- From: Kingsley Idehen <kidehen@openlinksw.com>
- Date: Sat, 30 Jan 2016 11:37:48 -0500
- To: "public-lod@w3.org" <public-lod@w3.org>
- Cc: "public-rww@w3.org" <public-rww@w3.org>, 'W3C Web Schemas Task Force' <public-vocabs@w3.org>, "semantic-web@w3.org" <semantic-web@w3.org>
- Message-ID: <56ACE6DC.6070409@openlinksw.com>
All, I am pleased to announce immediate availability of the 2.6.1 edition of our Structured Data Sniffer extension for Chrome, Opera, Firefox, and Vivaldi. I've published detailed notes on Medium [1] and Google Plus [2] that include live features and benefits exploitation examples. New Features Summary: * Nanotation sniffing — ability to sniff out RDF-Turtle (or RDF-Ntriples) statements embedded in the body of HTML docs and/or text pages * Improved Default SPARQL Query — clicking on the “Query” button returns a page enhanced (via Natural Language Processing, Machine Learning, and Entity Extraction) for immediate Linked Data exploration * Sniffed content download — you can download extracted data to local Turtle or JSON-LD documents (which include mounted folders from the likes of Dropbox, Google Drive, OneDrive etc..). Personally, Data Flow across Data Silos is a key benefit delivered by this release. Why? Because notations such as RDF-Turtle and RDF-Ntriples can be used to craft structured data islands within any kind of document without depending on the whims of any of the following: 1. article author -- since you can embed your notes (RDF-Turtle or RDF-Ntriples based nanotations) in comments that are associated with a post or in your own document publishing space 2. social media space owner --- you no longer have to wait for social media spaces to support or publish metadata (or general structured data islands) using RDF-Turtle or RDF-Ntriples, just post your nanotations and be done with it (I have a many examples of this powerful capability) 3. beyond tagging and bookmarking you can now craft important notes that simply augment your knowledgebase (wherever it might be on an HTTP network) while also being able to save content to the local or your local disk. Note: At this point, the Firefox extension lacks nanotation sniffing. That will be fixed in the coming days. Enjoy! Links: [1] https://medium.com/@kidehen/openlink-structured-data-sniffer-osds-2-6-1-unleashed-15137e558350#.7lqecrci7 -- OSDS New Features & Usage Examples Article [2] https://plus.google.com/+KingsleyIdehen/posts/PaH7rRhiD3D -- G+ Post covering New Features & Usage Examples [3] https://osds.openlinks.com -- OpenLink Structured Data Sniffer Home Page [4] https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/openlink-structured-data/egdaiaihbdoiibopledjahjaihbmjhdj/related?hl=en -- Chrome Store Listing [5] https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/openlink-structured-data-sniff/ -- Mozilla Extensions Store Listing . -- Regards, Kingsley Idehen Founder & CEO OpenLink Software Company Web: http://www.openlinksw.com Personal Weblog 1: http://kidehen.blogspot.com Personal Weblog 2: http://www.openlinksw.com/blog/~kidehen Twitter Profile: https://twitter.com/kidehen Google+ Profile: https://plus.google.com/+KingsleyIdehen/about LinkedIn Profile: http://www.linkedin.com/in/kidehen Personal WebID: http://kingsley.idehen.net/dataspace/person/kidehen#this
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Received on Saturday, 30 January 2016 16:38:15 UTC