Publicado por Ricardo Alonso Maturana
13/12/2014
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Comunidad pública de acceso restringido
Next Web: web 3.0, web semántica y el futuro de internet
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In Next Web people explore and discuss on opportunities related to web 2.0, semantic web and semantic technologies applied to the web, Web 3.0 and, in general, evolution and future of the Internet.
The community discusses the future of the web and the way in which the set of technologies enabling internet will influence the development of the socio-digital life, the building of the digital identity of people and organizations, and the acceleration of learning social processes. All thanks to the exercise of simultaneous sociability and access to ubiquitous information and intelligence.
Companies, venture capitalists, institutions, researchers, professors, start-ups, bloggers, advanced internet users, internet activists and, on the whole, anybody who believes in the technology power of social transformation, have their new space in Next Web, a community promoted by the GNOSS Team.
Publicado por Ricardo Alonso Maturana
13/12/2014
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Publicado por María Elena Alvarado
06/10/2010
Interesante comparativa de Kendall Clark sobre el mercado de bases de datos RDF publicada en el blog de Clark & Parsia. There’s a lot of talk about the purely technical a pects of RDF databases, triple stores, etc. There is considerably less talk about the RDF database market as a software business. As I see it, the commercial RDF database market is comprised of six seven systems, listed here in random order: Oracle Virtuoso Allegro Graph BigData OWLIM 5Store Talis Platform
Publicado por Equipo GNOSS
20/01/2010
Se trata de un artículo escrito por Richard Jones, CTO de Last.fm durante 6 años, sobre las bases de datos no relacionales. El artículo está escrito originalmente en enero de 2009, pero contiene actualizaciones en los comentarios. Perhaps you’re considering using a dedicated key-value or document store instead of a traditional relational database. Reasons for this might include: You’re suffering from Cloud-computing Mania. You need an excuse to ‘get your Erlang on’ You heard CouchDB was cool. You hate MySQL, and although PostgreSQL is much better, it still doesn’t have decent replication. There’s no chance you’re buying Oracle licenses. Your data is stored and retrieved mainly by primary key, wit...
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