- From: Martin Hepp <martin.hepp@ebusiness-unibw.org>
- Date: Tue, 3 May 2011 12:18:43 +0200
- To: Christopher Gutteridge <cjg@ecs.soton.ac.uk>
- Cc: semantic-web@w3.org, public-lod@w3.org
- Message-Id: <0DE837D1-F911-4DC6-8029-19472155D525@ebusiness-unibw.org>
Hi Christopher, here is an extended diagram with locality information about the point of interest from which a particular good or service is available. Note that I am already using the new URI for the location, gr:Location, which will replace gr:LocationOfSalesOrServiceProvisioning with the next service update. As for the geo data, there are of course multiple popular patterns, see [1] for a comparison. Best Martin [1] http://www.ebusiness-unibw.org/wiki/GoodRelations_and_Geo_/_Location_Data
On May 3, 2011, at 11:52 AM, Christopher Gutteridge wrote: > I think the below example is great. It should be really easy for tools to consume. > > What we've gone with with data.southampton.ac.uk is something very similar expect that our focus wasn't the company doing the gr:offers, but the point of sale or service. > > Nobody really cares if they are buying their coffee from the University Catering, Students Union Catering or from the Theatre. The key thing people want to know is where to buy coffee? when do they open? how much does it cost? > > I've developed a simple transform to take spreadsheet based descriptions of points of service locations, opening hours, and product lists or menus: > http://data.southampton.ac.uk/dumps/catering/2011-04-19/catering-services.csv > http://data.southampton.ac.uk/dumps/catering/2011-04-19/catering-menus.csv > http://data.southampton.ac.uk/dataset/catering.html > > The tool takes points-of-services & products/offerings as it's two input types but it could be adapted (easily) to take CSV data describing companies and shop-items. Which would make it cheap and easy to populate the model you've got here, from a 2-workbook google spreadsheet. Which would make it really painless to produce. Ideally this could be a service you register the URL of your google doc and it sucks out and publishes your data as RDF... > > Martin Hepp wrote: >> Dear all: >> >> I tried to visualize the minimal RDF pattern for using GoodRelations in a way compatible with both Google and the Semantic Web at large. >> Attached, please find the respective illustration. >> >> It is meant as a complement to the complete GoodRelations UML diagram. >> >> Best wishes >> >> Martin >> >> >> >> >> <Mail Attachment.png> > > -- > Christopher Gutteridge -- > http://id.ecs.soton.ac.uk/person/1248 > > > You should read the ECS Web Team blog: > http://blogs.ecs.soton.ac.uk/webteam/
Attachments
- image/png attachment: goodrelations-point-of-sale.png
Received on Tuesday, 3 May 2011 10:21:45 UTC