| I wanted to make you all aware of the latest release of Qri -pronounced ‘query’- (0.6.1), a free & open-source dataset version control system / network for finding, collaborating on & publishing open datasets on IPFS. We’re finally ready to recruit users (crash test smarties) to test drive qri & let us know what they love / don’t love / what’s broken. You likely have questions about qri. Hope this helps: Qri tackles four common data problems:
- Discovery: Can I find data I’m looking for?
- Trust: Can I trust what I’ve found?
- Friction: Can I make this work with my other stuff?
- Sync: How do I h&le changes in data? Because qri is global & content-addressed, adding data to qri also checks the entire network to see if someone has added it before. Every change on qri is associated with a peer, creating an audit-able trail you can use to quickly see what has changed & who changed it. All datasets on qri are automatically described at the time of ingest using a flexible schema that makes data naturally inter-operate. Qri comes with tools to turn all datasets on the network into a JSON API with a single command. Finally, all changes in qri are tracked & synced. All data on qri is public, & discoverable by anyone on the network once you hit publish. Qri is still in its SUPER early stages, so it will be buggy, offer little guidance/help within the app. That’s what our team is here for. How to Download: https://qri.io/download/ For now, you’ll need a Mac to use the front-end app (windows support coming). Scroll down the download page to see links to command line tools. Getting started:
- Documents: https://qri.io/docs/
- Tutorials: https://qri.io/docs/tutorials/
- Qri Demos: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC7E3_hURgFO2mVCLDwPSyOQ How you can support Qri:
- Share feedback by filing a github issue: https://github.com/qri-io
- Introduce us to a data scientist in your life
- Follow on Twitter @qri_io or star on Github Thank you so much! |