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Kingsley Uyi Idehen
Lexington, United States

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Additional OpenLink Data Spaces Features

Daniel Lewis has published another post about OpenLink Data Spaces (ODS) functionality titled:A few new features in OpenLink Data Spaces, that exposes additional features (some hot out the oven).

OpenLink Data Spaces (ODS) now officially supports:

Which means that OpenLink Data Spaces support all of the main standards being discussed in the DataPortability Interest Group!

APML Example:

All users of ODS automatically get a dynamically created APML file, for example: APML profile for Kingsley Idehen

The URI for an APML profile is: http://myopenlink.net/dataspace//apml.xml

Meaning of a Tag Example:

All users of ODS automatically have tag cloud information embedded inside their SIOC file, for example: SIOC for Kingsley Idehen on the Myopenlink.net installation of ODS.

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: http://myopenlink.net/dataspace/imitko/weblog/Mitko%27s%20Weblog/tag/paris

Which can be put through the OpenLink Data Browser:

OAuth Example:

OAuth Tokens and Secrets can be created for any ODS application. To do this:

  1. you can log in to MyOpenlink.net beta service, the Live Demo ODS installation, an EC2 instance, or your local installation
  2. then go to ‘Settings’
  3. and then you will see ‘OAuth Keys’
  4. you will then be able to choose the applications that you have instantiated and generate the token and secret for that app.

Related Document (Human) Links

Remember (as per my most recent post about ODS), 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.

Structured Tagging?

This is how we take a key Web 2.0 feature (think 2D in a sense), bend it over, to create a Linked Data Web (Web 3.0) experience unobtrusively (see earlier posts re. Dimensions of Web). 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:

    What's the Linked Data value proposition?
    What's the Linked Data business model?
    What's the Semantic Web Killer application?

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.

Related Items

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Tip: This post is best viewed via an RDF aware User Agent (e.g. a Browser or Data Viewer). 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) :-)

# PermaLink Comments [0]
02/09/2008 17:54 GMT Modified: 02/12/2008 15:07 GMT
10 Reasons to use OpenLink Data Spaces (ODS)

Via post by Daniel Lewis, titled:10 Reasons to use OpenLink Data Spaces

There are quite a few reasons to use OpenLink Data Spaces (ODS). Here are 10 of the reasons why I use ODS:

  1. Its native support of DataPortability Recommendations such as RSS, Atom, APML, Yadis, OPML, Microformats, FOAF, SIOC, OpenID and OAuth.
  2. Its native support of Semantic Web Technologies such as: RDF and SPARQL/SPARUL for querying.
  3. Everything in ODS is an Object with its own URI, this is due to the underlying Object-Relational Architecture provided by Virtuoso.
  4. It has all the social media components that you could need, including: blogs, wikis, social networks, feed readers, CRM and a calendar.
  5. It is expandable by installing pre-configured components (called VADs), or by re-configuring a LAMP application to use Virtuoso. Some examples of current VADs include: MediaWiki, Wordpress and Drupal.
  6. It works with external webservices such as: Facebook, del.icio.us and Flickr.
  7. Everything within OpenLink Data Spaces is Linked Data, 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 Knowledge Base.
  8. ODS builds bridges between the existing static-document based web (aka ‘Web 1.0‘), the more dynamic,  services-oriented, social and/or user-orientated webs (aka ‘Web 2.0‘) and the web which we are just going into, which is more data-orientated (aka ‘Web 3.0’ or ‘Linked Data Web’).
  9. It is fully supportive of Cloud Computing, and can be installed on Amazon EC2.
  10. Its released free under the GNU General Public License (GPL). [note]However, it is technically dual licensed as it lays on top of the Virtuoso Universal Server which has both Commercial and GPL licensing[/note]

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.

Note: 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.

# PermaLink Comments [0]
02/08/2008 17:33 GMT Modified: 02/12/2008 15:11 GMT
Ted Nelson's Perspective on Technology Lock-in

Ted Nelson expresses technology lock-in dislike. This applies to Operating System, Programming Language, Database, or any other forms.

Amen!
# PermaLink Comments [0] TrackBack [1]
02/15/2006 19:50 GMT Modified: 04/23/2007 04:54 GMT
Ted Nelson's Perspective on Technology Lock-in

Ted Nelson expresses technology lock-in dislike. This applies to Operating System, Programming Language, Database, or any other forms.

Amen!
# PermaLink Comments [0] TrackBack [1]
02/15/2006 19:50 GMT Modified: 04/23/2007 04:54 GMT
Ted Nelson's Perspective on Technology Lock-in

Ted Nelson expresses technology lock-in dislike. This applies to Operating System, Programming Language, Database, or any other forms.

Amen!
# PermaLink Comments [0] TrackBack [1]
02/15/2006 19:50 GMT Modified: 04/23/2007 04:54 GMT
Video: Tribute to Innovation (featuring: Doug Engelbart)
A really nice video tribute to Doug Engelbart and the fundamental challenges of seeing way ahead of your time (aka. Prescience) :-)
# PermaLink Comments [0]
02/15/2006 19:08 GMT Modified: 11/29/2006 00:12 GMT
Video: Tribute to Innovation (featuring: Doug Engelbart)
A really nice video tribute to Doug Engelbart and the fundamental challenges of seeing way ahead of your time (aka. Prescience) :-)
# PermaLink Comments [0]
02/15/2006 19:08 GMT Modified: 11/29/2006 00:12 GMT
Video: Tribute to Innovation (featuring: Doug Engelbart)
A really nice video tribute to Doug Engelbart and the fundamental challenges of seeing way ahead of your time (aka. Prescience) :-)
# PermaLink Comments [0]
02/15/2006 19:08 GMT Modified: 11/29/2006 00:12 GMT
         
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