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  3. are people on here that have opinions about #Solid (the pod technology not the javascript framework / library)

are people on here that have opinions about #Solid (the pod technology not the javascript framework / library)

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solidactivitypubfediverse
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  • reiver@mastodon.socialR This user is from outside of this forum
    reiver@mastodon.socialR This user is from outside of this forum
    reiver@mastodon.social
    wrote last edited by
    #6

    @thisismissem @mfru

    In your opinion, did you feel that the complexity of Solid was ONLY due to JSON-LD?

    Or, were there other (non- JSON-LD) things that made it complex, too?

    smallcircles@social.coopS 1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • mfru@mastodon.socialM mfru@mastodon.social

      are people on here that have opinions about #Solid (the pod technology not the javascript framework / library)

      why is it good / not good?

      is it usable?

      is it in use?

      it doesn't seem to have the same popularity as i.e. #ActivityPub / the #Fediverse, even though the concept of solid pods seems to synergize quite well with the idea of a decentralized web, as far as i can tell

      thisismissem@activitypub.spaceT This user is from outside of this forum
      thisismissem@activitypub.spaceT This user is from outside of this forum
      thisismissem@activitypub.space
      wrote last edited by
      #7

      There were a few other things (conflicting standards such as ACP vs WAC), but the JSON-LD was repeatedly the thing that developers found hard to wrap their head around. "How do I create a schema?" is a pretty normal question for an application developer, when you're used to working with traditional web app stacks. "Oh, it's JSON" and then they learn, nope, it's not: every property is optional, every property is one value or an array of values. The JSON-LD learning curve is so high that even people I think know it, generally go "yeah, nah, I still don't fully get it"

      So to develop an application with JSON-LD you basically need to deal with garbage in hopefully data out. It's not familiar nor simple to 99% of web developers. It's an incredibly niche community of people who actually get it, and they tend to work at companies who really benefit from the properties of JSON-LD.

      1 Reply Last reply
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      • nextgraph@fosstodon.orgN nextgraph@fosstodon.org

        @mfru at the intersection of Solid and Activitypub there is @activitypods that is BTW pivoting to @nextgraph as we think the truly decentralized POD based on RDF is in fact NextGrsph. Of course we are biased, but maybe we are onto something

        mfru@mastodon.socialM This user is from outside of this forum
        mfru@mastodon.socialM This user is from outside of this forum
        mfru@mastodon.social
        wrote last edited by
        #8

        @nextgraph @activitypods ActivityPods / Nextgraph looks extremely interesting!

        gina@fosstodon.orgG 1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • stuartyeates@cloudisland.nzS stuartyeates@cloudisland.nz

          @mfru it's in the class of tech that require a critical mass of users to be useful to outsiders. It's not achieved said critical mass, so no one will ever know whether it would have been any good. Maybe some ideas were progressed and picked up by other systems, not really clear.

          jg10@mastodon.socialJ This user is from outside of this forum
          jg10@mastodon.socialJ This user is from outside of this forum
          jg10@mastodon.social
          wrote last edited by
          #9

          @stuartyeates @mfru I think a critical mass of apps for a smaller number of users would also be ok - data sovereignty advantages can be obtained without network effects. There's still enough dev activity that the jury is out on whether this will be achieved.
          #SolidProject

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          0
          • reiver@mastodon.socialR reiver@mastodon.social

            @thisismissem @mfru

            In your opinion, did you feel that the complexity of Solid was ONLY due to JSON-LD?

            Or, were there other (non- JSON-LD) things that made it complex, too?

            smallcircles@social.coopS This user is from outside of this forum
            smallcircles@social.coopS This user is from outside of this forum
            smallcircles@social.coop
            wrote last edited by
            #10

            @reiver @thisismissem @mfru

            I made a diagram yesterday that contrasts #ActivityPub and #SolidProject that is I think interesting to consider.

            In the past I've been very active on the Solid forum, and tried to get a collab going with #SocialHub community. A number of points that existed then, are still issues today I think.

