit's RDF Browser (a component of the OAT Javascript Toolkit)

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 URI dereferencing (HTTP GETing the data exposed by the Data Pointer). Thus you can cut&paste the following into each of the aforementioned RDF Browsers:

  1. Triplr's RDF Data (Triples) extractions from Dan Connolly's Home Page
  2. The Virtuoso Sponger's RDF Data (Triples) extractions from Dan Connolly's Home Page

Since we are all time challenged (naturally!) you can also just click on these permalinks for the OAT RDF Browser demos:

  1. Permalink for Triplr's RDF Data (Triples) extractions from Dan Connolly's Home Page
  2. Permalink for the Virtuoso Sponger's RDF Data (Triples) extractions from Dan Connolly's Home Page
# PermaLink Comments [0] TrackBack [90]
03/28/2007 19:17 GMT Modified: 05/05/2007 09:38 GMT
RDF Browsers & RDF Data Middleware

Frederick Giasson penned an interesting post earlier today that highlighted the RDF Middleware services offered by Triplr and the Virtuoso Sponger

Some Definitions (as per usual):

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).

In this post I would like to provide a similar perspective on this ability to treat non RDF as RDF from RDF Browser perspective.

First off, what's an RDF Browser?

An RDF Browser is a piece of technology that enables you to Browse RDF Data Sources 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".).

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):

  1. Tabulator
  2. DISCO - Hyperdata Browser
  3. OpenLink Ajax Toolkit's RDF Browser (a component of the OAT Javascript Toolkit)

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 URI dereferencing (HTTP GETing the data exposed by the Data Pointer). Thus you can cut&paste the following into each of the aforementioned RDF Browsers:

  1. Triplr's RDF Data (Triples) extractions from Dan Connolly's Home Page
  2. The Virtuoso Sponger's RDF Data (Triples) extractions from Dan Connolly's Home Page

Since we are all time challenged (naturally!) you can also just click on these permalinks for the OAT RDF Browser demos:

  1. Permalink for Triplr's RDF Data (Triples) extractions from Dan Connolly's Home Page
  2. Permalink for the Virtuoso Sponger's RDF Data (Triples) extractions from Dan Connolly's Home Page
# PermaLink Comments [0] TrackBack [90]
03/28/2007 19:17 GMT Modified: 05/05/2007 09:38 GMT
RDF Browsers & RDF Data Middleware

Frederick Giasson penned an interesting post earlier today that highlighted the RDF Middleware services offered by Triplr and the Virtuoso Sponger

Some Definitions (as per usual):

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).

In this post I would like to provide a similar perspective on this ability to treat non RDF as RDF from RDF Browser perspective.

First off, what's an RDF Browser?

An RDF Browser is a piece of technology that enables you to Browse RDF Data Sources 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".).

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):

  1. Tabulator
  2. DISCO - Hyperdata Browser
  3. OpenLink Ajax Toolkit's RDF Browser (a component of the OAT Javascript Toolkit)

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 URI dereferencing (HTTP GETing the data exposed by the Data Pointer). Thus you can cut&paste the following into each of the aforementioned RDF Browsers:

  1. Triplr's RDF Data (Triples) extractions from Dan Connolly's Home Page
  2. The Virtuoso Sponger's RDF Data (Triples) extractions from Dan Connolly's Home Page

Since we are all time challenged (naturally!) you can also just click on these permalinks for the OAT RDF Browser demos:

  1. Permalink for Triplr's RDF Data (Triples) extractions from Dan Connolly's Home Page
  2. Permalink for the Virtuoso Sponger's RDF Data (Triples) extractions from Dan Connolly's Home Page
# PermaLink Comments [0] TrackBack [90]
03/28/2007 19:17 GMT Modified: 05/05/2007 09:38 GMT
RDF Browsers & RDF Data Middleware

Frederick Giasson penned an interesting post earlier today that highlighted the RDF Middleware services offered by Triplr and the Virtuoso Sponger

Some Definitions (as per usual):

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).

In this post I would like to provide a similar perspective on this ability to treat non RDF as RDF from RDF Browser perspective.

First off, what's an RDF Browser?

An RDF Browser is a piece of technology that enables you to Browse RDF Data Sources 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".).

