Graham Klyne's Annalist is perhaps not quite what you are thinking of (I don't think it can connect to an arbitrary SPARQL endpoint), but I would consider it as falling under a similar category, as you have a user interface to define record types and forms, browse and edit records, with views defined for different record types. Under the surface it is however all RDF and REST - so you are making a schema by stealth.
http://annalist.net/ http://demo.annalist.net/ On 18 February 2015 at 20:08, Paul Houle <[email protected]> wrote: > I am looking at some cases where I have databases that are similar to > Dbpedia and Freebase in character, sometimes that big (ok, those > particular databases), sometimes smaller. Right now there are no blank > nodes, perhaps there are things like the "compound value types" from > Freebase which are sorta like blank nodes but they have names, > > Sometimes I want to manually edit a few records. Perhaps I want to delete a > triple or add a few triples (possibly introducing a new subject.) > > It seems to me there could be some kind of system which points at a SPARQL > protocol endpoint (so I can keep my data in my favorite triple store) and > given an RDFS or OWL schema, automatically generates the forms so I can > easily edit the data. > > Is there something out there? > > -- > Paul Houle > Expert on Freebase, DBpedia, Hadoop and RDF > (607) 539 6254 paul.houle on Skype [email protected] > http://legalentityidentifier.info/lei/lookup -- Stian Soiland-Reyes, eScience Lab School of Computer Science The University of Manchester http://soiland-reyes.com/stian/work/ http://orcid.org/0000-0001-9842-9718
