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"Lack of Good Tutorials. I had the pleasure of attempting to teach RDF and Turtle at a
workshop. I think our biggest hurdle was teaching people where
predicates came from and which ones were we using for our examples.
This ended up with me having to teach OWL to people who were probably
not ready for it. I could not send them to a good tutorial site other than the RDF
1.1. Primer or the "Linked Data: Evolving the Web into a Global Data
Space" book (http://linkeddatabook.com/editions/1.0/). It is a very
large leap to have someone go from a few pages of primer to an entire
book." https://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/semantic-web/2018Dec/0088.html
"There are tutorials aimed at the very
beginner for React and most javascript frameworks. Look at things like
next.js and you have interactive tutorials, even get rewards and points,
in very well put together presentations." https://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/semantic-web/2018Nov/0136.html
IDEA: Building things
"When learning JS you can right from the very start
see what it does, and build things. You get tight feedback loops, and an
instant sugar rush when you learn a bit of technology and see what it can
do. You can see what others have done and import that via cut and paste.
Tools like code sandbox will let you experiment." https://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/semantic-web/2018Nov/0136.html
IDEA: An integrated primer that spans specifications and tools
"Data-centric, cross-specification semantic primer. . . . Every main spec (RDF, OWL, SPARQL) has its own primer/overview, usually with small data examples . . . . I think it would be good for W3C to have, especially for beginners, a primer that uses the same data sample, and then goes through the technologies and explains, with growing complexity, what each of them can
do for the data (infer, query etc.) and how they complement each other." https://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/semantic-web/2017Oct/0040.html
If I want to start on new technologies, sometimes I just lack the good
ideas that motivate me to start creating something - how about a list of
small to advanced features/projects that help you learn? (open source
projects one can fork and start off)
a collection of resources on how to get started is also not quite
prominent out there yet, good solid resources. (I recently use https://www.geeksforgeeks.org/ a lot because of my current needs -> not
related to semantic web)
Let's not forget the kids.
I think that Semantic Web is great technology for enthusiastic schoolkids.
Wouldn't it be great to have stuff that they could pick up that helped them to use it for whatever exciting things they were driven to do.
"Lack of Good Tutorials. I had the pleasure of attempting to teach RDF and Turtle at a
workshop. I think our biggest hurdle was teaching people where
predicates came from and which ones were we using for our examples.
This ended up with me having to teach OWL to people who were probably
not ready for it. I could not send them to a good tutorial site other than the RDF
1.1. Primer or the "Linked Data: Evolving the Web into a Global Data
Space" book (http://linkeddatabook.com/editions/1.0/). It is a very
large leap to have someone go from a few pages of primer to an entire
book."
https://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/semantic-web/2018Dec/0088.html
"There are tutorials aimed at the very
beginner for React and most javascript frameworks. Look at things like
next.js and you have interactive tutorials, even get rewards and points,
in very well put together presentations."
https://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/semantic-web/2018Nov/0136.html
IDEA: Building things
"When learning JS you can right from the very start
see what it does, and build things. You get tight feedback loops, and an
instant sugar rush when you learn a bit of technology and see what it can
do. You can see what others have done and import that via cut and paste.
Tools like code sandbox will let you experiment."
https://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/semantic-web/2018Nov/0136.html
"What RDF can demonstrate quite well, I think, is the ability to mix
different data sources together."
https://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/semantic-web/2018Nov/0138.html
"build examples ourselves of things that are working on the Web, with Web data"
https://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/semantic-web/2018Dec/0009.html
IDEA: An integrated primer that spans specifications and tools
"Data-centric, cross-specification semantic primer. . . . Every main spec (RDF, OWL, SPARQL) has its own primer/overview, usually with small data examples . . . . I think it would be good for W3C to have, especially for beginners, a primer that uses the same data sample, and then goes through the technologies and explains, with growing complexity, what each of them can
do for the data (infer, query etc.) and how they complement each other."
https://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/semantic-web/2017Oct/0040.html
"one additional recommendation is . . . that we move beyond data models involving social graphs."
https://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/semantic-web/2018Nov/0243.html
"A few ideas:
ideas that motivate me to start creating something - how about a list of
small to advanced features/projects that help you learn? (open source
projects one can fork and start off)
prominent out there yet, good solid resources. (I recently use
https://www.geeksforgeeks.org/ a lot because of my current needs -> not
related to semantic web)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=85RRL4eIUb8 )"
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