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iPhylo

Rants, raves (and occasionally considered opinions) on phyloinformatics, taxonomy, and biodiversity informatics. For more ranty and less considered opinions, see my Twitter feed.ISSN 2051-8188. Written content on this site is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license.
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Computer and Information Sciences
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Dion Hinchcliffe has a piece entitled Creating real business value with Web 2.0 which lists AntBase.org (I think he actually means AntWeb) as an example of a non-commercial Web 2.0 service that demonstrates "scalable marshalling of underutilized data resources," and shows: The article comes with this graphic: See also Dion's Thinking in Web 2.0: Sixteen ways (via Danny Ayers).

Computer and Information Sciences
Published

A triple store for ants is all very well, but it contains just the information available when the triple store was created. What about updating it? What about doing this automatically ? Here are some ideas: Connotea Connotea provides semantically rich RSS feeds. We could subscribe to a feed using a tag (such as Formicidae), and extract recent posts.

Computer and Information Sciences
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Ambient Findability by Peter Morville is a wonderful read, full of snippets of inspiration. In many ways, like ambient music alluded to at the end of the book, it is less about specifics and more about a way of thinking, and about the possibilities once things become findable.

CGIDotGraphvizMac OSXPerlComputer and Information Sciences
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Webdot isn't available for Mac OS X, and as I use an iBook running Panther for all my development work (before moving to a Linux box to host the results) I wanted to have the same functionality on my iBook. This can be achieved by hacking a simplified version of webdot. This Perl script creates a virtual web browser to serve the image. I've simplified things somewhat, but it works.