a) Government structure - makes sense as data.gov.uk is likely to have a lot of 
the models already

b) If the intent is to create an example which an average user understands 
(e.g. dummies guide to LOD) then use an example everyone (in the "modern 
world") will get, finds interesting and has easy referential example to: e.g. 
Character relationships in the Simpsons TV show, or the realm tree/family tree 
of Game of Thrones or Star Wars. Or practical like showing the structure of 
Google Inc or Fox.

(e.g. People, a service/s and hypertext locations eg: google.com etc)

C.



Sent from Samsung MobileDan Brickley <[email protected]> wrote:British Monarchy 
might be interesting. A while back I went looking for
a map of the interconnections amongst European Royalty (obviously a
larger problem) and was surprised not to find much. I think eventually
I did find some GEDCOM family tree info.
https://www.google.com/search?q=european+royalty+family+tree&tbm=isch
shows there's interest.

If you want to get into species (slippery stuff...), that search also
threw up 
http://blogs.nature.com/news/2008/07/family_tree_shows_dinos_missed.html
http://palaeo.gly.bris.ac.uk/macro/supertree/index.html "Several years
ago, a different 'Bristol team', but including some of the same
members, produced the first supertree of dinosaurs, incorporating 277
species, and based on 150 source trees. This served its purpose, and
was the largest supertree attempted at that time. However, with 277
species included, this covered only some 50% of dinosaurian
diversity."
http://palaeo.gly.bris.ac.uk/macro/supertree/Supertree.pdf

Either way, it'd be great if some kind of interesting network
structure existed amongst the entities in your descriptions, to help
illustrate that with Linked Data there are often 3 different notions
of network all intermingled; e.g. social networks, hypertext networks
and semantic networks.

cheers,

Dan

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