Over the past months, I’ve been working on a project that combines my interests in data-engineering, AI, and civic transparency: building a Contextualise AI-based data pipeline that processes and analyses the procedures of the Norwegian Parliament (Stortinget).
Contextualise AI is a data integration and analytics platform designed for organizations of all kinds. It combines a graph-based approach to modeling the world with tools for building data pipelines, applications and AI workflows; an all in one platform. This makes it easier for different teams to work with data and apply it to real problems.
I have recently resumed developing three.js-based applications after a period of little to no development with three.js and the developer experience has been first-class. It’s not that the three.js-specific developer experience was bad before, but now it’s just so much better.
The Brave Robot Universe project is part of my worldbuilding efforts and —to a greater or lesser extent— touches upon nearly all of my personal software development efforts.
For the past year I have been working on the development of content-related concepts, processes and tools with the express purpose of building highly engaging and unique web-based content experiences.
The first of several brain dumps in relation to the management of content and knowledge on the web. Some of the following points will be generally applicable while others are more specific to the topic maps paradigm, a member of the semantic technologies family.
TopicDB, the topic maps engine on top of which Contextualise is built has always had support for associations that connect more than two topics together. But, up until very recently, Contextualise didn’t.
The Awesome Knowledge Management project is an attempt to keep track of interesting people, projects, applications and so forth related to the combined knowledge management and knowledge graph space.
In the vast majority of forms in Contextualise the user is expected to provide references to other topics resulting in, at times, a very cumbersome user experience.
Currently, Contextualise does not support effective collaboration. A new feature is being developed that will allow you to share your topic maps with other Contextualise users for the purpose of collaboration.
Manage your knowledge with Contextualise, a tool particularly suited for organising information-heavy projects and activities consisting of unstructured and widely diverse data and information resources.