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There are several mechanisms available with different degrees of flexibility and maturity, and more options that will be available through the VIVO mini-grantsare becoming available on a regular basis as the semantic web and linked open data communities grow.

Most techniques currently rely on having a SPARQL endpoint for VIVO. Cornell has used Sesame for some time now, and UF supports Joseki.[Fuseki.

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  • John Fereira has developed semantic services (https://semanticservice.svn.sourceforge.net/svnroot/semanticservice).]) that are used in production at Cornell for sites such as [and http://www.classics.cornell.edu]. These services parse the results of SPARQL queries in Java and then offer XML and JSON outputs familiar to most webmasters. The queries and Java objects that interpret them have to be created and maintained but the services have a administrative UI, an HTML preview, and handle XML escaping and repeated values well.
  • the Duke VIVO Widgets - grant project mini grant is developing tools in Javascript to enable web masters or end users to pull standard content such as recent publications or grants into other websites much as they would a video or image from an Internet service