"A new microformat for online news has been developed by the Media standards Trust and the Web Science Reaseach Initiative: it's called hNews.
The goal is to make relevant elements of news articles machine-readable, and at the same time, to disply these metadata in a user-friendly format. ....."
Hopefully by the end of the year, the semantic search technology of Twine will make a further step into the construction of structured data on the Web, and its successor T2 will be released.
From an interview with Nova Spivack (CEO of Radar Networks, the company behind Twine) we can argue four main points..........
"Although the Semantic Web (SW) is still very much in its infancy, there is already a lot of data out there which conforms to the proposed SW standards (e.g. RDF and OWL). Small vertical vocabularies and ontologies have emerged, and the community of people using these is growing daily.... "
Berkan we find some key points:
* structured data is not equivalent to semantic technology. Simply organizing information in a database, to pull results for the search engines inside their SERP, it's not making semantics..........
Berkan we find some key points:
* structured data is not equivalent to semantic technology. Simply organizing information in a database, to pull results for the search engines inside their SERP, it's not making semantics..........
Here's a great video presentation I found about the Semantic Web; I transcripted all the main parts here below.
Text transcription:
The Internet as we know it today is in an extending success: more than 1.300.000.000 (1,3 billions) people are connected to the Web across the globe.
In 2006, 161 EB of informations were created or replicated world wide.
IDC estimates the increase over 6 times this metric by 2010 - to 988 EB, or to 1 ZB a year.......
A new format named Common Tag has been developed by major companies operating in the field of the Semantic Web to address the problems related to the ambiguities in Web contents.
Two days ago Stephen Wolfram gave an early preview of his "computational knowledge engine" Wolfram Alpha at a talk at Harvard University.
The video of the whole presentation (1h 45min long) is here above, while down below you can find some highlights I transcripted from his speech.
The latest project by Stephen Wolfram is defined as the first "computational knowledge engine", something capable of answering factual question for you.
The Wolfram engine is described as "a proprietary system based on fields of knowledge, containing terabytes of curated data and millions of lines of algorithms to represent real-world knowledge as we know it".
Calais 4.0 is the latest version of the semantic web service and open Api launched a year ago. It enables publishers to add semantic layers to their blogging content - categorizing people, places, events and so on.
It also enables publishers to connect to the Linked Data standards promoted over the last few years by guys like Berners-Lee.
* About Victor Godot
Creative New Media
Semantic Web: a Video Presentation in 5 Minutes
Posted on March 4, 2009
Filed Under online search, online video, search engine, semantic web, social media, video |
Here's an excellent, concise presentation by Tom Llube explaining the Semantic Web at the Davos economic forum.
Transcription below:
A revolution is happening in the structure of the web itself. It's gentle and it's powerful, it's like tai-chi: you hardly know that is happening, but when it hits, it has a massive impact.