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):

  1. Tabulator
  2. DISCO - Hyperdata Browser
  3. OpenLink Ajax Toolkit's RDF Browser (a component of the OAT Javascript Toolkit)

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 URI dereferencing (HTTP GETing the data exposed by the Data Pointer). Thus you can cut&paste the following into each of the aforementioned RDF Browsers:

  1. Triplr's RDF Data (Triples) extractions from Dan Connolly's Home Page
  2. The Virtuoso Sponger's RDF Data (Triples) extractions from Dan Connolly's Home Page

Since we are all time challenged (naturally!) you can also just click on these permalinks for the OAT RDF Browser demos:

  1. Permalink for Triplr's RDF Data (Triples) extractions from Dan Connolly's Home Page
  2. Permalink for the Virtuoso Sponger's RDF Data (Triples) extractions from Dan Connolly's Home Page
# PermaLink Comments [0] TrackBack [90]
03/28/2007 19:17 GMT Modified: 05/05/2007 09:38 GMT
Contd: Ajax Database Connectivity Demos

Last week I put out a series of screencast style demos that sought to demonstrate the core elements of our soon to be released Javascript Toolkit called OAT (OpenLink Ajax Toolkit) and its Ajax Database Connectivity layer.

The screencasts covered the following functionality realms:

  1. SQL Query By Example (basic)
  2. SQL Query By Example (advanced - pivot table construction)
  3. Web Form Design (basic database driven map based mashup)
  4. Web Form Design (advanced database driven map based mashup)

To bring additional clarity to the screencasts demos and OAT in general, I have saved a number of documents that are the by products of activities in the screenvcasts:

  1. Live XML Document produced using SQL Query By Example (basic) (you can use drag and drop columns across the grid to reorder and sort presentation)
  2. Live XML Document produced using QBE and Pivot Functionality (you can drag and drop the aggregate columns and rows to create your own views etc..)
  3. Basic database driven map based mashup (works with FireFox, Webkit, Camino; click on pins to see national flag)
  4. Advanced database driven map based mashup (works with FireFox, Webkit, Camino; records, 36, 87, and 257 will unveil pivots via lookup pin)

Notes:

  • “Advanced”, as used above, simply means that I am embedding images (employee photos and national flags) and a database driven pivot into the map pins that serve as details lookups in classic SQL master/details type scenarios.
  • The “Ajax Call In Progress..” dialog is there to show live interaction with a remote database (in this case Virtuoso but this could be any ODBC, JDBC, OLEDB, ADO.NET, or XMLA accessible data source)
  • The data access magic source (if you want to call it that) is XMLA - a standard that has been in place for years but completely misunderstood and as a result under utilized

You can see a full collection of saved documents at the following locations:

# PermaLink Comments [0] TrackBack [428]
06/02/2006 03:48 GMT Modified: 05/28/2007 01:41 GMT
Contd: Ajax Database Connectivity Demos

Last week I put out a series of screencast style demos that sought to demonstrate the core elements of our soon to be released Javascript Toolkit called OAT (OpenLink Ajax Toolkit) and its Ajax Database Connectivity layer.

The screencasts covered the following functionality realms:

  1. SQL Query By Example (basic)
  2. SQL Query By Example (advanced - pivot table construction)
  3. Web Form Design (basic database driven map based mashup)
  4. Web Form Design (advanced database driven map based mashup)

To bring additional clarity to the screencasts demos and OAT in general, I have saved a number of documents that are the by products of activities in the screenvcasts:

  1. Live XML Document produced using SQL Query By Example (basic) (you can use drag and drop columns across the grid to reorder and sort presentation)
  2. Live XML Document produced using QBE and Pivot Functionality (you can drag and drop the aggregate columns and rows to create your own views etc..)
  3. Basic database driven map based mashup (works with FireFox, Webkit, Camino; click on pins to see national flag)
  4. Advanced database driven map based mashup (works with FireFox, Webkit, Camino; records, 36, 87, and 257 will unveil pivots via lookup pin)

Notes:

  • “Advanced”, as used above, simply means that I am embedding images (employee photos and national flags) and a database driven pivot into the map pins that serve as details lookups in classic SQL master/details type scenarios.
  • The “Ajax Call In Progress..” dialog is there to show live interaction with a remote database (in this case Virtuoso but this could be any ODBC, JDBC, OLEDB, ADO.NET, or XMLA accessible data source)
  • The data access magic source (if you want to call it that) is XMLA - a standard that has been in place for years but completely misunderstood and as a result under utilized

You can see a full collection of saved documents at the following locations:

# PermaLink Comments [0] TrackBack [428]
06/02/2006 03:48 GMT Modified: 05/28/2007 01:41 GMT
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