Sometimes when i make a new post, i want to see if anyone else has linked it
And the correct choice is using Technorati

But it’s limited and not simple to do…

And so i want a sort of tool to make this simpler and not only with Technorati…

Shelley Powers has a lot of creativity and she makes an interesting tool…

-> Linkers Bookmarklet

You can install the script in PHP in your own site and this is one of the things i’ll make in the future…

Probably using a botton or o quick link at the right of the title of the post is more useful, isn’t it?
But the idea is very nice :)

References:

-> Odds and Ends
-> Linkers Bookmarklet

Commenta e condividi

Visto che il tempo e’ poco, intanto lancio delle segnalazioni,
sulle quali poi con calma mi fermero’ piu’ avanti…

Le consiglio caldamente perche’ sono discussioni ad alto livello sui fondamenti e sulle prospettive del Semantic Web e delle tecnologie ad esso correlate…

Prendetele come** letture per l’estate sul Semantic Web** :)

Ma si addentrano anche nella solita questione di quanto sono giuste e come si possono inserire i microformats e i vari dialetti XML ( Atom e RSS2 in testa… ) nella visione del web semantico…

I gave a talk yesterday at the ICSOC04. It was essentially a reminder to a group of very smart people that their intelligence should be used to accomodate really simple user and programmer models, not to build really complex ones.
Since I was preceded by Don Ferguson of IBM and followed the next day by Tim Berners-Lee, it seemed especially wise to stick to simple and basic ideas. Here is the talk

-> ISCOC04 Talk


So I meant to write about a 1-line piece of Javascript, but ended up with a 5000 word freeform essay on the nature of RDF, XML, validation and so forth. It could probably do with some editing, but for now the words are in pretty much the order they came out of my brain.
A short summary: thinking about our expectations of RDF “validation” can teach us a lot about RDF’s value, about it’s relationship to XML, and about the things we should focus on building next.

-> CheckRDFSyntax and Schemarama Revisited

In risposta all’intervento qui sopra…

-> Fit For Purpose


Un gran intervento di Stefano Mazzocchi…

-> Data First vs. Structure First

When you blog, you don’t tell the blog where to put it. You just write, you blog.
When you write a diary, you don’t pick a random page and then write an index to indicate where to locate that item. You just pick up from where you left off. Some people like to categorize their blog posts, some don’t. Some people decide what goes in their feeds, and some others allow you to have an RSS feed of a particular query.

e una delle tante repliche…
-> Game time started


E non poteva mancare uno dei maggiori creativi in circolazione, Danny Ayers con un post molto interessante dal titolo:

Got microformat data? Want it on the Semantic Web?
All you need is a bit of XSLT and a couple of tweaks to the XMDP profile, and every single document using that profile will transparently get a Semantic Web existence.

-> Microformats on the GRDDL

E per finire una interessante discussione su Slashdot.org

An anonymous reader writes “Adam Bosworth delivered what could be considered a seminal lecture (mp3) at the last MySQL conference about a new data model for the web, why the plain HTML web succeeded, and why XQuery or the Semantic web are failures. He is emphatic that RSS 2.0/Atom are the next big thing and represent the new data model for the web. The audio is rather long at forty plus minutes and there are a few places where the talk has been covered.”

-> A New Data Model for the Web

Commenta e condividi

Il documento in questione parla di molte cose e iniziare da un estratto preso dal mezzo non e’ certo un buon inizio, ma non resisto: e’ il cuore del Web2.0 se vogliamo e della rivoluzione che pian piano di soppiatto avremo nei prossimi anni nel Web…
Una cosa che ho gia’ accennato, il famoso Web of data, o Open Data….

Web users are becoming increasingly more savvy, and they have begun to recognise that their ongoing contributions in whatever form, e.g. product reviews, are an important success factor for these businesses.
In short, users are coming to recognise that they are providing data for free, so why should it be locked into that site alone?
**After Open Source, Open Data
**
The growing desire for web users to maintain ownership of their data, plus the increasing willingness for businesses to share their data to benefit from the network effects that web services can engender can be seen as a natural second wave of “open-ness”.
First open source; now open data

This second wave has the potential to be a much bigger and profound movement as it is of immediate relevance to all frequent web users, rather than just software engineers, hackers, businesses, etc.

The pressure for information to be free, is translating into pressure for sites to expose open services for users to interact with.
Similar pressures are leading to standardisation of data formats; web services alone aren’t enough the data must be portable and easily exchangeable. XML and RDF are both core technologies that facilitate this exchange, with specific vocabularies, such as FOAF (description of users) and RSS (syndication of content) addressing particular needs.

Questo e’ proprio uno dei passaggi chiave per capire la direzione che conviene prendere per rendere le applicazioni Web piu’ evolute e cosi’ anche l’esperienza Web stessa…
Per non parlare che creando un sub-strato RDF si crea anche quel livello fondamentale sul quale poggia la visione del Semantic Web…

Con un solo approccio si potrebbero avere ben due vantaggi, uno immediato e uno nel tempo…

Passiamo ora a vedere di cosa si parla in questo paper…

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Foto dell'autore

Matteo Brunati

Attivista Open Data prima, studioso di Civic Hacking e dell’importanza del ruolo delle comunità in seguito, vengo dalle scienze dell’informazione, dove ho scoperto il Software libero e l’Open Source, il Semantic Web e la filosofia che guida lo sviluppo degli standard del World Wide Web e ne sono rimasto affascinato.
Il lavoro (dal 2018 in poi) mi ha portato ad occuparmi di Legal Tech, di Cyber Security e di Compliance, ambiti fortemente connessi l’uno all’altro e decisamente sfidanti.


Compliance Specialist SpazioDati
Appassionato #CivicHackingIT


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