Kingsley Idehen
Kingsley Idehen
@sandhawke as you know != http://ontologi.es/like#likes . Thus, shouldn't we always expect terms functioning as statement/sentence predicates to be defined using Linked Open Data principles (which basically enables one lookup...
@bblfish -- Also note the document about Language & Natural Logic by John F. Sowa at: http://www.jfsowa.com/talks/natlog.pdf
@sandhawke : If possible, would you consider changing: { http://example.org/likes } to: @prefix likes: http://ontologi.es/like# . { like:likes } . Using index oriented sign (i.e., indexical) is crucial to understanding...
@RubenVerborgh, I would encourage embedding of both RDF-Turtle and JSON-LD, or at the very least JSON-LD. Why? JSON-LD is now broadly supported by content publishers and structured data centric user-agents....
That would be awesome! One of the most powerful aspects of Solid is the use of profile lookups to determine user preferences. Fundamentally, that's how a user takes full control...
@saleem-muhammad, You are dealing with an HTTP limitation. You can use ODBC or JDBC connections to Virtuoso that execute SPARQL queries too. The problem is that a document comprising a...
@saleem-muhammad, To be clear, I should have stated this was a Virtuoso HTTP interface limitation. Anyway, as per comment by @pkleef, the arbitrary limit can be increased.
> Type in await browser.storage.local.get();. In the pins array of the resulting object, you have all your bookmarks that you can post-process somehow. You may be able to push them...
> > This also indicates the need for an export feature i.e., one that exports a users current "pinboard extension generated bookmarks" to any combination of the following: > >...
On my new machine that returns: 0 On my old machine, that still holds my missing bookmarks, it returns: 2439