Today, the World Wide Web Consortium made it easier to share and reuse data across application, enterprise, and community boundaries with the publication of three new Semantic Web standards for
SPARQL (pronounced "sparkle"). SPARQL is the query language for the Semantic Web (see
Semantic Web use cases). SPARQL queries hide the details of data management, which lowers costs and increases robustness of data integration on the Web. "Trying to use the Semantic Web without SPARQL is like trying to use a relational database without SQL," explained Tim Berners-Lee, W3C Director. There are already
14 implementations of the standard, which is comprised of three W3C Recommendations:
SPARQL Query Language for RDF,
SPARQL Protocol for RDF, and
SPARQL Query Results XML Format. Read the
press release,
testimonials and learn more about the
Semantic Web Activity.
(Archivio News inglese, italiano)