Yeah, it'll be my next step, I guess :) Blueprints make this stuff super-easy :) I also see plain simple FS in there as well ;)
BTW, I've also noticed there's mongodb support for storage (?) How would you use that? > Hi Dimitri, > > Great. If you go through Blueprints (as I assume you are), you can also > connect it to OrientDB and RDF SAIL. > > Thanks, > Marko. > > http://markorodriguez.com > > On Sep 8, 2010, at 8:22 AM, Dmitrii Dimandt wrote: > >> >> cali has been updated slightly to become database-agnostic. >> >> There are currently connectors to neo4j and TinkerGraph. It's now quite easy >> to add your own (and, hopefully, I'll add connectors to all supported >> databases in the near future). >> >>> Very cool Dmitrii, >>> that is what is called Ecosystem! >>> >>> Cheers, >>> >>> /peter neubauer >>> >>> COO and Sales, Neo Technology >>> >>> GTalk: neubauer.peter >>> Skype peter.neubauer >>> Phone +46 704 106975 >>> LinkedIn http://www.linkedin.com/in/neubauer >>> Twitter http://twitter.com/peterneubauer >>> >>> http://www.neo4j.org - Your high performance graph database. >>> http://www.thoughtmade.com - Scandinavia's coolest Bring-a-Thing party. >>> >>> >>> >>> On Thu, Sep 2, 2010 at 4:18 PM, Dmitrii Dimandt <[email protected]> >>> wrote: >>>> I'd like to introduce cali, another library to interface erlang and neo4j, >>>> http://github.com/dmitriid/cali. The other one is nerlo, >>>> http://github.com/nerlo/nerlo >>>> >>>> Cali is an early version which is more of an experiment rather than >>>> anything else, but it works. It's built on top of Gremlin, and if you >>>> don't know what Gremlin is, do read presentations linked in the README :) >>>> >>>> Anyway, it's quite simple, no fancy stuff other than ad-hoc Gremlin >>>> queries. There are several examples in the README to get you started. >>>> >>>> If anyone's willing to help, do jump in :) >> > _______________________________________________ Neo4j mailing list [email protected] https://lists.neo4j.org/mailman/listinfo/user

