On 10/14/11 1:38 PM, Rob Styles wrote:
This redirection and the resulting address of a web page, rather than the name of the real-world thing originally requested, is one of the reasons I believe the IR/NIR distinction is problematic in practice.

If we overturned httpRange-14 and allowed a non-information resource (i.e. a URI naming a real world thing) to return a 200 OK and a representation of itself then your client-side address bar manipulation would be unnecessary.

I don't think over turning httpRange-14 is the solution. The problem with httpRange-14 is that it has chosen to explain data objects (resources), identifiers (e.g., names and addresses), and indirection (implicit or explicit) in an esoteric way.


In practical experience training and mentoring many developers and data hackers new to Linked Data this is one of the most problematic areas.

Yes!

I encourage you to negate httpRange-14, and build on existing anecdotes (you have some of that material already) re. history, use, and characteristics of identifiers.

As you know, It just so happens that URI abstraction enables some really powerful stuff (e.g., Linked Data) to happen re., data representation, access, integration, and management, when combined with EAV/SPO based structured data.

Kingsley

rob

Rob Styles
Senior Technical Consultant
http://consulting.talis.com/rob-styles





On 14 October 2011 17:03, Hugh Glaser <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

    Thanks, yes.
    It is client side JS, not a complicated server-side.
    It won't work for the purposes I describe if the Linked Data
    publisher has chosen (or had to) have the document on a different
    domain, but for all the cases I can quickly think of it does.

    Of course it won't work if window.history.replaceState is not
    available, but that can be tested for (Ian says).
    It is a bit undesirable that the "old" way, as it will become (!)
    should persist for the old browsers, but that is the Way of the Web.
    Best

    On 14 Oct 2011, at 16:40, David Wood wrote:

