- From: Paul Houle <ontology2@gmail.com>
- Date: Thu, 3 Sep 2015 17:34:58 -0400
- To: Bernadette Hyland <bhyland@3roundstones.com>
- Cc: David Booth <david@dbooth.org>, Linked Data community <public-lod@w3.org>, "semantic-web@w3.org" <semantic-web@w3.org>
- Message-ID: <CAE__kdRB7AnZ4=x9LU3mJY0SCx=oWai5OcR3W=zB_kpoV3E+Gg@mail.gmail.com>
Bernadette,
it is not just perception, it is reality.
People find JSON-LD easy to work with, and often it is a simple
lossless model-driven transformation from an RDF graph to a JSON graph that
people can do what they want with.
Ultimately RDF is a universal data model and it is the data model that
is important, NOT the specific implementations. For instance you can do a
model-driven transformation of data from RDF to JSON-LD and then any JSON
user can access it with few hangups even if they are unaware of JSON-LD.
Add some JSON-LD tooling and you've got JSON++.
We can use a use relational-logical-graphical methods to process
handle data and we can accept and publish JSON with the greatest of ease.
On Thu, Sep 3, 2015 at 5:18 PM, Bernadette Hyland <bhyland@3roundstones.com>
wrote:
> +1 David, well said.
>
> Amazing how much the mention of JSON (in the phase JSON-LD) puts people at
> ease vs. RDF <anything>. JSON-LD as a Recommendation has helped lower the
> defenses of many who used to get their hackles up and say ‘RDF is too hard'.
>
> Perception counts for a lot, even for highly technical people including
> Web developers.
>
> Cheers,
>
> Bernadette Hyland
> CEO, 3 Round Stones, Inc.
>
> http://3roundstones.com || http://about.me/bernadettehyland
>
>
> On Sep 3, 2015, at 1:03 PM, David Booth <david@dbooth.org> wrote:
>
> Side note: RDF/XML was the first RDF serialization standardized, over 15
> years ago, at a time when XML was all the buzz. Since then other
> serializations have been standardized that are far more human friendly to
> read and write, and easier for programmers to use, such as Turtle and
> JSON-LD.
>
> However, even beyond ease of use, one of the biggest problems with RDF/XML
> that I and others have seen over the years is that it misleads people into
> thinking that RDF is a dialect of XML, and it is not. I'm sure this
> misconception was reinforced by the unfortunate depiction of XML in the
> foundation of the (now infamous) semantic web layer cake of 2001, which in
> hindsight is just plain wrong:
> http://www.w3.org/2001/09/06-ecdl/slide17-0.html
> (Admittedly JSON-LD may run a similar risk, but I think that risk is
> mitigated now by the fact that RDF is already more established in its own
> right.)
>
> I encourage all RDF publishers to use one of the other standard RDF
> formats such as Turtle or JSON-LD. All commonly used RDF tools now support
> Turtle, and many or most already support JSON-LD.
>
> RDF/XML is not officially deprecated, but I personally hope that in the
> next round of RDF updates, we will quietly thank RDF/XML for its faithful
> service and mark it as deprecated.
>
> David Booth
>
>
>
--
Paul Houle
*Applying Schemas for Natural Language Processing, Distributed Systems,
Classification and Text Mining and Data Lakes*
(607) 539 6254 paul.houle on Skype ontology2@gmail.com
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Received on Thursday, 3 September 2015 21:35:26 UTC