- From: Giosue Vitaglione <giosue@umich.edu>
- Date: Thu, 12 Apr 2001 15:10:26 -0400 (EDT)
- To: "Sean B. Palmer" <sean@mysterylights.com>
- cc: www-rdf-interest@w3.org, www-rdf-logic@w3.org
Right. But you would use an identifier for the car, and a location on the network of the computer that handles this information. If you want you can also give an identifier to this computer, or a software on it. Does that make any sense to you? Anyway, now we've got also the anti-theft URI :-) Best Regards, Giosue' On Thu, 12 Apr 2001, Sean B. Palmer wrote: > > Can you identify a car with a locator ? > > Not, of course. > > Um... actually, I could if I installed an HTTP server into it > somewhere... I could kind of say "this IP address is the address of my > car", and maybe it could server back details of how fast I'm going, > etc. In fact, my car is broken at the moment, so it wouldn't register > anything. > > Hmm, this isn't as crazy a notion as it sounds: some anti-theft > devices already communicate with the police when stolen, and I guess > there must be some cars out there hooked up to the Internet. > > -- > Kindest Regards, > Sean B. Palmer > @prefix : <http://webns.net/roughterms/> . > :Sean :hasHomepage <http://purl.org/net/sbp/> . >
Received on Thursday, 12 April 2001 15:10:32 UTC