Hi Patrick, On 10/04/2011 03:34 PM, Patrick van Kleef wrote: > Hi Mohamed, > > I would like to know what timestamp the live stream is actually using > to fetch from wikipedia. > > > There are articles from 4 October 2011 that are in Wikipedia but not > yet in the live stream e.g.: > > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emotan_Preparatory_School > > which cannot be found on either > > http://dbpedia-live.openlinksw.com/page/Emotan_Preparatory_School > or > http://live.dbpedia.org/page/Emotan_Preparatory_School >
Yes you are right, I've also noticed that, the live stream may get blocked for sometime as after a while, DBpedia got updated. > > Furthermore when i look at the live statistics page on: > > http://live.dbpedia.org/LiveStats/ > > and i check some of the wikipedia articles it claims it has updated e.g.: > > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baba_Kohneh > > and i check this page history, i can see the last modification to this > page is from 9 june 2010. > > Same goes for http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Don_Kennedy which was last > modified on 21 August 2011. That is normal behavior, as we also have 2 other feeders, one for the pages affected by a mapping change, and another one for the pages which are not modified for a long time. So, those pages could be inserted in the queue for processing through any of those feeders. > > > Patrick > --- > OpenLink Software > -- Kind Regards Mohamed Morsey Department of Computer Science University of Leipzig ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ All the data continuously generated in your IT infrastructure contains a definitive record of customers, application performance, security threats, fraudulent activity and more. Splunk takes this data and makes sense of it. Business sense. IT sense. Common sense. http://p.sf.net/sfu/splunk-d2dcopy1 _______________________________________________ Dbpedia-discussion mailing list [email protected] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/dbpedia-discussion