            Like, though anyone could participate in the standards process via chat, the Solid team and Inrupt were not really interested in their community, hardly giving attention while people were building interesting stuff there.

            Also at the time basically all available code was Javascript, making Solid uninteresting or hard to access for other language devs.

            But I think biggest issue was that Solid didn't know what it was. It was positioned as 'personal data vault' on the landing page then (but not using this term), but was 'secretly' TBL's desire to reboot the #SemanticWeb. The new web would be all 'Solid apps'. But the adoption strategy for that didn't exist.

            smallcircles@social.coopS thisismissem@activitypub.spaceT 2 Replies Last reply
            1
            1
            • smallcircles@social.coopS smallcircles@social.coop

              @reiver @thisismissem @mfru

              I made a diagram yesterday that contrasts #ActivityPub and #SolidProject that is I think interesting to consider.

              In the past I've been very active on the Solid forum, and tried to get a collab going with #SocialHub community. A number of points that existed then, are still issues today I think.

              Like, though anyone could participate in the standards process via chat, the Solid team and Inrupt were not really interested in their community, hardly giving attention while people were building interesting stuff there.

              Also at the time basically all available code was Javascript, making Solid uninteresting or hard to access for other language devs.

              But I think biggest issue was that Solid didn't know what it was. It was positioned as 'personal data vault' on the landing page then (but not using this term), but was 'secretly' TBL's desire to reboot the #SemanticWeb. The new web would be all 'Solid apps'. But the adoption strategy for that didn't exist.

              smallcircles@social.coopS This user is from outside of this forum
              smallcircles@social.coopS This user is from outside of this forum
              smallcircles@social.coop
              wrote last edited by
              #11

              @reiver @thisismissem @mfru

              Here's the diagram btw: https://social.coop/@smallcircles/116113963712755122

              The problem of #SolidProject knowing what it is, is more an inherited problem of #LinkedData / #SemanticWeb knowing what it is.

              Semantic web always was "if only all information on the web were semantic and machine-readable, then...". And there it stopped. Presumably magic would happen.

              And perhaps it would. But to make such a big leap, a paradigm shift of the entire web, along the way you have inspire a whole lot of people to set the (r)evolution in motion and keep it going.

              If you look at what linked data is, it is a very low-level format. Nice if you have it, but now what are you going to build with it? There are some good application areas, but the case for linked data elsewhere is not a given.

              Still today there are regular discussions on 'what would be the killer app for Solid' or linked data in general. Saw some interest for LLM's fed semantic data to make them more deterministic. I'm not interested.

              smallcircles@social.coopS 1 Reply Last reply
              1
              • mfru@mastodon.socialM mfru@mastodon.social

                @nextgraph @activitypods ActivityPods / Nextgraph looks extremely interesting!

                gina@fosstodon.orgG This user is from outside of this forum
                gina@fosstodon.orgG This user is from outside of this forum
                gina@fosstodon.org
                wrote last edited by
                #12

                @mfru @nextgraph @activitypods that sounds super interesting indeed, would love to know more!

                1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • smallcircles@social.coopS smallcircles@social.coop

                  @reiver @thisismissem @mfru

                  Here's the diagram btw: https://social.coop/@smallcircles/116113963712755122

                  The problem of #SolidProject knowing what it is, is more an inherited problem of #LinkedData / #SemanticWeb knowing what it is.

                  Semantic web always was "if only all information on the web were semantic and machine-readable, then...". And there it stopped. Presumably magic would happen.

                  And perhaps it would. But to make such a big leap, a paradigm shift of the entire web, along the way you have inspire a whole lot of people to set the (r)evolution in motion and keep it going.

                  If you look at what linked data is, it is a very low-level format. Nice if you have it, but now what are you going to build with it? There are some good application areas, but the case for linked data elsewhere is not a given.

