On Wed, 26 May 2010, Kingsley Idehen wrote:
> >>Sesame and Virtuoso aren't disjoint.
> >>
> >>You can use Sesame Frameworks atop Virtuoso's RDF DBMS (Quad Store).
> >>Ditto Jena and Redland
> >
> >Yes I've looked at Virtuoso, I'm a little more keen on using my existing data
> >storage (Postgres) instead of loading things into something entirely new. I'm
> >looking to use RDFAlchemy, given my work is entirely in Python, so Sesame's
> >framework versus Jena (for example) is completely irrelevant to me.
> 
> Jena was mentioned to exemplify that fact that Virtuoso has many
> Data Providers.
> >Playing around with the openrdf workbench, I was able to load a set of 
> >triplets
> >into a "native java store",
> >
> >I'm really looking for the path of least resistence to give me a fast and
> >RDFAlchemy or otherwise Python-safe way of working with DBPedia information 
> >within my local
> >research cluster.
> 
> "path of least reistance" is a very subjective thing, and context dependent.
> 
> Bottom line, just use whatever works best for you.

The problems I'm having is besides sparse mailing list topics, there's not a
lot in the way of documentation on "getting started with dbpedia" at least for
running a local mirror. So I honestly don't know what works best for me, I
don't know what works at all! :(

Some guidance on how to get going would be useful :)


Cheers,
-R. Tyler Ballance
--------------------------------------
  Jabber: [email protected]
  GitHub: http://github.com/rtyler
Identica: http://identi.ca/dero
 Twitter: http://twitter.com/agentdero
    Blog: http://unethicalblogger.com

Attachment: pgp2F9Wd2SSAa.pgp
Description: PGP signature

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

_______________________________________________
Dbpedia-discussion mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/dbpedia-discussion

Reply via email to