That's an interesting idea. I mean there are also things like RDF/SPARQL which would be probably far too much. But maybe if a Graph implementation is open enough - e.g. just a JSON for connections like a generalization of folders - one could realize RDF with custom tools at least.
Am Samstag, 20. Oktober 2018 12:29:21 UTC+2 schrieb dan.kortschak: > > The initial design criterion is to get something that I can use for > recording my research in a reasonably way. A wiki is sort of what is > wanted, but the links between topics don't have attributes other than > connectedness between them. I want to encode things like "supports", > "refutes", "suggests", "depends" etc. This allows graphical analysis of > the results, hypotheses and conclusions. > > The approach to storage that perkeep has is a good fit because of the > native deduplication and the immutability of data. > > > On Sat, 2018-10-20 at 11:44 +0200, Simon B. wrote: > > > > > > I'm attempting to construct a science lab > > > notebook system that keeps experimental results, result > > > interpretations > > > and other notes in a way that can be used to store and extract > > > argument > > > graphs for research projects. > > > > > To be shared among users? Topics? Needs a timeline for lookup? Would > > a > > wiki-like system backed up to get timeline feature and permanent > > persistence be a good fit? > > > > > > > > > -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Perkeep" 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.
