Hi, thanks for everyone's sense of humour about uri4uri.net -- I had fun
writing it. I'm now working on taking out the silly bits and leaving it
up indefinitely as I think it's not entirely useless. Suggestions welcome.
Now it's past April 1st, I'd like to show off a few more useful tools
I've built:
http://graphite.ecs.soton.ac.uk/checker/
This catches common mistakes people (me, for example) make when
producing RDF: it checks for minor typos in common namespaces, and for
terms & classes which have a namespace which resolves to a
schema/ontology but the term in question isn't there. It's saved me
loads of silly mistakes. It's on github if people want to suggest
improvements.
http://graphite.ecs.soton.ac.uk/browser/
I wrote this RDF browser as a lightweight alternative to the existing
ones. It's aimed at developers wanting to see inside an RDF file with a
bit less headache than raw RDF (or RDFa, etc). Again, suggestions
welcome and you can run a local copy if you want, once again all the
code is on github.
http://graphite.ecs.soton.ac.uk/geo2kml/
Looks for lat/long data in RDF and makes a Google Earth (or maps) KML
file. Handy for spotting obvious mistakes in your data.
http://graphite.ecs.soton.ac.uk/stuff2rdf/
This is a bit of a personal swiss army knife if I need to quickly munge
RDF between the common formats.
Share and enjoy!
--
Christopher Gutteridge -- http://users.ecs.soton.ac.uk/cjg
University of Southampton Open Data Service: http://data.southampton.ac.uk/
You should read the ECS Web Team blog: http://blogs.ecs.soton.ac.uk/webteam/