OMB policy on posting information sparks debate: "The Office of Management and Budget’s new policy asking agencies to improve how they disseminate public information is at the heart of a larger battle over how much categorization is needed to make government information publicly accessible.
The new policy, required by the E-Government Act of 2002, is another piece in an ongoing disagreement over whether search technology is good enough to find specific instances of government information or whether metadata tagging and other categorization techniques are necessary at some level.
In a memo issued late last week, Clay Johnson, OMB’s deputy director for management, detailed three steps—for the most part involving publishing materials online—agencies must complete by Sept. 1 to meet the requirements outlined in Section 207 of the E-Government Act of 2002."
Saturday, December 24, 2005
The future of Online Search
CNN.com - The future of online search - Dec 23, 2005: "LONDON, England (CNN) -- If anyone can guess what is in store for Web searching, it is Wired magazine co-founder John Batelle, who has spent most of his career as a technology journalist trying to find the answer.
CNN: What is the next big thing on the Web?
JB: The idea to create a semantic Web where everything is described not by one researcher and his team but rather by all of us as we root about the Web. I might say, 'This is a picture of a seaside with a sunset,' but someone else comes and says, 'No this is a picture of a beach in Thailand,' and another person comes along and says, 'This is a picture of a place I like to go diving.' And over time, this one object, and every object in the world gets thusly tagged, gets enough intelligence around it that it can be found no matter how you might ask for it, the brittleness problem is solved."
CNN: What is the next big thing on the Web?
JB: The idea to create a semantic Web where everything is described not by one researcher and his team but rather by all of us as we root about the Web. I might say, 'This is a picture of a seaside with a sunset,' but someone else comes and says, 'No this is a picture of a beach in Thailand,' and another person comes along and says, 'This is a picture of a place I like to go diving.' And over time, this one object, and every object in the world gets thusly tagged, gets enough intelligence around it that it can be found no matter how you might ask for it, the brittleness problem is solved."
Friday, December 23, 2005
Campmor Jumpstarts Business Performance with IBM and Tachyon Solutions
Campmor Jumpstarts Business Performance with IBM and Tachyon Solutions: "IBM business partner Taychon Solutions worked with Campmor to implement an e-commerce solution powered by IBM WebSphere Commerce and IBM DB2 Universal Database. The innovative search capabilities of the solution make it possible to index specific products in the database and allows customers to search both keyword and concept. The solution also includes apparel ontology with synonyms and acronyms for various terms a customer might enter, as well as likely misspellings that are automatically corrected. Campmor customers can now perform detailed searches and find exactly what they are looking for in sub-second response times. As a result the number of orders placed from searches has increased 10 percent and the average size of a search order has increased 15 percent within a year."
Saturday, December 17, 2005
Semantic Web, Here We Come
RED HERRING | Semantic Web, Here We Come: "A consortium of young companies declared their support this week for building categories into web sites that would make them more easily searched and combined.
The "Structured Blogging Initiative" is an attempt to jump-start the "semantic web," the idea of giving deeper meaning to the Internet advocated by World Wide Web creator Tim Berners-Lee. By incorporating descriptive information into the code of web pages, laypeople will be able to designate their content as a movie review, an event posting, or an item available for sale."
The "Structured Blogging Initiative" is an attempt to jump-start the "semantic web," the idea of giving deeper meaning to the Internet advocated by World Wide Web creator Tim Berners-Lee. By incorporating descriptive information into the code of web pages, laypeople will be able to designate their content as a movie review, an event posting, or an item available for sale."
Friday, December 16, 2005
Grid Semantics for Virtual Collaboration
IST Results - Understanding Grid semantics for virtual collaboration: "An EU project hopes to realise the ultimate potential of Grid computing by creating a network that is intelligently aware of its components and of the domain it addresses, enabling quick and easy virtual collaboration.
If successful, the InteliGrid project will deliver on the long promised but never realised potential of networks, which people and companies can plug into, use its resources, and find and share information based on its meaning.
If he succeeds it will have a profound impact on society, perhaps more than the creation of the Internet itself. Information will no longer be tied simply to words that appear on the page. InteliGrid is making bold steps in semantic computing for VOs in complex industries. Its concern is not so much words but models of engineering products.
If successful, the InteliGrid project will deliver on the long promised but never realised potential of networks, which people and companies can plug into, use its resources, and find and share information based on its meaning.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
In semantic computing computers can deal with meaningful objects. It is a huge topic in Web computing right now. Dr Tim Berners-Lee, one of the founding fathers of the Web, is currently devoting the majority of his creative energies into making The Semantic Web a reality.If he succeeds it will have a profound impact on society, perhaps more than the creation of the Internet itself. Information will no longer be tied simply to words that appear on the page. InteliGrid is making bold steps in semantic computing for VOs in complex industries. Its concern is not so much words but models of engineering products.
Thursday, December 15, 2005
The Protege Ontology Editor and Knowledge Acquisition System 3.2 Beta
The Protege Ontology Editor and Knowledge Acquisition System: "Protege is a free, open source ontology editor and knowledge-base framework. Protege is based on Java, is extensible, and provides a foundation for customized knowledge-based applications. Protege supports Frames, XML Schema, RDF(S) and OWL. It provides a plug-and-play environment that makes it a flexible base for rapid prototyping and application development."
Tuesday, December 13, 2005
Tim Bray, Co-author of the XML Specification
No easy road to interoperability: "After he helped develop the Extensible Markup Language, Tim Bray could have rested on his laurels, collecting the occasional consulting check. Instead he continued to innovate.
From 1996 to 1998, Bray co-wrote version 1 of the XML specification, which subsequently made its way into countless Web applications and other networking software. Today he is the director of Web technologies for Sun Microsystems Inc. He also co-chairs the Atom Publishing Format and Protocol Working Group, an Internet Engineering Task Force body that is laboring to standardize a data feed format for Web pages, based on XML. "
From 1996 to 1998, Bray co-wrote version 1 of the XML specification, which subsequently made its way into countless Web applications and other networking software. Today he is the director of Web technologies for Sun Microsystems Inc. He also co-chairs the Atom Publishing Format and Protocol Working Group, an Internet Engineering Task Force body that is laboring to standardize a data feed format for Web pages, based on XML. "
SPARQL: Querying the Semantic Web
XML.com: Introducing SPARQL: Querying the Semantic Web: "This tutorial, the first of a three-part series, introduces SPARQL -- a query language and data access protocol for the Semantic Web. SPARQL is defined in terms of the W3C's RDF data model and will work for any data source that can be mapped into RDF. The specification is under development by the RDF Data Access Working Group (DAWG) and has recently reached Last Call Working Draft.
At this point in its life cycle the specification is stable enough that developers can begin seriously exploring its capabilities. And the availability of several SPARQL query engines means that this exploration can be practical rather than theoretical."
At this point in its life cycle the specification is stable enough that developers can begin seriously exploring its capabilities. And the availability of several SPARQL query engines means that this exploration can be practical rather than theoretical."
Altova's Semantic Web Development Tool
Altova's Semantic Web Development Tool: "Altova, creator of XMLSpy and other leading XML, data management, UML, and Web services tools, announced a new addition to its award-winning line of XML applications. Altova SemanticWorks 2006 is a visual Semantic Web development tool with support for Resource Description Framework (RDF) and Web Ontology Language (OWL) creation and editing. In line with its tradition of supplying developers with easy-to-use, visual development tools, Altova created SemanticWorks to help customers learn and work with emerging Semantic Web technologies in an intuitive way. "
First Medical Group on Semantic Web
Medical industry first group on semantic Web: "The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) has launched its first special interest group to begin the planning necessary for application of semantic Web technologies in a vertical industry.
The new group, called the Health Care and Life Sciences Interest Group (HCLSIG), will be the first to deploy semantic Web specifications into services defined by a user community.
Until now, semantic Web specifications have been largely generalized in nature, making it difficult to see their full potential.
W3C Director Tim Berners-Lee says that 'this new venture puts W3C specification through the paces of a dynamic, multifaceted and interdependent set of communities.'"
The new group, called the Health Care and Life Sciences Interest Group (HCLSIG), will be the first to deploy semantic Web specifications into services defined by a user community.
Until now, semantic Web specifications have been largely generalized in nature, making it difficult to see their full potential.
W3C Director Tim Berners-Lee says that 'this new venture puts W3C specification through the paces of a dynamic, multifaceted and interdependent set of communities.'"
First Neurology Repository for the Semantic Web
Teranode Corporation - Teranode Press Releases: "December 12, 2005 - Teranode Corporation, the leading innovator of experiment design automation (XDA) software for the Life Sciences industry, today announced it will collaborate with Science Commons, a project of the non-profit corporation Creative Commons, to build and implement the industry's first neurology repository for the Semantic Web. The project, dubbed NeuroCommons.org (www.neurocommons.org), will be a freely accessible neurology commons of data, tools, and pathway knowledge to be used by public and private researchers. Science Commons will use Teranode's award-winning platform, TERANODE XDA, as the infrastructure for NeuroCommons.org. All content will be available in Resource Description Framework (RDF), allowing participating foundations to search and access a shared repository of data and research, currently restricted by different formats and copyright restrictions. "
New Brain Trust to Work Like the Web
New Brain Trust to Work Like the Web: "'All the Web can do is find a document for you and display it for you,' said Wilbanks. 'The semantic web marks things up in a more concrete manner; it says that there are relationships.' For example, a scientist could search for peer-reviewed articles about a particular gene, data related to that gene, or models about how that gene might affect other genes and proteins.
Neurocommons.org is set up to be maintained by its community of users. Researchers will be able to annotate each others' data.
Wilbanks hopes that, eventually, researchers will see contributing information to the semantic Web as part of their scientific duty, much like peer review. But he admits that it isn't yet part of scientific culture. 'It's hard to get someone to take the time to say, 'I'm going to make my data reusable by someone that doesn't know me.' '"
Neurocommons.org is set up to be maintained by its community of users. Researchers will be able to annotate each others' data.
Wilbanks hopes that, eventually, researchers will see contributing information to the semantic Web as part of their scientific duty, much like peer review. But he admits that it isn't yet part of scientific culture. 'It's hard to get someone to take the time to say, 'I'm going to make my data reusable by someone that doesn't know me.' '"
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