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Hi Roger, I am not sure if your request includes intranet-only services. Anyhow, of those I wrote two major ones, each one as part of a mid- sized distributed information system project. One of them is an implementaton of a configuration management database the other one acts as a facade around a document management system. Both serve and accept RDF and custom-made client side SDKs (more or less RDF/S, RDFForms[1], and OWL aware user agents in a sense) shield developers from the nitty-gritty details of HTTP and the RDF graph. The RDF is sent as ntriples or RDF/XML and I am using XSLT to transform[2] to HTML depending on conneg. One of those services started out serving Topic Maps but after I realized they just do not hit the 80/20 spot, I switched to RDF. [1] http://www.markbaker.ca/2003/05/RDF-Forms/ [2] The services differentiate the RDF properties to determine the actual portion of the RDF graph to serve as an XML tree so the XSLT gets more than a flat, boring RDF/XML serialization :-) On May 18, 2006, at 5:24 PM, Costello, Roger L. wrote: > [I am interested in getting a snapshot of the diversity in the Web > ecosystem as it exists today] /Roger > > Jan > From: jalgermissen@t... > [mailto:jalgermissen@t...] > Sent: Thursday, May 18, 2006 8:31 AM > To: Costello, Roger L.; xml-dev@l... > Subject: AW: Who has created a Web service that serves up > its datain one or more of these formats: RSS? HTML? XML? SOAP? > audio? video? > > > > Hi Roger, > > what about RDF? Did you intentionally omit it from the list? > > > > > > A service which serves up its data to its customers in RSS format. > A service which serves up its data to its customers in HTML format. > A service which serves up its data to its customers in XML format. > A service which serves up its data to its customers in SOAP format. > A service which serves up its data to its customers in audio (MP3) > format. > A service which serves up its data to its customers in video (MPEG) > format. > Jan > > > > > > > > > > > > Also, I am interested in examples of: > > A service which serves up its data to its customers in two or more > different formats. > > > If you know of a service which fits one of the above, please send me: > > - The name of the service > > - A 1-2 sentence description of the service > > - What format(s) does the service serve up > > > > Thanks! /Roger > > > >
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