wiki.js is an eye opener, and it's donor driven. Depending what this extension does, I could provide some funding (I'm also a javascript developer, though a bit overstretched). I have been experimenting with embedding rdflib in markup based annotations (based on Semantic Mediawiki's in-text annotation style), for a kind of "semantic tiddlywiki," while already useful it has a long way to go to be pleasant. Would be very happy to support a larger project along these lines.
David On Fri, 19 Jun 2020 at 10:55, Brian M. Watson <[email protected]> wrote: > Hello all, > > I'm writing at the recommendation of Mairelys Lemus-Rojas after I > approached her with the below inquiry and exchanged some emails about it. > > I was wondering if anyone was familiar with a semantic/linked data capable > content management system or blog that has autofill or nanotation > capabilities. What I mean by that is, say I'm writing a blog post about > Paris, I'm looking for something that would autofill linked data 'under the > hood' by either a dropdown (a la Omeka's Value Suggest > <https://omeka.org/s/modules/ValueSuggest/>), a autofill (a la > wikidata/pedia) or something that creates semantic blog tags. > > I've seen a (very) bleeding-edge technology/proof of concept called > nanotation <http://kidehen.blogspot.com/2014/07/nanotation.html> that > looks about right, but might be completely different then what I actually > want, which is to find something that incorporates linked data, autofills > URIs, and works like a blog/content management system. > > So far I've explored > > - > > *Recogito* (https://recogito.pelagios.org/) is lovely but focused on > annotating images/maps/preexisting items. > - > > *Catma* (https://catma.de/) is lovely looking but builds off > preexisting texts, not creating new texts (i.e. you'd have to write the > text and then annotate it all.). It seems to be a Voyant on steroids. > Nonetheless if I could combine Recogito and Catma, that'd be neat. The same > program (? project?) also puts out forText (https://fortext.net/), > which i just include here as it's also nice. > - > > *dokie.li <http://dokie.li>* (https://dokie.li/) This seems the > closest, as it's focused on article publishing, annotations and social > interactions, but unfortunately, setting up a Solid Server remains quite > the technical hurdle for me > - > > *Atomgraph* (https://atomgraph.com/) is knowledge graph oriented and > installed upon previously-existing data, not focused on content management. > Gephi on steroids. > - > > *Webanno* (https://webanno.github.io/webanno/) which is specifically > targeted at linguistically annotating the internet, not really creating > content. > - > > *Wikibase*: A heavily modified wikibase might be what I'm left with. > In this scenario I'd make a Mediawiki, turn it into Wikibase, and kinda > hack a blog out of it. Less than satisfying but would work if needed. > - > > I also tried *wiki.js* (SUCH A NICE INTERFACE, but it doesn't support > linked data yet) and *OntoWiki* (which looks like it also builds off a > preexisting knowledge graph) > - > > *Anthologize*: (https://anthologize.org/) also looks very close as a > wordpress plugin but it is not linked-data specific so I didn't explore > ways to make it so. > - > > I've also explored *wordpress* > <https://wordpress.org/plugins/wp-linked-data/> and Drupal plugins (one > <https://www.drupal.org/project/ldp>, two > <https://www.drupal.org/project/linked_data>, three > <https://www.drupal.org/project/ldt>) that are all obsolete or not > maintained anymore > > My longterm goal with this is to create semantic libguides and blogs. I > really do think semantic libguides are NEARLY possible—maybe an API that > pulls knowledge graphs along and wikidata visualizations, along with some > blog-type software... I think it could be done, and I have some bits and > pieces of it, but not quite the whole sandwich (so to speak). > > I'm partially doing this with an ALA grant I got for www.histsex.com (soon > to be www.histsex.org just in case you're clicking that in a week or > so!). This "bibliography" is all in omeka and it works effectively *like* > a libguide, but will need further plugins to make it all work as desired, > so I continue to investigate alternatives. > > Perhaps this is something that a grant will be needed to do in a broader > way? Or is there something obvious I've missed here? > > Thank you all for your time! > > -- > > > *BRIAN M. WATSON *they/them > twitter <https://twitter.com/brimwats> - website <https://brimwats.com/> > PhD: UBC SLAIS <https://slais.ubc.ca/> > Director: HistSex.org <https://histsex.com/> > Editorial Board: Homosaurus <http://homosaurus.org/about> > > _______________________________________________ > Wikidata mailing list > [email protected] > https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikidata > -- http://zooid.org/vid
_______________________________________________ Wikidata mailing list [email protected] https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikidata
