Your article addresses some very important issues.
1. Data understanding and appreciation is dwindling at a time when the reverse should be happening. We are supposed to be in the throws of the "Information Age", but for some reason this appears to have no correlation with data and "data access" in the minds of many -- as reflected in the broad contradictory positions taken re. unstructured data vs structured data.
2. The difference between "Structured Containers" and "Structured Data" are clearly misunderstood by most.
"Structured Containers" (most DBMS products) have been limited by proprietary data access APIs and underlying data model specificity to date, when looking at the needs of the loosely coupled "Open-World" web of data called the World Wide Web. Naturally, in the "Open-world" model of the Web this is unacceptable. But things are changing fast, and the concept of multi-model DBMS products is beginning to crystalize.
For instance, the Semantic Web (a vision that most don't understand due to the lack of coherent annecdotal material for the less technical) will ultimately manifest itself as a collection of loosely coupled databases that possess object-relational DBMS functionality.
ORDBMS engines can extend data model support capabilities via object-relational functionality as exemplified by OpenLink Virtuoso which enables SQL, XML, and RDF management from one place (Unified Storage) with support for SPARQL, GData, OpenSearch, and other emerging Query Protocols).
Please note that I am not implying that ORDBMS knowldge is required to make the Semantic Web more coherent than it is to date. I am designating ORDBMS engines as the DBMS engine form best suited for building the applications layer that is ultimately exposed as an endpoint in the eventual "web of databases". Personally, I prefer to call these endpoints "Data Spaces" since this is what ultimately fuses the Web 2.0 and the Semantic Web paradigms (that are currently perceived as mutually exclusive).
For information on Virtuoso you can take a look at the Open Source project at: http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/wiki/main/
Nice article!
--
Regards,
Kingsley Idehen
President & CEO
OpenLink Software Web: http://www.openlinksw.com
Personal Blog: http://www.openlinksw.com/blog/~kidehen