I like the sound of the 'compactness' of the format, but I worry that there is a lack of tools that support the format (ie browsers, mainly). It is quite nice to naturally navigate the rdf world with a standard browser. But for transfer standards, I suppose this wouldn't matter.
Kevin
Sent from my HTC
----- Reply message -----
From: "Bob Morris" <morris.bob(a)gmail.com>
Date: Sun, Jan 24, 2010 12:08 PM
Subject: [tdwg-tag] RDF N3
To: "Technical Architecture Group mailing list" <Tdwg-tag(a)lists.tdwg.org>
Let's make N3 be the recommended RDF representation. It is way more
compact and human readable than RDF/XML. We could even specify a
normative conversion tool if necessary.
--
Robert A. Morris
Professor of Computer Science (nominally retired)
UMASS-Boston
100 Morrissey Blvd
Boston, MA 02125-3390
Associate, Harvard University Herbaria
email: ram(a)cs.umb.edu
web: http://bdei.cs.umb.edu/
web: http://etaxonomy.org/FilteredPushhttp://www.cs.umb.edu/~ram
phone (+1)617 287 6466
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Dear colleague,
The team listed below is charged by the Global Biodiversity
Information Facility (GBIF) with developing a position paper about its
future needs for Knowledge Organization Systems (KOS), a rubric which
includes thesauri, controlled vocabularies, ontologies, gazetteers,
linked data, and other such resources. The paper will cover tools,
impediments to deployment, training requirements, etc. After we draft
it, the position paper will be put forth for a period of public
comment before final recommendations to GBIF.
In order to put together the position paper, we solicit your opinions,
experiences, needs, and information on resources you already in place
about Knowledge Organization for biodiversity research. Please go to
http://surveymonkey.com/GBIFKOSurvey to participate in the survey.
We especially value your input about points you feel the survey doesn’t cover.
Please feel free to forward this invitation to mailing lists or
colleagues you feel appropriate, hopefully to people who may not have
seen it already.
Thanks
GBIF KOS position paper team
Bob Morris, Convenor.
Terry Catapano, Donald Hobern, Hilmar Lapp, Norman Morrison, Natasha
Noy, Mark Schildhauer, Dave Thau
September 7, 2010
--
Robert A. Morris
Emeritus Professor of Computer Science
UMASS-Boston
100 Morrissey Blvd
Boston, MA 02125-3390
Associate, Harvard University Herbaria
email: morris.bob(a)gmail.com
web: http://bdei.cs.umb.edu/
web: http://etaxonomy.org/mw/FilteredPushhttp://www.cs.umb.edu/~ram
phone (+1) 857 222 7992 (mobile)