Hi Niclas, great blog post, thanks a lot.
I have only one textual remark, can you please change all occurences of "plugin" to "extension" when referring to yours? Otherwise it gets confusing with the old plugin (perhaps also change "current plugin" to "old plugin"). On your github page you correctly only call your extension "extension". It would be great, if the blog post could also mentions the kind of graph model you choose for representing RDF as well as performance implications and future work. Then I'd be happy to reblog it on neo4j.com/blog Btw. I'd love to continue the discussion about the best model to represent RDF in a property graph. It would be cool if we could come up with a "pragmatic" RDF model that can be mapped directly to a property graph and is performant and can still be exposed as RDF and queried with SPARQL. Cheers, Michael On Thu, Nov 20, 2014 at 9:59 AM, Niclas Hoyer <[email protected]> wrote: > Hi, > > Looking forward to your blog post. I'd love to see a complete roundtrip >> covered, from import to queries and inference. >> > > My blog post is now available [1]. I go through the basic installation > steps and add a minimal example that also demonstrates inference. > > [1] > http://comsys.informatik.uni-kiel.de/lang/en/res/sparql-and-owl-2-inference-for-neo4j/ > > Regards, > Niclas > > -- > You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups > "Neo4j" group. > To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an > email to [email protected]. > For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout. > -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Neo4j" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to [email protected]. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.
