What is "knowledge graph server"?
Is it like a semantic wiki?
What's the main use case?
Is it like "git for structured information"?
Or is it like "distributed mindmap"?

Michał 

On Tue, Apr 11, 2017 at 2:34 AM, Jeffrey Brown <jeffbrown.the@gmail.com> wrote:
I should have mentioned that the front end is simple, resembling an ordinary text editor. There are only 25 commands a user has to learn; no programming is needed.

On Mon, Apr 10, 2017 at 3:40 PM, Jeffrey Brown <jeffbrown.the@gmail.com> wrote:
Esteemed Haskellers,

Semantic Synchrony is an open-source knowledge graph server with an Emacs front end. It integrates with Chrome and Git. Git allows a graph to be selectively shared, as a collection of repositories. Subgraphs can be created and edited using indented plain text or Markdown; the latter allows nodes to serve double-duty as edge labels, by linking to them in section or subsection headings. The front end and server communicate using simple JSON.

We are open to taking it in new directions.

For hacking it, check out our invitation to coders[1]. For learning more about it, check out the wiki[2], which is thorough and friendly -- it even including videos.



--
Jeff Brown | Jeffrey Benjamin Brown
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--
Jeff Brown | Jeffrey Benjamin Brown
Website   |   Facebook   |   LinkedIn(spammy, so I often miss messages here)   |   Github   

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