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.
"Semantically-Interlinked Online Communities Project (SIOC - pronounced "shock") is a Semantic Web technology. SIOC provides methods for interconnecting discussion methods such as blogs, forums and mailing lists to each other. It consists of the SIOC ontology, an open-standard machine readable format for expressing the information contained both explicitly and implicitly in Internet discussion m"
"he Semantic Web is an extension of the World Wide Web through standards set by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C).[1] The goal of the Semantic Web is to make Internet data machine-readable. To enable the encoding of semantics with the data, technologies such as Resource Description Framework (RDF)[2] and Web Ontology Language (OWL)[3] are used. These technol"
Open data is the idea that certain data should be freely available to everyone to use and republish as they wish, without restrictions from copyright, patents or other mechanisms of control. The goals of the open data movement are similar to those of other "Open" movements such as open source, open hardware, open content, and open access. The ph
A triplestore is a purpose-built database for the storage and retrieval of triples,[1] a triple being a data entity composed of subject-predicate-object, like "Bob is 35" or "Bob knows Fred".
SPARQL (pronounced "sparkle", a recursive acronym for SPARQL Protocol and RDF Query Language) is an RDF query language, that is, a query language for databases, able to retrieve and manipulate data stored in Resource Description Framework format.[1][2] It was made a standard by the RDF Data Access Working Group (DAWG) of the World Wide Web Consortium, and is considered as one of the key technologies of the semantic web.
"KBpedia is a computable knowledge structure that combines six (6) public knowledge bases - Wikipedia, Wikidata, OpenCyc, GeoNames, DBpedia and UMBEL - into an integrated whole. The knowledge graph that organizes this computable framework is the KBpedia Knowledge Ontology (KKO). KBpedia is the entirety of the combined knowledge bases; KKO is the schema by which these combined sources are made coherent.[1]"
inked data describes a method of publishing structured data so that it can be interlinked and become more useful. It builds upon standard Web technologies such as HTTP and URIs, but rather than using them to serve web pages for human readers, it extends them to share information in a way that can be read automatically by computers. This enables data from different sources to be connected and queried.[1]
Mathematica is a computational software program used in scientific, engineering, and mathematical fields and other areas of technical computing. It was conceived by Stephen Wolfram and is developed by Wolfram Research of Champaign, Illinois.[2][3]
This is the Countries of the World demo site. This Silk site contains pages for all the United Nations member states. All capitals, Heads of State and Heads of Government are included. The content originates from Wikipedia.org.
The implementation is based on the TERRIER information retrieval framework and supports the following features:
build an inverted index of a Wikipedia Database provided in the original MediaWiki database schema
compute ESA vectors for any text
compute Cosine Similarity of ESA vectors (which can be used as semantic similarity measure)
Representational state transfer (REST) is a style of software architecture for distributed hypermedia systems such as the World Wide Web. The term representational state transfer was introduced and defined in 2000 by Roy Fielding in his doctoral dissertation.[1][2] Fielding is one of the principal authors of the Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) specification versions 1.0 and 1.1.[3][4]
"Embedded Objects Linked Across Systems", and Irish for "knowledge") is a United States technology[citation needed] company. It was founded in 1994 by sole employee Michael David Doyle.[1]
"Semantic Web Services, like conventional web services, are the server end of a client-server system for machine-to-machine interaction via the World Wide Web. Semantic services are a component of the semantic web because they use markup which makes data machine-readable in a detailed and sophisticated way (as compared with human-readable HTML which is usually not easily "understood" by computer programs)."