So, here is a small input form and a bookmarklet :-)
Visit http://www.kanzaki.com/ns/geo and you'll find an input form to
submit location, datetime, event name and event page URI. At the
bottom of the form page, a sample bookmarklet is provided. It will
extract a geohashed URI from hCalendar
Hello 'masaka'
KANZAKI Masahide a écrit :
Hello Bernard,
I've been thinking something similar, and test implemented such URI, e.g.:
http://www.kanzaki.com/ns/geo/u0tyz0ssw:2008-10-26_2008-10-31;International_Semantic_Web_Conference
Very cool. Tried a similar one
Hi Bernard,
Added support for event page uri:
http://www.kanzaki.com/ns/geo/u07t4qf8j:2008-09-28_2008-10-03;INRIA_IST_2008?uri=http://www.inria.fr/actualites/colloques/2008/ist08/
The uri part cannot be combined 'hash:datetime;name' part, because
such uri itself adds another hierarchy to the
Hi masa
Hi Bernard,
Added support for event page uri:
http://www.kanzaki.com/ns/geo/u07t4qf8j:2008-09-28_2008-10-03;INRIA_IST_2008?uri=http://www.inria.fr/actualites/colloques/2008/ist08/
Really cool. The URI format looks perfect to me now and exactly what I
imagined you would do :-) .
Bernard Vatant wrote:
Hi masa
Hi Bernard,
Added support for event page uri:
http://www.kanzaki.com/ns/geo/u07t4qf8j:2008-09-28_2008-10-03;INRIA_IST_2008?uri=http://www.inria.fr/actualites/colloques/2008/ist08/
Really cool. The URI format looks perfect to me now and exactly what I
Hi Kingsley,
I really like the fact that there are both timeline and map view for the
data. But, how much it would take for giving both views in one window?
We have an application where we want to allow classics scholars to
browse artifacts by both time line and geo-line at the same time.
Hello Bernard,
I've been thinking something similar, and test implemented such URI, e.g.:
http://www.kanzaki.com/ns/geo/u0tyz0ssw:2008-10-26_2008-10-31;International_Semantic_Web_Conference
Because URIs in geohash.org identify services, not things like events
or places, I use 302 redirection to
Hi Gustavo, all
For LOD people : Gustavo is the man behind http://geohash.org, a very
cool service. I've been thinking about a layer which could be added to
geohash to generate URIs for events, encapsulating in a single standard
URI string the Where-When-What, and allowing automatic