currently finding RDF very useful in mapping out my computer parts and builds as a single Turtle document, without the absolute mess of having to deal with spreadsheets and inserting rows between other rows.
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currently finding RDF very useful in mapping out my computer parts and builds as a single Turtle document, without the absolute mess of having to deal with spreadsheets and inserting rows between other rows. turns out when you want to connect a bunch of things together, a graph model works way better than a tabular model!
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currently finding RDF very useful in mapping out my computer parts and builds as a single Turtle document, without the absolute mess of having to deal with spreadsheets and inserting rows between other rows. turns out when you want to connect a bunch of things together, a graph model works way better than a tabular model!
the one thing that i do wish i had though is better tooling to visualize those connections, or to use those connections to build better visualizations. i was weighing going with some drag-and-drop-style diagramming software like diagrams.net, but realized that i wanted to include a lot of metadata that would be somewhat painful to have in a diagram and somewhat natural to have in a plain text file.