The road to publishing Linked Data is paved with broken tooling.
Post created with https://apps.rhiaro.co.uk/no-ceremonies-are-necessary
The road to publishing Linked Data is paved with broken tooling.
Post created with https://apps.rhiaro.co.uk/no-ceremonies-are-necessary
Post created with https://apps.rhiaro.co.uk/no-ceremonies-are-necessary
In reply to:
Nah but everything is triples really and we're just waiting for sparql engines to get faster so we can actually treat them that way right?
Day 1 of week 3 of Real World job with Real World database. Slowly coming to terms with things that aren't triples. Slowly.
It's dokieli o'clock at ICWE2017. Sarven Capadisli presents tooling for a read-write Web which helps you own your data, and have more control over the user interfaces you use to create and edit content. dokieli includes social features, including sharing and annotations, across decentralised personal data stores.
It's open source and there are plenty of issues... help out :)
Decentralised Authoring, Annotations and Notifications for a Read-Write Web with dokieli article is here.
This year, the Linked Data on the Web workshop at WWW2017 held an open discussion session about academic publishing. In particular, about what is getting in the way of us getting more research outputs into the LOD Cloud. The discussion was led by Sarven Capadisli, the loudest voice behind the Linked Research initiative, who did his best to remain a neutral facilitator, and let others in the room argue about the things he is normally arguing about.
There was a general consensus that we should have research from the Linked Data on the Web community in the form of Linked Data, and on the Web. Sounds like kind of a no-brainer, but you'd be surprised. Or maybe you wouldn't. The group, around 30 people, discussed the reasons why we, as a community, are lagging.
One of the reasons is tooling. Nobody wants to hand-author HTML, especially not with RDFa in. Nobody really wants to turn their research articles into datasets in any other syntax either. There are (apparently) still a large portion of researchers even in CS who use MSWord to generate their final PDFs so they need something that works at least as well as that to generate Web-friendly submissions.
There is also a matter of incentives, on several different fronts. Most researchers are a-researchin' and publishing their work to advance their career, and to get funding so they can do new cool stuff. So how are individual researchers incentivised to put in the extra effort it takes to generate HTML? On another level, how do we incentivise researchers to improve the state of tooling and resources? The first can be tackled along multiple fronts, one of which is petitioning publishers to demand HTML (just like today they demand LaTeX). What are the incentives for publishers to do this? There were a few ideas thrown around, including how they can improve their SEO, access, discoverability, and creating more pleasurable reading experiences than PDFs can deliver.
But there's a large faction ill-at-ease with depending so much on publishers to drive this change, even if it didn't look like it would be an agonisingly slow process. Some of us, myself included, would like to shift the whole scholarly communications process to be more self-sufficient and less dependant on centralised third parties. We do not want to do this at the expense of quality of work of course! (Which some people immediately assume is the case). Beyond publishing, we want to open up the review process, so it's both more transparent, and so researchers get the credit they deserve for this work. Conversations can continue well beyond the submission process if the reviews are open and public. But again, we need to work on the tooling and incentives to enable this.
Whilst I agree that we are woefully underdeveloped on the tooling front, I object to the weight this was given in the context of getting just Linked Data researchers to adapt to the Web. Personally I think if Linked Data researchers are going to cry about being required to submit their contributions as Linked Data, I will have trouble taking them seriously. Writing HTML is not a high bar. If you're comfortable with LaTeX, you can switch off a few neurons and write HTML instead. Or you can use Pandoc. As Jens Lehmann succinctly put it, the LDOW workshop is about advancing the state of Linked Data on the Web. If this community is not prepared to drive the state of this forward, even (especially?) if it includes working outside of the current system and taking some risks, who is going to?
So overall there was a vague feeling of consensus that we need to do something to take better advantage of Web technologies, and that LDOW as an established and respected venue is a good grounds for an experiment. I don't know if LDOW will manage to require HTML submissions next year, but the organising committee seem like they'll be inclined to strongly incentivise it. Stay tuned (watch the public-lod@w3.org
mailing list. And speak up, if you care. Notes from the session are here.
We'll be continuing this discussion in the Web Observatories workshop this afternoon, around 4pm.
PS. the Enabling Decentralised Scholarly Communication workshop at ESWC this year requires Web-based submissions and is all about building and connecting the tooling to advance the state of academic publishing on the Web. Deadline is 17th of April. See you there.
+ Recogito annotation platform
Amy added http://recogito.pelagios.org/rhiaro to https://rhiaro.co.uk/bookmarks/
Attending to give a lightning talk about the social web and linked data.
🔁 https://twitter.com/philarcher1/status/778515246109646848
Amy shared https://twitter.com/philarcher1/status/778515246109646848
Vocabulary development and maintenance, W3C namespace control. 15:30 today, room 1.04 at TPAC2016- Phil
In reply to:
Our article on building tooling to publish and consume (and own) your LinkedResearch, plus LDOW2016 reviews, up at csarven.ca/dokieli
Amy added http://inkdroid.org/ to https://rhiaro.co.uk/bookmarks/
+ http://bblfish.net/tmp/2011/05/09/
Amy added http://bblfish.net/tmp/2011/05/09/ to https://rhiaro.co.uk/bookmarks/
+ http://kidehen.blogspot.cz/2015/09/what-happened-to-semantic-web.html
Amy added http://kidehen.blogspot.cz/2015/09/what-happened-to-semantic-web.html to https://rhiaro.co.uk/bookmarks/