Deep knowledge storage graphs
Earlier today, I spent some time reading about the best frameworks for knowledge graphs. A lot of that research was focused on how people make those knowledge graphs deeper and ultimately portable or storable. Portable knowledge graphs are a topic that I find endlessly entertaining. We have hit a point where the indexed web is failing. A lot of what we currently do is going to have to change in terms of interfaces and just how content is used. Headless web interfaces where API content can be retrieved by agents is probably a more likely outcome than the sea of HTML we were accustomed to accessing. At the moment, I don’t think any of the multitude of knowledge graph frameworks are going to end up overtaking HTML. The question, however, remains at what point will something overtake HTML and will end up just making content you have to pay to access on the other side of an endpoint. Everything else will get swallowed in the model and just be accessible.
We went to Costco today, and it was bonkers busy for some reason around lunchtime. For the most part, Costco just seems busy pretty much every time we visit. That business model appears to be successful. We did see a 100-inch television right when we walked in the door today. It was gigantic. Seeing that television made me wonder if we are going to see wall-size devices or if everything will just switch over to high-powered laser-based projectors. My guess is that Costco sells a lot more television systems vs. projectors and that trend will probably continue for a few years. You could build a very interesting knowledge graph of just the history of television and televisions.
I know you are wondering if I’m still watching Andromeda season 5. Yes, of course I’m still working my way through the end of the Andromeda series. I may finish up the series this weekend and move on to watching some SG-1.