This Week in Neo4j – 25th February 2017


Welcome to this week in Neo4j!

From now on instead of covering everything that happened in Neo4j at the end of the month in one mega-post we’re going to publish a more focused update once a week.

We hope you like it and if you have any ideas/feedback for future versions please send us an email – devrel@neo4j.com.

Featured Community Member: Andrew Bowman


If you ask a question with the neo4j tag on StackOverflow the chances are that you’ll get a reply from Andrew Bowman, a.k.a. InverseFalcon. Andrew has answered 79 questions in the last 30 days and is currently 14th on the list of top users on the neo4j tag. He’s also extremely active on the Neo4j Discord channel and if you’ve ever asked a question about APOC or Cypher you’re sure to have come across him.

We’d like to thank Andrew for his amazing contribution to the Neo4j community and for jumping in to help so many users.

New Neo4j Online Meetup


We had the return of the Neo4j Online Meetup on 15th February where Michael Hunger showed us all how to explore Buzzfeed’s TrumpWorld dataset.

Our next online meetup is on 2nd March at 17.00 UTC and will feature Jesús Barrasa talking about his experiences in the RDF and graph worlds. We hope you can join us.

If you’re keen to attend the online meetup but the time doesn’t work for you let us know at devrel@neo4j.com – if we have enough interest, we can schedule events at a time friendlier for other time zones.

Don’t forget to subscribe to the Neo4j YouTube channel to get notified about future videos.

Introducing the Neo4j Sandbox


If you’ve always wanted to play around with Neo4j but haven’t got around to downloading it, you can get up and running quickly with the Neo4j Sandbox.

In a few minutes you’ll have your own hosted Neo4j instance with built-in guides and sample datasets for popular use cases.

Neo4j in Forbes


Neo4j was featured in Forbes! NASA’s Chief Knowledge Architect David Meza explains how his team have used Neo4j to make it easier for NASA engineers to find the information they’re looking for by connecting related topics in the company’s Lessons Learned database.

David spoke at GraphConnect San Francisco 2016 where he describes NASA’s Knowledge Graph in more detail.

Use Spring, Elixir, or JetBrains IDEs?



Explore everything that's happening in the Neo4j community for the week of 25 February 2017


Community Experiments


On the Developer Relations team, we like to experiment with various features for the Neo4j Browser and gather feedback on them. If the community loves any particular features, we’ll work with the product management team to share feedback and hopefully get them into the core product.

This week Michael Hunger created neo4j-spoon – a Chrome bookmarklet that adds support for charts and sorting/searching/paging tabular results in the Neo4j Browser. It’s useful if you want to quickly get a visual representation of some data to send to a colleague without having to crack open a Jupyter notebook.

The Neo4j-spoon Chrome bookmarklet for charts


Loading Data into Neo4j


We’ve found that people don’t truly get the power of the graph until they’ve loaded their own data in and written a few queries against it.

This week there have been a couple of blog posts showing both how to load CSV and JSON data.

Optimizing Neo4j Queries


The Neo4j field team spend a lot of their time helping users performance tune their queries, and this week two members of the field team have shared some of their tips:

On the Podcast


Rik Van Bruggen hosts the popular Graphistania podcast in which he interviews Neo4j community members. There are over 80 episodes featuring people such as Dr. Jim Webber, Matt Wright and Felienne Hermans.

After a well-deserved new year’s break Rik is back with his first interview of 2017 with Gábor Szárnyas from the Budapest University of Technology and Economics.

Gabor spoke about incremental graph queries with openCypher in the Graph DevRoom at FOSDEM in early February, and they discuss his talk and more in the interview. You can find a video of Gabor’s talk if you’re interested in learning more.

If you’d like to appear on Rik’s podcast you can send him a direct message on Twitter – he’s always looking for new people to talk to.



Learning Neo4j


We’ll finish up this week’s post with a hat tip to a couple of intro to Neo4j tutorials we found on our travels.

That’s all for this week. We hope you enjoyed it and if you have any feedback or suggestions let us know – devrel@neo4j.com.

Cheers,
Mark