Hey Rob, thanks for the pointers. Much appreciated.
Phil This message optimized for indexing by NSA PRISM On Tue, Nov 25, 2014 at 6:07 AM, Rob Vesse <[email protected]> wrote: > Phillip > > From a commercial standpoint it is worth noting that several major triple > store vendors actually use various parts of the Jena stack to provide some > parts of their RDF and SPARQL implementations. > > Details differ by vendor but my rough understanding is as follows: > > - Cray (my employer) uses the ARQ library for SPARQL parsing and > optimisation > - IBM uses ARQ and Fuseki as the Java and HTTP front ends to their RDF > store > (http://www-01.ibm.com/software/data/db2/linux-unix-windows/nosql-support.h > tml) > - Oracle uses ARQ as their Java API to their RDF store > (https://docs.oracle.com/database/121/RDFRM/sem_jena.htm#RDFRM234) > > All of these vendors have made presentations about their RDF stores at > various conferences if you are interested in more details and use cases. > These vendors would not be selling these products if they did not have > customers buying these products. > > Like any technology Apache Jena by itself does not magically deliver, it > is a framework that enables you to implement a whole range of different > approaches and whether they are "for real" really depends on what you want > to do and how well you execute it. > > Rob > > On 24/11/2014 03:19, "Phillip Rhodes" <[email protected]> wrote: > >>Hi all, I was just wondering if anybody knows of, or is involved with, >>any projects using Jena and/or Stanbol which (have been|can be) >>discussed and cited publicly? >> >>A local company that I've been talking to is interested in possibly >>using SemWeb technology (specifically, Jena/Stanbol) internally, but >>are looking for some evidence to support the assertion that this >>technology delivers and is "for real". >> >>Any pointers or references would be appreciated... or if you are >>personally involved in something and are willing to talk about it >>(possibly with appropriate NDAs, etc. in place), I'd love to talk to >>you. >> >> >>Thanks, >> >> >> >>Phil >>--- >>This message optimized for indexing by NSA PRISM > > > >
