CMSWire
Paul Wlodarczyk of JustSystems thinks it’s closer than we think. He’s written a great post about the Semantic Web, focusing particularly on how XML can take ambiguity out of search and enable other semantic advantages. He likens the ‘old’ Web to one where the wisdom of crowds prevails (more backlinks equals better content), and the RDF-structured Web as one where the ‘wisdom of authors’ wins; ‘…who can let the crowds know — in no uncertain terms — what their content means.’ So a post on a New York sports team involved in a trade with a L.A. sports team (using Paul’s example) is unambiguously about the Knicks and the Lakers, or whatever.
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CNET News Nokia and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology on Friday opened the doors to a new research lab that has a distinct software flavor. Nokia executives said the Nokia Research Center Cambridge has begun seven projects in collaboration with MIT’s Center for Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL). The research focuses on simplifying [...]
CNET News Nokia and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology on Friday opened the doors to a new research lab that has a distinct software flavor. Nokia executives said the Nokia Research Center Cambridge has begun seven projects in collaboration with MIT’s Center for Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL). The research focuses on simplifying [...]
Bio-IT World.com Sharing their passion for the Semantic Web at the Bio-IT World Life Sciences Conference + Expo session on Tuesday were several prominent leaders of the movement. Providing a clinical perspective was Tonya Hongsermeier of Partners Healthcare, who said the Semantic Web is necessary for knowledge management because “the market is balking at healthcare [...]
XML.com Let’s say you’re curious to find out the population of the city you live in. Go to Google and ask it “population of philadelphia, pa.” Ha! We’re too smart for Google. It tries to answer the question but comes up with “Pennsylvania – Population: 12,281,054 ; 6th, 12/00.” That’s not what we were looking [...]
FCW.com An open-standards group has created a framework that could facilitate the global exchange of information among organizations. The naming system could benefit a wide range of disciplines, from disaster response to medical research. The Open Group’s Universal Data Element Framework (UDEF) has the potential to hasten information exchange by indexing the world’s datasets — [...]