- From: Martynas Jusevicius <martynas@graphity.org>
- Date: Fri, 16 Mar 2012 22:04:18 +0100
- To: Hugh Glaser <hg@ecs.soton.ac.uk>
- Cc: Yury Katkov <katkov.juriy@gmail.com>, Semantic Web <semantic-web@w3.org>, public-lod <public-lod@w3.org>
Hey all, I'm working on generic Linked Data/SPARQL endpoint browser. Provided with either RDF document URI or SPARQL endpoint URI, it creates a web interface for it. Here's some source code https://github.com/Graphity/graphity-browser and a paper about the core framework (PHP version of it) here: http://www.w3.org/2011/09/LinkedData/ledp2011_submission_1.pdf I'd be happy to answer some questions. Martynas graphity.org On Fri, Mar 16, 2012 at 9:15 PM, Hugh Glaser <hg@ecs.soton.ac.uk> wrote: > Hi Yury > Well I am sorry to see you have had no response, but it is not so surprising, really. > You will find that essentially there are very few people doing what you are trying to do. > The Semantic Web and Linked Data world is made up of people who publish, and rarely consume. > It is almost unheard of for someone to consume someone else's data, unless they know the publisher. > Everyone is shouting, but not many listening. > OK, I might not be in a great mood today, but I'm not far wrong. > > To your problem. > Your steps seem reasonable. > I would, however, add the use of VoiD (http://www.w3.org/TR/void/, http://semanticweb.org/wiki/VoiD). > VoiD is designed to deliver what you want, I think (if it doesn't, then it should be made to). > Some sites do publish VoiD descriptions, and these can often be located automatically by looking in the sitemap, which can in turn be discovered by looking in robots.txt. > Keith Alexander has a store of collected VoiD descriptions (http://kwijibo.talis.com/voiD/), as do we (http://void.rkbexplorer.com). > I would also suggest that my own site, http://sameas.org might lead from interesting URIs to other related URIs, and hence interesting stores. > > Hope that helps. > Best > Hugh > > On 16 Mar 2012, at 04:58, Yury Katkov wrote: > >> Hi! >> >> What do you usually do when you want to find a dataset for your needs? >> I'm preparing a tiny tutorial on this topic for the students and ask >> you to share your experience. >> My typical algorithm is the following: >> 0) Define the topic. I have to know precisely what kind of data I need. >> 1) Look at Linked Data cloud and other visualizations to ensure that >> the needed data is presented somewhere. If for example I want to >> improve Mendeley or Zotero I look at these visualizations and search >> for publication data. >> 2) Search the needed properties and classes with Sindice, Sig.ma and Swoogle. >> 3) Look at CKAN description of the dataset, its XML citemap and VoiD metadata. >> 4) explore the dataset that were found on the previous step with some >> simple SPARQL queries like these: >> >> SELECT DISTINCT ?p WHERE { >> ?s ?p ?o >> } >> >> SELECT DISTINCT ?class WHERE { >> { ?class a rdfs:Class . } >> UNION >> {?class a owl:Class . } >> } >> >> SELECT DISCTINCT ?label WHERE { >> {?a rdfs:label ?label} >> UNION >> {?a dc:title ?label} >> /* and possibly some more things to search foaf:name's and so on */ >> } >> >> I can also use COUNTing and GROUPing BY to get some quick statistics >> about the datasets. >> 5) When I find some interesting URIs I use semantic web browsers >> Marbles and Sig.ma to navigate through the dataset. >> 5) Ask these smart guys in Semantic Web mailing list and Public LOD >> mailing list. Probably go to semanticoverflow and ask for help there >> as well >> ====================== >> Here are my questions: >> >> 1) What else do you typically doing to find the dataset? >> 2) Is there a resource where I can find the brief description of the >> dataset in terms of properties and classes that mentioned there? And >> these cool arrows in Richard Cyganiak's diagram: is there a resource >> where I can find the information about relationship between the given >> dataset and the rest of the world? >> 3) I have similar algorithm for searching vocabularies. Can resources >> like Schemapedia help me in searching the dataset? >> 4) Do you know any other meeting SPARQL queries that can be handy when >> I search something in the dataset. >> >> Sincerely yours, >> ----- >> Yury Katkov >> > > -- > Hugh Glaser, > Web and Internet Science > Electronics and Computer Science, > University of Southampton, > Southampton SO17 1BJ > Work: +44 23 8059 3670, Fax: +44 23 8059 3045 > Mobile: +44 75 9533 4155 , Home: +44 23 8061 5652 > http://www.ecs.soton.ac.uk/~hg/ > >
Received on Friday, 16 March 2012 21:04:48 UTC