Am 31.01.2015 um 19:58 schrieb Kingsley Idehen :
> On 1/29/15 5:56 PM, Edgard Marx wrote:
>> The easiest and fast way to get DBpedia statistics is
>> http://dbtrends.aksw.org.
> Why can't I access an RDF representation of this information?
>>
>> There is also a library that can be used in your
HI, Rob,
Thank you very much for you help!
I will try them out.
Much appreciated,
Asiyah
Jedi Order:
There is no emotion, there is peace.
There is no ignorance, there is knowledge.
There is no passion, there is serenity.
There is no chaos, ther
Dear Linked Data aficionados,
The 8th edition of the Linked Data on the Web workshop will take place
at WWW2015 in Florence, Italy. Papers are due March 15th, 2015. Please
find the call for papers below.
We are looking forward to having another exciting LDOW workshop and to
seeing many of you in
The 14th International Symposium on Parallel and Distributed
Computing (ISPDC 2015)
29 June - 2 July, 2015, St. Raphael Resort 5*, Limassol, Cyprus
http://www.cyprusconferences.org/ispdc2015/
*** New Extended Submission Deadline: 22 February 2015 ***
[Due to numerous requests, the submission
Hi Kingsley,
On 31 Jan 2015, at 19:58, Kingsley Idehen wrote:
> Anyway, we've loaded stats data into the DBpedia public instance:
I know and this is cool, but it's only based on wikiPageWikiLink.
I was interested in ordering nodes by triple count with them as subject /
object, based on all p