Hacking CongressPaul Ford shows us how to build a Semantic Web site by assembling
machine-readable information about the US federal government. Published on XML.com.tag:oreilly.com,2009:column-332006-04-13T07:04Ztag:xml.com,2006:article:1652
In his second Hacking Congress column, Joshua Tauberer shows us how to query open data from the U.S. Census Bureau using RDF and Python's RDFLib.
2006-04-12T07:00Z2006-04-13T07:04ZJoshua TaubererHacking CongressJoshua TaubererO'Reilly and Associatestext/htmlen-usCopyright 2006, O'Reilly and Associatestag:xml.com,2006:article:1643
Joshua Tauberer takes over XML.com's Hacking Congress column to explain how he's using RDF and the Semantic Web to build a site that organizes U.S. federal government data.
2006-02-08T07:00Z2006-02-09T07:05ZJoshua TaubererHacking CongressJoshua TaubererO'Reilly and Associatestext/htmlen-usCopyright 2006, O'Reilly and Associatestag:xml.com,2004:article:1496
At the pinnacle of election season in the U.S., Paul Ford returns with another Hacking Congress column. This time, Ford says things about the President using RDF and explains why the Semantic Web is about more than ontologies.
2004-11-03T07:00Z2005-01-13T17:28ZPaul FordHacking CongressPaul FordO'Reilly and Associatestext/htmlen-usCopyright 2004, O'Reilly and Associatestag:xml.com,2004:article:1484
Paul Ford discovers that creating a clean RDF
representation of the United States Senate is harder than he thought, and goes back to fix his mistakes, delving into the
mysterious world of URNs along the way.
2004-10-13T07:00Z2004-11-18T03:11ZPaul FordHacking CongressPaul FordO'Reilly and Associatestext/htmlen-usCopyright 2004, O'Reilly and Associatestag:xml.com,2004:article:1468
In Paul Ford's first Hacking Congress column, he shows us how to turn information on the U.S. Senate site into RDF.
2004-09-01T07:00Z2004-11-18T03:11ZPaul FordHacking CongressPaul FordO'Reilly and Associatestext/htmlen-usCopyright 2004, O'Reilly and Associates