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SPARQL Graduates to W3C Recommendation

KjetilK writes "The W3C just gave SPARQL the stamp of approval. SPARQL is a query language for the Semantic Web, and differs from other query languages in that is usable across different data sources. There are already 14 implementations of the spec available. Most of them are free software. There are also billions of relations out there that are query-able, thanks to the Linking Open Data project. The structured data of Wikipedia is now query-able at DBpedia. Also, have a look at Ivan Herman's presentations on this topic."

3 of 111 comments (clear)

  1. Semantic Web Quite Important by curmudgeon99 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Though the Semantic web is not important for the casual user--I think Google is pretty good now--but for a machine trying to converse with a human being, the semantic web is a great advance. I myself have an open source project on Googlecode that had a place holder for just this item. Thank god it's coming along.

  2. Worst acronym ever! by el_chupanegre · · Score: 1, Interesting

    SPARQL is both a recursive acronym and contains other acronyms! SPARQL Protocol and RDF Query Language.

    I vote this worst acronym ever!

  3. Re:It is really simple by KjetilK · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Hehe, well, yeah, FOAF's been around for ages, it predates pretty much the whole social networking craze. But the XML thing is kinda arbitrary, it is just one of several ways to write RDF. I don't really write RDF as XML by hand anymore, except for that single file. I might use RDF/XML if it is generated, if I hand-write, I use Turtle.

    Anyway, FOAF + SIOC + Policy Aware Web comprises pretty good solutions to the data portability and privacy considerations people have been screaming about lately.

    --
    Employee of Inrupt, Project Release Manager and Community Manager for Solid