    > Hi Hugh,
    >
    > Sorry, I think we are talking about different ways of
    accomplishing the same thing.  You seem to be suggesting that the
    user's browser rewrite the URL in the address bar to match the URI
    you want to see.  This is completely client-side approach.  As you
    said, you can do that if you don't change the domain or protocol
    (because if you did, it would be a security nightmare).  That
    seems fine to me.
    >
    > Another way to do this is to have the server rewrite the URI,
    using redirection and/or server-side URL rewriting.  That's where
    my earlier comments came in: A server needs to have enough
    knowledge to re-write a URL properly after a redirection.
    >
    > Your browser tests tested your client-side scenario, but the
    server-side scenario is more complicated.
    >
    > I hope that helps.
    >
    > Regards,
    > Dave
    >
    >
    >
    >
    > On Oct 14, 2011, at 11:27, Hugh Glaser wrote:
    >
    >> Thanks.
    >> I have just tried it on my mac with
    >> Firefox, Chrome, Safair, Flock and Opera.
    >> All seem to do it fine, although obviously I am running the
    latest versions.
    >> Ian Millard has modded rkbexplorer.com
    <http://rkbexplorer.com>, so you can try:
    >> http://southampton.rkbexplorer.com/id/person-04860
    >> It goes to
    http://southampton.rkbexplorer.com/description/person-04860
    >> and then shows
    >> http://southampton.rkbexplorer.com/id/person-04860
    >> again.
    >> (You do need to wait until the page has finished loading.)
    >> I don't know what the failure mode is on older browsers or
    buggy ones.
    >>
    >> But for these it looks good to me.
    >> But as you say, if there is other stuff going on too, things
    may break.
    >> Best
    >> Hugh
    >>
    >> On 14 Oct 2011, at 16:11, David Wood wrote:
    >>
    >>> Hi Hugh,
    >>>
    >>> I like what you are saying and agree that this approach would
    be a real boon to the LOD community.  Practical problems with
    using it are likely to be with subtleties of browser implementation.
    >>>
    >>> For example, Firefox resets all headers on redirect, including
    the Accept: header which causes us difficulty with PURL redirects.
     This is a known issue in Firefox and has been unfixed for four years:
    >>> https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=401564
    >>> The test page can be found here:
    >>> http://tc.labs.opera.com/apis/XMLHttpRequest/send-redirect.htm
    >>>
    >>> I recall a similar bug report on Firefox where Mozilla
    developers were discussing how the address bar contents should be
    modified, and there was violent disagreement.  Unfortunately, I
    can't put my hands on that URL at the moment, but I think you get
    my point: Each browser vendor will decide to handle these things
    differently in the absence of a standard (or in the presence of
    cross-site abuse concerns).
    >>>
    >>> The best way to proceed is probably to try it and test all
    major browsers.
    >>>
    >>> Regards,
    >>> Dave
    >>>
    >>>
    >>>
    >>>
    >>> On Oct 14, 2011, at 10:22, Hugh Glaser wrote:
    >>>
    >>>> Excellent, hopefully that is out of the way.
    >>>> Does anyone want to express an opinion on the original
    question, which boils down to:
    >>>>
    >>>> "Is there a problem if going to URI
    http://www.myexperiment.org/workflows/158 (say, by clicking) in a
    browser then shows http://www.myexperiment.org/workflows/158 in
    the address bar for the page it displays?"
    >>>>
    >>>> I suggest not.
    >>>>
    >>>> It does bring one further question (at least):
    >>>> What do you display if someone goes to
    http://www.myexperiment.org/workflows/158.html?
    >>>> Possibly more controversial, as I suspect that the pragmatic
    answer is to display
    >>>> http://www.myexperiment.org/workflows/158
    >>>>
    >>>> Best
    >>>> Hugh
    >>>>
    >>>>
    >>>> On 14 Oct 2011, at 14:23, Ian Davis wrote:
    >>>>
    >>>>> On Fri, Oct 14, 2011 at 2:15 PM, Kingsley Idehen
    <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
    >>>>>
    >>>>>
    >>>>> Yes, opaque technology to you. Luckily, not for the rest of
    the computing universe.
    >>>>>
    >>>>> The large number of off-list messages supporting my view
    seems to provide evidence to the contrary.
    >>>>>
    >>>>> Apologies to the list for this off-topic conversation. I
    won't prolong it.
    >>>>>
    >>>>> Ian
    >>>>
    >>>> --
    >>>> Hugh Glaser,
    >>>>           Web and Internet Science
    >>>>           Electronics and Computer Science,
    >>>>           University of Southampton,
    >>>>           Southampton SO17 1BJ
    >>>> Work: +44 23 8059 3670 <tel:%2B44%2023%208059%203670>, Fax:
    +44 23 8059 3045 <tel:%2B44%2023%208059%203045>
    >>>> Mobile: +44 75 9533 4155 <tel:%2B44%2075%209533%204155> ,
    Home: +44 23 8061 5652 <tel:%2B44%2023%208061%205652>
    >>>> http://www.ecs.soton.ac.uk/~hg/
    <http://www.ecs.soton.ac.uk/%7Ehg/>
    >>>>
    >>>>
    >>>>
    >>>
    >>
    >> --
    >> Hugh Glaser,
    >>             Web and Internet Science
    >>             Electronics and Computer Science,
    >>             University of Southampton,
    >>             Southampton SO17 1BJ
    >> Work: +44 23 8059 3670 <tel:%2B44%2023%208059%203670>, Fax: +44
    23 8059 3045 <tel:%2B44%2023%208059%203045>
    >> Mobile: +44 75 9533 4155 <tel:%2B44%2075%209533%204155> , Home:
    +44 23 8061 5652 <tel:%2B44%2023%208061%205652>
    >> http://www.ecs.soton.ac.uk/~hg/ <http://www.ecs.soton.ac.uk/%7Ehg/>
    >>
    >>
    >>
    >

    --
    Hugh Glaser,
                 Web and Internet Science
                 Electronics and Computer Science,
                 University of Southampton,
                 Southampton SO17 1BJ
    Work: +44 23 8059 3670 <tel:%2B44%2023%208059%203670>, Fax: +44 23
    8059 3045 <tel:%2B44%2023%208059%203045>
    Mobile: +44 75 9533 4155 <tel:%2B44%2075%209533%204155> , Home:
    +44 23 8061 5652 <tel:%2B44%2023%208061%205652>
    http://www.ecs.soton.ac.uk/~hg/ <http://www.ecs.soton.ac.uk/%7Ehg/>






--

Regards,

Kingsley Idehen 
President&  CEO
OpenLink Software
Web: http://www.openlinksw.com
Weblog: http://www.openlinksw.com/blog/~kidehen
Twitter/Identi.ca: kidehen





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