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Posts Tagged ‘HTTP’

Defining Meaning on the Semantic Web

Mike Bergman recently asked the deceptively simple question, what do things mean on the semantic web? He explains, “The crowning achievement of the semantic Web is the simple use of URIs to identify data. Further, if the URI identifier can resolve to a representation of that data, it now becomes an integral part of the HTTP access protocol of the Web while providing a unique identifier for the data. These innovations provide the basis for distributed data at global scale, all accessible via Web devices such as browsers and smartphones that are now a ubiquitous part of our daily lives.” Read more

SemTechBiz is Less Than 2 Weeks Away

The Semantic Tech & Business Conference (SemTechBiz) is coming to San Francisco on June 3-7! Join us for case studies, innovative panels, tutorials, and keynotes that will provide you with practical advice, hands-on guidance, and breakthrough approaches to solving business problems with semantic technology. Passes go up $200 at the door. Sign up now and save !

Five Updated SPARQL 1.1 Drafts

The W3C SPARQL Working Group has published updated drafts of the following SPARQL 1.1 documents.

The current plans of the Working Group are to publish the so called “Last Call” Working Draft around the end of the year.

First Draft of SPARQL 1.1 Federation Extensions Published; Five SPARQL 1.1 Drafts Updated

The SPARQL Working Group has published a First Public Working Draft of SPARQL 1.1 Federation Extensions, which defines extensions to the SPARQL Query Language to support distributed SPARQL query execution. The group also published 5 updates, listed below. The group seeks feedback, particularly on open issues identified in each document.

A Common SPARQL Extension

I have often heard people lament the lack of federated systems in the Semantic Web. Certainly, the use of URIs allows data from many different sources to link together seamlessly, and the judicious use of assertions like owl:sameAs can help fill in the gaps, but if a developer wants to do something interesting with data from more than one SPARQL endpoint, they must draw it all in from various locations before merging and linking it all locally. Where is the "webiness" in this data? Wasn’t SPARQL supposed to do all of the processing work for us? Why do we need to do this work manually?

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Put Your Desktop in the Cloud to Support the Open Government Directive and Data.gov/semantic

Disclaimer:  This article does not reflect the views of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and does not constitute endorsement by the EPA of the standards or products mentioned.

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HTTP PATCH and Tracking RDF Changes

Last week’s announcement that HTTP PATCH has been adopted as an official verb via RFC 5789 has generated a lot of excitement (and questions). As a summary, the intention of each verb is:

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New SPARQL drafts published

The W3C SPARQL Working Group has published a First Public Working Draft of SPARQL 1.1 Property Paths, which
defines a more succinct way to write parts of basic graph patterns and also extend matching of triple pattern to arbitrary length paths. The group also published six updates, namely:

New drafts of EARL and HTTP vocabularies in RDF

The W3C Evaluation and Repair Tools Working Group (ERT WG) has published new or updated a number of RDF vocabularies that are part of the Evaluation and Report Language (EARL). These working drafts include:

See also the Evaluation and Report Language (EARL) 1.0 Guide.

EARL provides a format for expressing test results, such as those generated by Web accessibility evaluation tools, using a vendor-neutral and platform-independent format. While the review period has ended, ERT WG encourages you to review EARL 1.0 documents and submit any comments. See Call for Review: EARL 1.0 Last Call Working Draft e-mail for more information.

First drafts for SPARQL 1.1 published

The W3C SPARQL Working
Group
published the First Public Working Draft of six SPARQL 1.1
specifications. SPARQL is the query language of the Semantic Web, and
SPARQL 1.1 enhances the SPARQL landscape with:

oeGOV: Open Government through Semantic Web Technologies

Enabling Data Independence for Government Transparency

by Ralph Hodgson, CTO, TopQuadrant, Inc.

Open Government has become a popular theme, both in the U.S. and other countries.  With “Transparency” gaining momentum, increasing categories and amounts of government data are becoming available on the web.  In the U.S., an impetus for this was Barrack Obama’s memorandum to the heads of Executive Departments and Agencies. This included the following statement:

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