Dear Andy, dear Jena team, thank you for your long dedication to jena. 20 years! About one year later, I asked my first question on the list, about the serialization of those memory models mentioned by Brian McBride. Jena has allowed me to build the thing I have been interested with, http://www.semanlink.net, so yes, this API brought benefits to me.
Happy birthday! fps > Le 28 août 2020 à 14:57, Andy Seaborne <[email protected]> a écrit : > > Brian released the first Jena code with this message: > https://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/www-rdf-interest/2000Aug/0128.html > > Andy > >> From: McBride, Brian <[email protected]> >> Subject: Jena - A Java API for RDF >> Date: Mon, 28 Aug 2000 13:40:03 +0100 >> Message-ID: <[email protected]> >> To: "RDF Interest (E-mail)" <[email protected]> >> A few weeks ago I posted some suggestions for an improved java RDF API. >> I've placed an implementation of these ideas at >> http://www-uk.hpl.hp.com/people/bwm/rdf/jena/index.htm >> <http://www-uk.hpl.hp.com/people/bwm/rdf/jena/index.htm> . >> The code supports in memory models. David Megginson's RDFFilter is hooked >> in so it can parse RDF serializations. I suggest you use the version of >> RDFFilter supplied in the distribution as it has some minor bug fixes. Its >> alpha code - it gets through the regression tests and runs the samples but >> hasn't had much use other than that. An SQL implementation may follow. >> I think better tools will help encourage the adoption of RDF. I'm looking >> on this as an experiment to see whether this API brings any benefits. So >> I'd like some feedback. >> Brian McBride >> HPLabs > >
