the wiki for the community of users, administrators and developers of the Semantic MediaWiki extension to the MediaWiki application, and all its spinoff extensions, including Semantic Forms, Semantic Drilldown, Semantic Result Formats, Halo, Semantic Maps and others. The wiki itself uses many of these extensions, in order to provide a flexible yet structured interface to the data. Here you will find information on people and organizations in the Semantic MediaWiki community, a listing of SMW-based sites, a list of extensions themselves, a list of SMW-related events, a list of requested features for the extensions, and a list of "packages", which are collections of wiki pages defining properties, templates, forms etc. that can be imported into one's wiki to create an instant data structure.
Semantic Bundle contains a large number of MediaWiki extensions; chief among them is, of course, Semantic MediaWiki, an extension that enables semantic storage and querying of data. Other SMW-based extensions included in this bundle are ..
a core ontology for organizational structures, aimed at supporting linked data publishing of organizational information across a number of domains. It is designed to allow domain-specific extensions to add classification of organizations and roles, as well as extensions to support neighbouring information such as organizational activities.
The goals of this effort is to design and implement a configurable and extensible semantic eScience framework. Configuration will require some research into accommodating different levels of semantic expressivity and user requirements from use cases. Extensibility will be achieved in a modular approach to the semantic encodings (i.e. ontologies) performed in a community setting, i.e. an ontology framework into which specific applications all the way up to communities can extend the semantics for their needs.
"Semantic MediaWiki (SMW) is a free, open-source extension to MediaWiki - the wiki software that powers Wikipedia - that lets you store and query data within the wiki's pages.
Semantic MediaWiki is also a full-fledged framework, in conjunction with many spinoff extensions, that can turn a wiki into a powerful and flexible knowledge management system. All data created within SMW can easily be published via the Semantic Web, allowing other systems to use this data seamlessly."
Semantic Radar is a semantic metadata detector for Mozilla Firefox.
Available at Mozilla Add-ons site. It is a browser extension which inspects web pages for links to Semantic Web metadata and informs about presence of it by showing an icon in browser's status bar. Currently it supports RDF autodiscovery (SIOC, FOAF, DOAP and any type) and RDFa metadata detection.
New: Semantic Radar can now ping the Semantic Web Ping Service when metadata are detected. This allows for a community based discovery of the Semantic Web data.
Semantic MediaWiki (SMW) is a free, open-source extension to MediaWiki - the wiki software that powers Wikipedia - that lets you store and query data within the wiki's pages. Semantic MediaWiki is also a full-fledged framework, in conjunction with many spinoff extensions, that can turn a wiki into a powerful and flexible "collaborative database". All data created within SMW can easily be published via the Semantic Web, allowing other systems to use this data seamlessly.
"The Semantic MediaWiki (SMW) extension allows for managing structured data in your wiki and for querying that data to create dynamic representations: tables, timelines, maps, lists, etc."
"Wikibase is the software that enables MediaWiki to store structured data or access data that is stored in a structured data repository. Wikibase basically consists of two MediaWiki extensions, Wikibase Repository and Wikibase Client, that can be enabled individually or together for a certain MediaWiki installation to turn it into a structured data repository, a client of a structured data repository or both."
Harpa.ai: Get more done from your browser (harpa.ai).
Harpa.ai: HARPA Artificial Intelligence is a Chrome Extension and AI-powered NoCode RPA platform (harpa.ai).
document describes the use of HTTP for accessing, updating, creating and deleting resources from servers that expose their resources as Linked Data. It provides some new rules as well as clarifications and extensions of the four rules of Linked Data [LINKED-DATA]:
1. Use URIs as names for things
Have you tried OpenRefine previously known as GoogleRefine previously known as Gridworks? =) It is out and ready to be used, supported and extended. Good news: someone already LOD-enabled it for you. We provide a set of extensions either integrated with the latest version of OpenRefine, or being available for download separately.
the team of developers will transition the semantic platform (DataStaR) developed at Cornell University from a single library software prototype to a well-documented, open-source platform ready for adoption and extension at other institutions wishing to provide research data sharing and discovery services.
document describes the use of HTTP for accessing, updating, creating and deleting resources from servers that expose their resources as Linked Data. It provides some new rules as well as clarifications and extensions of the four rules of Linked Data [LINKED-DATA]:
The group was started at DrupalCon Barcelona 2007 and includes discussions on how to integrate the Semantic Web technologies into Drupal and list the various effort of the community towards enabling RDF in Drupal. Drupal 7 comes with native RDFa support in core. If you want extra RDF capabilities such as other serialization formats and SPARQL support, checkout the RDF Extensions, SPARQL and SPARQL Views contributed projects.