data.gov
solid
data.gov | solid | |
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26 | 117 | |
514 | 8,173 | |
4.9% | 0.0% | |
7.9 | 0.0 | |
21 days ago | over 1 year ago | |
Shell | HTML | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
data.gov
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Where does everyone get shapefiles/basemaps?
data.gov may have additional material regarding Federal parcels / properties.
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Open Data Is Dead
I wouldn't have considered any of the four bullet points "open data". I would consider
https://data.gov/
Wikidata and many other things "open". It's my own (partially true) opinion that open data is downloadable as a data dump, anything involving an API is like breathing through a straw.
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Legislative records House of Representatives?
Does anyone know of a data source where I could gather laws passed/blocked and their sponsors? I tried the data.gov API for legislative info, but that source limits any data dump to 250 records, far from being enough to cover any given year.
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OnlyOffice: Free open source office suite with business productivity tools
This is all completely irrelevant. No office suite user gives a shit what the Library of Congress thinks about database formats, because spreadsheets are not databases, no matter how often you personally conflate the two.
Furthermore, the LoC's job is archiving. Your links have "preservation" in the url for a reason, and "preservation" is not what people do with spreadsheets. To strive for relevance, explore https://data.gov, where CSV is abundant, because it's in use by literally hundreds of state and federal agencies, often by people using spreadsheet software, and will continue to be so for years or decades to come, whether you understand why or not.
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API’s role in digital government: 10 national best practices
The US Government is known for its data.gov initiative, where it has standardized the APIs across all federal agencies. This initiative has led to better consistency, security, and interoperability, thereby enhancing the data and services' value. They are used the API management tool to enforce strict encryption and access control measures, providing secure access to the vast amount of public data hosted by federal agencies.
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Struggling with finding a use case to work on for my Course Work
However, for my next coursework we should be using our own datasets which should be supervised learning in nature and they cannot be from Kaggle or UCI (we lose 30 points if we use any of these sources for our datasets. I have spent about a week to look for datasets and I am a bit confused and also unable to understand which dataset to use or what kind of use cases should I look at. I did explore data.gov but I kind of just freeze because I am unable to understand what use case I can create of the database. I can't use clustering problem because that would be unsupervised in nature.
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Semi-niche peat mapping question- please help!
My first thought were the GIS services and catalogues listed on the Maryland state website (https://doit.maryland.gov/support/Pages/GIS.aspx) USGS National Geologic Map database (https://ngmdb.usgs.gov/ngm-bin/ngm_compsearch.pl) and the more-general federal open data portal (https://data.gov/). I didn't find many promising results for "peat" on any of them, but you might have better luck.
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Where can I find data about India on anything
Yes, I have opened data.gov many times but always find that most of the categories have no datasets and any dataset which is avilable have insufficient data. It's useless.
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D214 Capstone Data Ideas
Government data: https://data.gov/
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Update of the RDF and SPARQL (RDF star) families of specifications
The U.S. Open Data catalog [1] has all the metadata and even some data as Linked Data, same with the European Open Data catalog [2]
[1]: https://data.gov/
solid
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Simple Lasts Longer
This doesn't support the various consumer cloud storage APIs, but you've just reminded me of a project I ran into years ago that seems to still be around: https://remotestorage.io/
There's also Solid which attempts to do something similar: https://solidproject.org/
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The current state of the Web and what is the next step in its evolution.
It is surprising to me this is not talked about more. I see little to none online news, podcasts, YouTube videos or anything else where this is discussed. I only found out about it because of research I did on Tim Berners-Lee in preparation for a Career Day talk at my kids middle school. Otherwise I would have probably not known about it still today. And even after I found out and started watching YouTube videos on the topic, YouTube won't even suggest any related videos about it even after already watching multiple videos on the subject (Web 3.0, Solid Project, Decentralized Web...etc).. is Big Tech trying to keep the web from evolving into what Sir Tim Berners-Lee is proposing?
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Write libraries instead of services, where possible
It's only an unreasonable amount of work if you assume that the user is managing a separate storage backend for each library. If you take the Tim Berners-Lee approach (re: https://solidproject.org/) then each user is only managing one storage backend: the one that stores their data. The marginal cost of hooking in one more library low.
We just have to get a little more fed up with all of these services and then the initial cost of setting it up in the first place will be worth it. Any day now...
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Manas: Storage servers confirming to Solid protocol
Solid is a web native protocol to enable interoperable, read-write, collaborative, and decentralized web, truer to web's original vision.
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Manas: Solid protocol storage server in Rust for decentralized web
Manas project(https://github.com/manomayam/manas/tree/main) aims to create a modular framework and ecosystem to create correct, robust storage servers adhering to Solid protocol in rust.
[Solid](https://solidproject.org/) is a web native protocol to enable interoperable, read-write, collaborative, and decentralized web, truer to web's original vision.
Solid adds to existing Web standards to realise a space where individuals can maintain their autonomy, control their data and privacy, and choose applications and services to fulfil their needs.
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My vision of the semantic web...correct me if I'm wrong.
You're describing Solid, not the Semantic Web. Granted, Solid uses Semantic technologies to achieve it. https://solidproject.org/
- Threads : à peine lancé, le concurrent de Twitter crée par Facebook compte 10 millions de membres
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The problem with federated web apps
Tim Berners-Lee's Solid project is working on that. Put data in "pods" that are stored on pod servers, which are federated. You can self-host.
It could be a federated layer of identity & personal content decoupled from social platforms.
https://solidproject.org/
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Update of the RDF and SPARQL (RDF star) families of specifications
Check out https://solidproject.org (If you want a short intro I recently gave a ~30min talk about it: https://noeldemartin.com/fosdem)
- Solid, a spec that lets people store their data securely in decentralized Pods
What are some alternatives?
dev-machine - Ansible setup for maintaining a development environment
Mastodon - Your self-hosted, globally interconnected microblogging community
X-Road - Source code of the X-Road® data exchange layer software
logseq - A local-first, non-linear, outliner notebook for organizing and sharing your personal knowledge base. Use it to organize your todo list, to write your journals, or to record your unique life.
bcapps
orbitdb - Peer-to-Peer Databases for the Decentralized Web
lv2 - The LV2 audio plugin specification
Peergos - A p2p, secure file storage, social network and application protocol
sf-tree-history - Tracking the history of trees in San Francisco
kanidm - Kanidm: A simple, secure and fast identity management platform
manjaro-playbook - Manjaro/Arch Linux Ansible provision playbook
Nullboard - Nullboard is a minimalist kanban board, focused on compactness and readability.