Interesting piece. Many seem to be feeling around blindly for the next unicorn, when new value from data is being created and discussed openly by companies who blend statistical and knowledge modeling. Some examples: https://t.co/V3QCVLSmBT https://t.co/aOvQnYz1XV— Alan Morrison (@AlanMorrison) November 17, 2018
Football clubs connected to the countries for which their players play at the world cup. Size of nodes: number of players at the world cup. pic.twitter.com/ONYjuCafUn— Alexandre Afonso (@alexandreafonso) June 17, 2018
The Graph Engine Service from Huawei Cloud is Apache TinkerPop enabled - yet another #graphdb to offer Gremlin support https://t.co/azSWcmDKUP pic.twitter.com/tnaUNORXSf— TinkerPop (@apachetinkerpop) July 18, 2018
“Lovveeeee these women. They inspire me!!! Thank you for coming and speaking at the Neo4j Ecosystem Summit!!!! @gabidavila (Developer Advocate, Google), @reshamas (Data Scientist and Organizer of WiMLDS, PyLadies NYC), @jumokedada (Founder, Tech Women Network) #Neo4j #GraphConnect”
New release of neosemantics for #neo4j is now available (3.4.0.2). It includes model mapping and microinferencing capabilities. Watch this space for examples of use... https://t.co/il4UuzC5zF #RDF— Jesús Barrasa (@BarrasaDV) October 10, 2018
Recently I decided to teach myself #React and #electron so I built out a IDE for running traversals and visualizing results for @apachetinkerpop enabled databases. If you want to try it out you can get it here: https://t.co/Yb6eaF6HKo #graphDB #graph— Dave Bechberger (@bechbd) August 23, 2018
If you find https://t.co/XZ7CIl9C8r interesting, knowledge graphs the next generation of search, & linked data a place where the web becomes a very useful database, you might want to check out this new site from the creators of https://t.co/XZ7CIl9C8r: https://t.co/bhnxXR1grI— Bill Slawski ⚓ (@bill_slawski) October 18, 2018
Old-school symbolic AI is sneaking back into modern machine learning AI, and the heritage of triples-based inferencing shows through in some of it. Nice short presentation by Imperial College London's Marta Garnelo: https://t.co/4nelxJmsYu pic.twitter.com/fSftB5Tqr9— Bob DuCharme (@bobdc) June 24, 2018
RDF was designed as a data interchange framework; what you do in the privacy of your own database is your own business— Dan Brickley (@danbri) September 16, 2018
Semantic Webby projects could often do with a dose of this. I'm afraid that careful UI creation suffers from semweb culture valuing generality over all else.Perhaps SHACL & ShEx shapes will provide better attachment points for UIs built over graph data? https://t.co/C1xvAoxPiU— Dan Brickley (@danbri) May 19, 2018
Gartner serves up 2018 Hype Cycle with a heavy side of AIImage Source: https://t.co/90NoF4IqvG#AI #MachineLearning #DeepLearning #BigData #Fintech #Insurtech #Marketing #Datascience #ML #DL #Robotics #HealthTech #IoT #tech Article Link: https://t.co/CtQlfve1Gm pic.twitter.com/Y5Xelzc6r4— AI (@DeepLearn007) August 21, 2018
New @ManningBooks early access book: "Graph-Powered Machine Learning" by Dr. Alessandro Negro @AlessandroNegro #MachineLearning #neo4j #AmazonNeptune #DataScience https://t.co/XpxZK3jw0g pic.twitter.com/xntecIh0Yh— John Dhabolt (@Dhabolt) October 17, 2018
Here are our slides for #stratadata on the progress we've made on scalable vulnerability discovery with code property graphs: multi-layered, extensible and with support for multiple programming languages: https://t.co/qbgK5PM28m pic.twitter.com/iRjLfr8VY2— Fabian Yamaguchi (@fabsx00) May 23, 2018
I think graphs are the correct mental model and API for deep learning -- but not graph of ops like a TF graphdef, instead, graph of layers. Recursive graphs of high-level building blocks.Which is also how deep NNs are visualized in pretty much every paper or textbook ever...— François Chollet (@fchollet) November 15, 2018
I just published the latest version of Practical Gremlin in all supported formats. Another substantial update. Please see the change history for full details. https://t.co/UNJzfsUg3s … … https://t.co/mXGaOEe3q6 … … https://t.co/7YtyD2xQuR … … @apachetinkerpop @JanusGraph pic.twitter.com/EcokGbuwMN— Kelvin Lawrence (@gfxman) May 29, 2018
I’ve been saying this to paying customers for a couple years and now DataStax is just giving it away. Next thing you know everyone will have a nicely partitioned, massively scalable graph. And then what will have but loads of potential business value being realized. https://t.co/tJs4bUnfTD— GraphCurmudgeon (@GraphCurmudgeon) June 17, 2018
At long last! With this, we aim to bridge the gap between semantic web and graph database communities. Happy graph-querying! https://t.co/8al1uLi1aC— Harsh Thakkar (@Harsh9t) August 17, 2018
Presentation slides for my #iswc_conf blue sky ideas track paper "Make #Embeddings Semantic Again!", including my tongue-in-cheek depiction of the #semanticweb #layercake as of 2018: https://t.co/HC1gIA2Sqz pic.twitter.com/GpR68z5NFs— Heiko Paulheim (@heikopaulheim) October 15, 2018
Using @neo4j to analyse the madness that is Javascript package dependencies for my upcoming @ACCUConf talk. This is the dependency graph for what `create-react-app` spits out. Seems 4K isn’t enough to get it all in view at once :S pic.twitter.com/MPjmN7yKx4— I, Dom Davis (@idomdavis) April 3, 2018
The work from @SDA_Research member @Harsh9t and @dharmenpunjani on converting SPARQL queries to Gremlin path traversals has been integrated into the popular Apache Tinkerpop framework (master branch): https://t.co/XEctJ6Q6A5 - you can now run #sparql queries in @apachetinkerpop!— Jens Lehmann (@JLehmann82) August 17, 2018
Satya is excited about Microsoft's Cosmos DB momentum (>$100m in annualized revenue), given that it launched last year. 'I mean, I've been around databases for a long time and I've never seen a product that's gotten to this kind of scale this quickly,' he said— Jordan Novet (@jordannovet) April 26, 2018
In this week's #twin4j @amyhodler interviews Alastair Green, @boggle, and @aethelraed about the GQL proposal that was published last week.https://t.co/HWlcwFIEwE#neo4j pic.twitter.com/xYwPXZcC55— Neo4j (@neo4j) May 27, 2018
New book: "Querying Graphs" by Angela Bonifati (@ang3ela), George Fletcher (@georgehiroshi), Hannes Voigt, and Nikolay Yakovets (@nikk186)https://t.co/VufBTdGdG3— Olaf Hartig (@olafhartig) October 2, 2018
Happening in March next year: the @w3c Workshop on Web Standardization for Graph Data.Mark your calendars and express your interest in participating!https://t.co/HbDEO3dxM4 https://t.co/PELY1dVkyT— Olaf Hartig (@olafhartig) October 15, 2018