Dave,

IMHO, the W3C Cookbook methods do not go far enough to define the short-term 
strategy game of which Americans are so fond.  The Federal Government must plan 
Social Policy from ante Meridian (AM) to post Meridian (PM).  Playing 
statistical games with higher frequencies or modified time spans is fun, but it 
is not Science (a Free Energy Calculation).

http://www.rustprivacy.org/2013/egov/roadmap/NoMoneyInGovernment.pdf

Sorry to say, for reasons given, that StratML seems the better choice for 
Strategic Policy Representation (rather than SKOS and RDF).

--Gannon



________________________________
 From: David Wood <[email protected]>
To: "<[email protected]> community" <[email protected]> 
Sent: Saturday, May 18, 2013 8:59 AM
Subject: Re: Request for Help: US Government Linked Data
 

Hi all,

I take it back: Don't just comment.

We need to introduce pull requests into the Project Open Data documents that 
add Linked Data terms, examples and guidelines to the existing material.

There are a few scattered RDFa references in relation to schema.org, but most 
of the Linked Data material has been removed from the documents.  We need to 
get this back in existing Linked Data efforts within the US Government might 
very well be hurt.

Please help.  Thanks.

Regards,
Dave
--
http://about.me/david_wood



On May 18, 2013, at 09:16, David Wood <[email protected]> wrote:

> Hi all,
> 
> Parts of the US Government have been discussing the role of Linked Data in 
> government agencies and whether Linked Data is what the Obama Administration 
> meant when they mandated "machine readable" data.  Unsurprisingly, some 
> people like to do things the old ways, with a three-tier architecture and 
> without fostering reuse of the data.
> 
> Please respond to the GitHub thread if you would like to support Linked Data:
>  https://github.com/project-open-data/project-open-data.github.io/pull/21
> 
> Regards,
> Dave
> --
> http://about.me/david_wood
> 
> 
> 

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