@samj Would you share your links and resources? Anything you want in the open source knowledge graph I am curating.
See an example open source knowledge graph at lightrag.streamlit.app.
@samj Would you share your links and resources? Anything you want in the open source knowledge graph I am curating.
See an example open source knowledge graph at lightrag.streamlit.app.
This is a really interesting idea. It doesn’t belong on https://opensourcedefinition.org, which (save for the forum) is intended to be a clean, stable home for the Open Source Definition (OSD) and its dependencies like the list of approved licenses, but I have some ideas about where it could go. I’d propose that anything that lands on this domain is fair game though.
[edit: changing the order of the readings, by importance]
This morning readings lead me to some interesting discussion on definitions:
And a paper has been making the rounds: Opportunities And Threats To The Development Of Artificial Intelligence Applications And The Need For Normative Regulation Of This Development
Trivial comment: the link seems down. For self-hosting of Streamlit apps (or other data science web apps) we use (and created) ShinyProxy.
@gvlx Thanks for sharing your research.
@Tobias - I am moving away from Streamlit and will repost the new link when it is ready.
I also think the start of an open source knowledge graph should be human collaborative mindmap, rather than code-defined webapp so I suggest we start there for those interested in collaborating: Excalidraw | Hand-drawn look & feel • Collaborative • Secure
I updated the URL to newest and working version: https://lightrag-gui.streamlit.app/
I am not sure how long it persists memory, but between sessions, you can insert most formats into this graph-centered AI.
In that thread I replied to Carlo Piana (OSI’s board member) and I was censored.
Here you can read my original post (with link to the archived page proving the OSI censorship): FSF is working on freedom in machine learning applications - #2 by giacomo