What Is This?

This is an HTML+RDFa representation of metadata describing this Web-addressable resource.

Why Is This Important?

The property (attributes and values pairs) links on this page unveil a different kind of link, one which enables the following on HTTP networks such as the Web:

  1. Unambiguous identity for entities (aka. strong identifiers)
  2. Implicit binding of an entity and its metadata via strong identifiers
  3. Multiple metadata representations that enable a variety of presentations
  4. High precision Search and Find queries that simply use the metadata documents (by referencing entity URIs) as the query's Data Source Name

How Do I Discover Alternative Metadata Representations?

This document exposes metadata in the following formats: (X)HTML+RDFa, Turtle, N3, RDF/JSON, or RDF/XML. In the most basic form, you can simply view the (X)HTML source markup of this page, and go directly to the <head/> section which contains a <link/> tag with relationship and type properties for each format.

In addition, you can also explicitly request a desired metadata representation for a given resource via HTTP GET requests that use the entity's strong identifier as the call target.

How Can I Expose My Web Resources In This Manner?

Simply include the following in the <head/> section of your (static or dynamically generated) (X)HTML page:

<link rel="alternate" title="My Data in RDF Linked Data form"
type="application/rdf+xml"
href="http://linkeddata.uriburner.com/about/id/<this-page-URL>/>"

How Is This Related To The Linked Data Meme?

As stated above, the links in this page expose strong identifiers for its primary topic, secondary topics, attributes, and some values. These links, via implicit association, act as conduits to their metadata-bearing documents, in a variety formats.

[OpenLink Software]

About: nodeID://b21635428

An Entity of Type : Content Class, from Data Source : https://apihtawikosisan.wordpress.com/language-links-2/feed, within Data Space : dev.restore.ovi.cnr.it:8890

  • References
  • Referenced By
body relation
  • Government of Saskatchewan department of education put together its own list:
    http://www.education.gov.sk.ca/aboriginal-resource-list
    This is useful, despite obvious drawbacks; it includes non-textbook materials (such as short films) that would otherwise be hard to find out about, and illustrated children’s books (unlikely to be mentioned in academic book catalogues). Although I have seen many in-class materials for Cree (especially those produced by particular band councils) I do not think I have seen the “K.I.M. Language Starter Kit” for Cree; it is probably important for people more advanced in the language (like yourself) to see and review resources such as this. It is possible that I saw this set of books at the F.N.U. library already, and didn’t take any interest in it for some obvious reason, but it reportedly covers “kindergarden through grade 12”, etc.
    Cf. http://www.sasked.gov.sk.ca/curr_inst/iru/bibs/update03/updates/aboriginal_languages.html

source
  • https://apihtawikosisan.wordpress.com/language-links-2/feed
type
  • Content Class
described by
  • https://apihtawikosisan.wordpress.com/language-links-2/feed
content
  • By: Emo
Alternative Linked Data Views: Facets | iSPARQL | ODE     Raw Linked Data formats: CXML | CSV | RDF ( N-Triples N3/Turtle JSON XML ) | OData ( Atom JSON ) | Microdata ( JSON HTML) | JSON-LD
This material is Open Knowledge   W3C Semantic Web Technology     This material is Open Knowledge Creative Commons License Valid XHTML + RDFa
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License.
OpenLink Virtuoso version 07.20.3231, on Linux (x86_64-generic_glibc25-linux-gnu), Single Edition