François Dongier wrote:
I wonder how Wolfram|Alpha could take advantage of all this data made available both by Google Fusion Tables and by the Linked Data project. Will Alpha just try to slowly integrate it through its "curation pipeline"? Wouldn't it be better to introduce something like "curation coefficients" that would allow computation to be done by Alpha on imperfect data? This would make it possible to quickly catch up on the published data, while introducing some uncertainty in the results Alpha returns.
Francois,

Since the overall theme is Linked Data (HTTP URIs for data objects), how does WolframAlpha add any value if the end result is an opaque HTML resource (one that lacks structure data granularity or pointers to structured data sources)?

Value comes if Google exposes its Dataspace GUIDs as HTTP URIs, and then WolframAlpha (or anyone else in the data processing pipeline) does the same, then you get something that is truly valuable i.e.:

1. Computation Answer Engine that emits its Linked Data (as per Linked Data meme) 2. Google's contribution to the Linked Data Web realm via Data Spaces / Virtual Database technology that also emits Linked Data.

The ultimate value of the Web remains the fundamental separation of the following re. data:

1. Identity
2. Storage
3. Access
4. Representation
5. Presentation.

We cannot see, comprehend, and appreciate the Web via item #5 solely, which is always the case when the output representation from a Web service lacks pointers (HTTP URIs) to RDF model based structured and interlinked data in line with Linked Data meme.

To conclude, things will more than likely get better now that Google, Yahoo!, and Microsoft (naturally) are beginning to see alignment between their respective customer-driven technology adoption strategies and the virtues of Linked Data, thanks to RDFa and the GoodRelations vocabulary.


Kingsley

Cheers,
François

On Fri, Jul 3, 2009 at 2:28 PM, Chris Bizer <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

    Hi all,

    I’m regularly following Alon Halevy blog as I really like his
    thoughts on dataspaces [1].

    Today, I discovered this post about Google Fusion Tables

    
http://alonhalevy.blogspot.com/2009/06/fusion-tables-third-piece-of-puzzle.html

    “The main goal of Fusion Tables is to make it easier for people to
    create, manage and share on structured data on the Web. Fusion
    Tables is a new kind of data management system that focuses on
    features that /enable collaboration/. […] In a nutshell, Fusion
    Tables enables you to upload tabular data (up to 100MB per table)
    from spreadsheets and CSV files. You can filter and aggregate the
    data and visualize it in several ways, such as maps and time
    lines. The system will try to recognize columns that represent
    geographical locations and suggest appropriate visualizations. To
    collaborate, you can share a table with a select set of
    collaborators or make it public. One of the reasons to collaborate
    is to enable /fusing/ data from multiple tables, which is a simple
    yet powerful form of data integration. If you have a table about
    water resources in the countries of the world, and I have data
    about the incidence of malaria in various countries, we can fuse
    our data on the country column, and see our data side by side.”

    See also

    Google announcement
    http://googleresearch.blogspot.com/2009/06/google-fusion-tables.html

    Water data example
    
http://www.circleofblue.org/waternews/2009/world/google-brings-water-data-to-life/

    Taken this together with Google Squared and the recent
    announcement that Google is going to crawl microformats and RDFa,

    it starts to look like the folks at Google are working in the same
    direction as the Linking Open Data community, but as usual a bit
    more centralized and less webish.

    Cheers,

    Chris

    [1] http://www.cs.berkeley.edu/~franklin/Papers/dataspaceSR.pdf
    <http://www.cs.berkeley.edu/%7Efranklin/Papers/dataspaceSR.pdf>

    --

    Prof. Dr. Christian Bizer

    Web-based Systems Group

    Freie Universität Berlin

    +49 30 838 55509

    http://www.bizer.de

    [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>




--


Regards,

Kingsley Idehen       Weblog: http://www.openlinksw.com/blog/~kidehen
President & CEO OpenLink Software Web: http://www.openlinksw.com





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