- From: Toby Inkster <tai@g5n.co.uk>
- Date: Wed, 2 Sep 2009 06:34:01 +0100
- To: Semantic Web <semantic-web@w3.org>, "public-lod@w3.org community" <public-lod@w3.org>
I think this is a great idea for a project, but I don't have time to do it myself... 1. Set up a wiki (pref MediaWiki) for people to publish their CVs/ Resumés. This might need slightly different access restrictions than normal MediaWiki installations to prevent people from negatively editing others' CVs. 2. The site would provide a bunch of MediaWiki "templates" which would expose the CV data as XHTML+RDFa using the FOAF and DOAC vocabs primarily. 3. The site would provide a conformance checking tool for CV authors, using RDFS and OWL reasoning, and perhaps in-built knowledge of FOAF and DOAC, to look at individual CVs and check them for contradictions. (e.g. range/domain conflicts.) 4. The site would provide a "dictionary" of skills, each with a URI, for more standardised markup of a person's skillset. 5. A bot would monitor the "recent changes" RSS feed (is this valid RSS 1.0 - i.e. RDF? If not, it could maybe be fixed.) finding CVs which had recently been changed. Each of these would be parsed as RDFa and entered into a big, communal triple store (using the URL of the CV page as a graph name for easy maintenance). 6. A SPARQL endpoint would be exposed for the big triple store. 7. People could write various human-friendly forms as a wrapper for the SPARQL endpoint. The cviki community would vote on the best of these, and the winner would be placed on the Wiki front page. -- Toby A Inkster <mailto:mail@tobyinkster.co.uk> <http://tobyinkster.co.uk>
Received on Wednesday, 2 September 2009 05:34:44 UTC