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	<title>typewriting tag: rdf</title>
	<link href="http://typewriting.org/tag/rdf/"/>
	<updated>2005-10-29T12:37:57-07:00</updated>
	<id>http://typewriting.org/tag/rdf/</id>
	<subtitle>Most recent articles on typewriting.org for tag: rdf</subtitle>
<author>
				<name>Scott Reynen</name>
			</author><entry>
					<title>RDF my Database</title>
               		<link href="http://typewriting.org/2005/10/29/RDF_my_Database/"/>
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							<p>Last night <a href="http://weblog.burningbird.net/2005/10/28/the-bottoms-up-rdf-tutorial/">Shelley Powers published a lengthy RDF tutorial</a>, in which she wrote <q>I’m focusing on what I call <em>street RDF</em>–RDF that can be used out of the box to meet a need ...</q> I've read about RDF before, and I read about it again, but the needs RDF meets are still not clear to me. Today <a href="http://dannyayers.com/archives/2005/10/29/metadata/">Danny Ayers</a> wrote <q>But the statements can be made available by techniques like mapping SQL database tables to RDF ...</q> Fair enough. I've started <a href="http://www.randomchaos.com/database/">making my database available via XHTML</a>, and will add more tables soon. Now if anyone wants to convince me of the value of RDF, I invite you to explain to me how to represent my database as RDF, and show me how this helps me or anyone else.</p>
							<p><a href="http://typewriting.org/2005/10/29/RDF_my_Database/#comments">Comment</a></p>
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					</content>
					<updated>2005-10-29T12:37:57-07:00</updated>
                	<id>http://typewriting.org/2005/10/29/RDF_my_Database/</id>
				</entry></feed>
