- From: Hugh Glaser <hg@ecs.soton.ac.uk>
- Date: Wed, 6 May 2009 09:57:28 +0100
- To: Terry Brooks <tabrooks@u.washington.edu>, "public-lod@w3.org" <public-lod@w3.org>
Services: You might want to look at our http://www.rkbexplorer.com/demos/ for such services. It is our internal page, but you should be able to work out what to do. The Network and Detail services might interest you: http://www.rkbexplorer.com/network/?uri=http://dblp.rkbexplorer.com/id/peopl e-9abf7137e4dcd375d8ec4f9fbb6a53a2-34cbcdef609246c4e532796398e4377b&type=per son-person&format=tsv (tsv means it is tab-separated records, so should be easy to process.) (We don't have a lot about you.) http://www.rkbexplorer.com/detail/?uri= http://southampton.rkbexplorer.com/id/person-17e6d4cf4846bd195454a7c1143a20f b-32a6807d38b58d6d56e31d88f5e48de2&format=fragment provides a simple HTML fragment. LOD/Web 3.0 meets Web 2.0 - oh yes! If you do make use of these it would be good to know. AJAX: Of course, these services consult LOD repositories widely (note the dbpedia info in the details) and the RKBexplorer itself uses the service data, although it doesn't use AJAX. But our capture pages use AJAX, such as the ones off http://resist.ecs.soton.ac.uk/courseware/ that allow users to enter metadata, since they populate the forms by doing calls to the KBs by querying. We probably have some others. Best Hugh On 05/05/2009 20:57, "Terry Brooks" <tabrooks@u.washington.edu> wrote: > Are there examples available of making AJAX calls to a LOD repository such as > DBpedia and then displaying the results on a webpage? Similarly, are there > LOD web services that accept a request with one or more parameters and then > return a payload that can be unpacked for a webpage? > > Terrence Brooks > Information School > University of Washington > Voice: 206 543-2646 > Fax: 206 616-3152 > E-mail: tabrooks@u.washington.edu > Web: http://faculty.washington.edu/tabrooks/ > > > > >
Received on Wednesday, 6 May 2009 08:58:35 UTC