                  Still today there are regular discussions on 'what would be the killer app for Solid' or linked data in general. Saw some interest for LLM's fed semantic data to make them more deterministic. I'm not interested.

                  smallcircles@social.coopS This user is from outside of this forum
                  smallcircles@social.coopS This user is from outside of this forum
                  smallcircles@social.coop
                  wrote last edited by
                  #13

                  @reiver @thisismissem @mfru

                  The chicken/egg of getting good tool support for Linked Data et al remains a serious issue.

                  The standards are complex and intertwined with each other in intricate ways. Regular devs need to be shielded from that, and have tools that allow them to focus on solving problems, building solutions, satisfying needs.

                  Without the tools, barrier to entry is real high. But because of that there are also less folks who build and improve tools.

                  Last problem that is important to mention, is more a social issue. The generalized "dev community" has made up their mind that they dislike linked data, just as they did before on XML, for instance. It is a particular mindset that has taken hold, caused by the first hype cycle around Semantic web, where it didn't deliver.

                  I'd advise anyone in LD space to incrementally prove value solution-side, and not emphasize too much on linked data as unique selling point. Alongside strengthen the ecosystem to get better tool support.

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  1
                  • mro@digitalcourage.socialM This user is from outside of this forum
                    mro@digitalcourage.socialM This user is from outside of this forum
                    mro@digitalcourage.social
                    wrote last edited by
                    #14

                    Hi @thisismissem,
                    yes, IMHO the question is, how big should the mental burden be implementing simple things?
                    Does AP want to be basic infrastructure, then it should strive to be basic.
                    I liked the line of thought of @mariusor in a chat with @steve on C2S complexity on C and S sides (keeping servers basic and let lients elaborate). Can't find the post right now.

                    thisismissem@activitypub.spaceT 1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • smallcircles@social.coopS smallcircles@social.coop

                      @reiver @thisismissem @mfru

                      I made a diagram yesterday that contrasts #ActivityPub and #SolidProject that is I think interesting to consider.

                      In the past I've been very active on the Solid forum, and tried to get a collab going with #SocialHub community. A number of points that existed then, are still issues today I think.

                      Like, though anyone could participate in the standards process via chat, the Solid team and Inrupt were not really interested in their community, hardly giving attention while people were building interesting stuff there.

                      Also at the time basically all available code was Javascript, making Solid uninteresting or hard to access for other language devs.

                      But I think biggest issue was that Solid didn't know what it was. It was positioned as 'personal data vault' on the landing page then (but not using this term), but was 'secretly' TBL's desire to reboot the #SemanticWeb. The new web would be all 'Solid apps'. But the adoption strategy for that didn't exist.

                      thisismissem@activitypub.spaceT This user is from outside of this forum
                      thisismissem@activitypub.spaceT This user is from outside of this forum
                      thisismissem@activitypub.space
                      wrote last edited by
                      #15

                      > @smallcircles@social.coop said:
                      >
                      > the Solid team and Inrupt were not really interested in their community, hardly giving attention while people were building interesting stuff there.

                      Yeah, the Inrupt leader ship were all not startup people. They didn't get devrel or really startups. There were more managers at Inrupt when I left than people actually doing the work when I left. (at least, that's how it felt). I think after I left like 2-3 other people also had enough and left.

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • mro@digitalcourage.socialM mro@digitalcourage.social

                        Hi @thisismissem,
                        yes, IMHO the question is, how big should the mental burden be implementing simple things?
                        Does AP want to be basic infrastructure, then it should strive to be basic.
                        I liked the line of thought of @mariusor in a chat with @steve on C2S complexity on C and S sides (keeping servers basic and let lients elaborate). Can't find the post right now.

                        thisismissem@activitypub.spaceT This user is from outside of this forum
                        thisismissem@activitypub.spaceT This user is from outside of this forum
                        thisismissem@activitypub.space
                        wrote last edited by
                        #16

                        @mro@digitalcourage.social yeah, for protocols to succeed they need to know when to be complicated and when to get out of developers way. There's some complexity that you can do on the server side, but the client needs to be why you solve that complexity. A server can easily do things like filtering over a dataset. For a client that can be really expensive, since it means retrieving a bunch of data you don't need.

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