3. Solid…, data pod examples
For different contexts/purposes:
• https://pietervaneverdingen.inrupt.net/profile/card#me
(personal data I would like to share with e.g. friends)
• https://openinc.solid.community/profile/card#me
(business data I would like to share with e.g. advisors)
• https://pldn.solid.community/profile/card#me
(community data I would like to share with community members)
6. Comments for this screen
Click on the GET A POD
button on this screen
7. Comments for this screen
Choose which Pod provider is
allowed to host your Pod (but
you can also install a Solid
server yourself to host your
own Pods and to be in control
yourself totally)
8. Comments for this screen
Click on the Register button
to create a Pod
9. Comments for this screen
Create a unique Pod name
that will serve as your WebID
and enter a password and an
e-mail address
11. Comments for this screen
This the home page for one
of my test Pods (and you are
looking at the current version
of the GUI)
12. Comments for this screen
You start with an empty Pod
profile, where you can drag
an image into the head icon
and fill in the entry fields in
the form for the data that
you want to share in public
13. Comments for this screen
Drag and drop an image from
e.g. your hard drive to the
head icon
14. Comments for this screen
When you click the Profile
link on the home page of my
POD then see the (linked)
data for my Profile`with e.g.
my profile characteristics and
the apps that I trust
Comments for this screen
Confirm this drag and drop
action to copy the image
15. Comments for this screen
A Pod profile with an image
and some test data
16. Comments for this screen
You can also drag http links
to screen sections with a
bull’s eye sign, e.g. for web
sites and persons (with a
known WebID) you want to
connect to your profile
17. Comments for this screen
An example of the XML
source data of a profile
18. Comments for this screen
When you start with a new
Pod then your storage will be
empty
19. Comments for this screen
You start with an empty public
folder in a Pod.
The settings folder is more of
interest for Solid app developers
(e.g. how are indexes used)
21. Solid…, app examples
First versions of apps I’ve used:
• https://markbook.org
(a bookmark app)
• https://vincenttunru.gitlab.io/poddit/
(another bookmark app)
• https://pixolid.netlify.com
(a photo management app)
Interoperable Solid apps !!
22. Comments for this screen
You first have to authenticate
yourself with your WebID and
password before you can
start using a Solid app
23. Comments for this screen
And you have to grant access
to your Pod before an app
can use your Pod data and
can add data to your Pod
24. Comments for this screen
Then you see that Mark Book
is aware of all the bookmarks
that were created by Poddit
and Mark Book! (these two
Solid apps are interoperable)
25. Comments for this screen
And you see that Poddit is
also aware of all the
bookmarks that I have
created with two
interoperable apps
26. Created by Mark Book!
Created by Poddit
Comments for this screen
In the bookmarks.ttl file you
see 3 bookmarks that were
created with 2 different
bookmark apps: Poddit and
Mark Book!
27. Layered compatibility via
compatible data shapes !
which is the basis for adding
more related Linked Data
Comments for this screen
Here you see a first example
of layered compatibility for
the bookmark data shapes
that were created by two
interoperable Solid bookmark
apps
28. Comments for this screen
In the photo management
app Pixolid, I’ve upload one
picture (from the Solid
Utrecht session), which I’ve
made public (you can also
share pictures with a friend
that is known in your Pod)
29. Comments for this screen
I’ve liked it and I’ve created
one sample comment
30. Comments for this screen
And in my public folder I see
a pixolid sub folder
31. Comments for this screen
And when open the pixolid
folder then you see the
modular folder structure of
the data in this folder (the
images, comments and likes)
33. Comments for this screen
The comment that I’ve added
to the picture, etc.
The pattern of storing data is:
Who added when, data of a
certain type, with/without a
relationship to data that was
already stored in the Pod and
with more/less additional
metadata details (pattern is
often activity stream alike)