Recovered from the Wayback Machine. The RDF/XML syntax differs a great deal from vanilla XML, not the least of which is there is no assumptions associated with the order of elements, and XML lacks many of the precision refinements built directly into RDF/XML. For instance, in XML you can have several children of an element, […]
Big Water
Recovered from the Wayback Machine. Pretty tired today, and no, it has nothing to do with the peace party that happened in the comments to the last post. The participants worked things out for themselves, which is as it should be. I’m not sure what Happy Tutor is doing and where he’s taking it, but he’s a […]
Recovered from the Wayback Machine. Sometimes enough disparate elements come together and you have to write about it because to do otherwise would be to toss fate’s good idea down the drain. So I find myself writing about writing and weblogging and self-censorship, when I think I should be writing about a girl and a […]
Welcome back, Cobber
A long time friend from weblogging, Allan Moult, has restarted his weblog. Welcome back, Allan, you’ve been missed. I look forward to many of your photographs with that digital camera you have and that I covet so strongly. A catalyst for Allan’s return is effort he’s involved in with regards to Tasmania’s environmental treasures, specifically the Styx Valley. As part of […]
In a clever play on my For Poets weblogs, specifically my Semantic Web for Poets – a warped menage a duo of technology and art with images of rusting robots and silent metallic forests with moblogged fallen trees – Danny Ayers has created variations on the theme, all based on my RDF book. There’s: RDF for Woodcarvers RDF for […]
