David Booth wrote:
If you want to implement your own 303-redirect service, the full code
that is used to implement http://thing-described-by.org/ and
http://t-d-b.org/ can be viewed here:
http://thing-described-by.org/?showfile=.
David,
In a sense we are now clearly unveiling a functional partition within
the general scope of Linked Data Deployment i.e., the disambiguation of
a Resource URI and the URI of its Metadata doc is distinct from the
deployment of HTTP URIs published in line with the Linked Data meme.
Personally, I find the above extremely important re. overall Linked Data
meme comprehension.
Juan/Tom: I assume Davids service will be added to an appropriate
location within the <http://linkeddata.org> data space ?
All:
As you can see we can sanely describe the Linked Data meme without
wandering down the information resource and non information resource
comprehension cul-de-sac. Ditto examples that inaccurately use "Document
vs Real World Things" anecdotes, when documents are themselves "Things"
worthy of description via associated metadata.
Metadata has been with us for eons, so lets use it to bring brevity and
broad comprehension to our messaging.
FWIW - binding Metadata docs to their subjects via HTTP URIs is
basically what the Linked Data meme fundamentally addresses in a novel way.
Kingsley
David Booth
On Mon, 2009-07-06 at 15:58 +0200, Juan Sequeda wrote:
Hi Everybody,
In a recent thread there was a lot of discussion of how the content
negotiation through .htaccess can be complicated. Several people
started to send their solutions to this problem through PHP and Python
scripts. I believe that these solutions are a very important resource
for the whole LOD community. Hence, Tom and I have set up a section on
linkeddata.org on Content Negotiation:
http://linkeddata.org/conneg-303-redirect-code-samples
Currently we have examples in PHP and Python. There is a RoR script on
the way too! If anybody else has any other code examples of how to do
Content Negotiation, please let me know so we can add your link on the
website!
Thanks to everybody who has contributed!
Juan Sequeda, Ph.D Student
Dept. of Computer Sciences
The University of Texas at Austin
www.juansequeda.com
www.semanticwebaustin.org
--
Regards,
Kingsley Idehen Weblog: http://www.openlinksw.com/blog/~kidehen
President & CEO
OpenLink Software Web: http://www.openlinksw.com