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Posts Tagged ‘Austria’

Session 4: Using the Web of Data [WOD-PD]

October 23rd, 2008

This morning’s first session was dedicated to Using the Web of Data, or, as Alan Dix put it: “In the end, it’s not about data - it’s about use!” Alan and Richard Cyganiak were the keynoters for this session.

Alan Dix is a Professor at the Computing Department of Lancaster University, and author (with Janet Finlay, Gregory Abowd, and Russel Beale) of Human-Computer Interaction.

To start with, Alan pointed to the two sides of achieving the web of data: Firstly generating the web of data (a billion triples, as mighty as this may sound, is actually tiny, says Alan) and then, secondly, accessing the web of data.

Alan Dix giving a talk

With regard to generating the Web of Data, Alan distinguished between top down and bottom up approaches, counting to the former the creation of the web of data from legacy sources (i.e. where you take existing data and semantically lift them, e.g. from structured data) or web scraping such as DBpedia’s extraction of data from Wikipedia.

N.B.: This notion of ‘top-down’ does not imply a hierarchical relationship, but rather means that there is already a plan for what is going to be put on the web of data (e.g. ‘all semi-structured information on Wikipedia’ or ‘dataset XY from project Z’). The bottom-up idea here implies that data is added as the result of an action, or interaction, as the user/s go, e.g. relationships are created as the user expands his or her social network. For instance on Amazon, user interaction is used to generate semantics: People do not tell Amazon what they like, they simply buy it.

Having relationships of course does not imply yet that these relationships are part of the Semantic Web. Or, as Alan put it, “why should I be RDFizing my online presence if none of my friends are?”

Alan is going to publish his slides on his keynote page later - what I cannot reproduce here is a chart he developed, which was very useful for describing current scenarios on the web and which posed a twofold question:

Does a website/platform have the web of data implemented? YES/NO
Is the web of data on ta website/platform apparent to the user? YES/NO

The possible combinations (YES/YES, YES/NO, NO/YES, NO/NO) provide a good heuristic tool for describing what is currently available, with and without the Semantic Web. Take, for instance, the shiny interface of Talis’ Project Cenote: Cenote’s vision is to “make library data visible in many contexts, inside and outside of the library, making the data much more accessible and visible to a wider audience - benefiting current and potential users of library services wherever they are.” On Cenote, the user doesn’t see that it’s got the Web of Dat in it - it is actually implemented, but not in a way that is apparent to the user.

On the other end of the spectrum, you have a platform like Facebook: Alan referred to Facebook as “the user’s own web of data”, i.e. web of relationships: The user is aware of these relationships (they actually shape his interaction and communication with the site), and the (numerous!) apps on Facebook continually add relationships, but, regrettably, insulated from one another and not using RDF (and don’t you try to take data out of Facebook!).

Two examples of public data that Alan cited and that grow as people/institutions add data do them are Freebase (the “open database of the world’s information” - see previous posts on this blog about Freebase) and Swivel. Swivel allows people, institutions, anyone to upload and explore data, also featuring official data sources such as (links go to their Swivel pages): New York Federal Reserve Bank, UNESCO Institute for Statistics, DukeResearch or EUROSTAT. According to Alan, there is already more data on Swivel now than in the whole Linked Data cloud.

Alan also mentioned the Social Graph API - o yesterday evening Luca Hammer (one of the web 2.0 people who had joined the Open Hacking Session) introduced me to the Wordpress Plugin “Meet your commenters” - Meet you commenters uses Social Graph to find social relations on the web, and adds these data to the commenter profiles it creates in Wordpress.

Two Christmas crackersImage via WikipediaOn a different note: I took sometime today to explore Alan’s homepage and found the cute Christmas Cracker’s application which was first developed in 1999 and which is now also available on Facebook. As trivial as it may sound at first - sending virtual Christmas Crackers (with more than 5000 possible combinations!) is a good showcase for developing Human Interaction Scenarios, and a number of papers have been written about the application. Here is the casestudy which Alan recommends to begin with: Designing experience - virtual Christmas Crackers.

The abstract and a list of links to all websites and demos Alan discussed can be found here. Full reference: A. Dix and R. Cyganiak (2008). Using the Web of Data. Keynote at WOD-PD 2008 | Web of Data Practitioners Days, Vienna, Austria - Oct 22-23, 2008. http://www.hcibook.com/alan/papers/WOD-PD-2008/

Even if you have not met Richard Cyganiak in person, you have certainly come across one of his creations: The Linked Data Cloud. Richard is a research assistant at DERI Galway. In his demo, he gave us the opportunity to gain hands on experience, introducing a tool he dubbed Snorql, which is basically an easier to use version of a SPARQL-endpoint, as it already has the required prefixes ‘pre-installed’:

Using the Snorql interface, we could explore the dataset we had created collaboratively during Keith Alexander and Yves Raimond’s session. Writing SPARQL queries manually can be a challenge, but is next to impossible if you (like me) don’t know the syntax. But today we could just copy and paste all the queries from a website Richard had put up prior to his session - thanks a lot for the excellent preparation and demonstration!

Richard also showed a couple of RDF browsers in action, e.g. the Tabulator Plugin (”a Firefox extension which allows Firefox to handle data as well as documents”), or the Marbles Linked Data browser which is running right on beckr.org/marbles; enter, for instance http://api.talis.com/stores/wod-pd-sandbox/items/People/JanaHerwig (learn more about Marbles here).

Thank you, Alan and Richard - the combination of talk and demo was indeed a perfect intro towards using the Web of Data.

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LEARNtec Forum Austria 2008

October 7th, 2008

End of this week Learntec Austria 2008 is going to take place in Vienna. I am going to give a short talk on “How to learn in the social semantic web” (in German) and I am already excited, because I can discuss some interesting questions: How has the process of learning changed over the last few years? Why is there such a big gap between all the new possibilities like “Learning Communities”, “Collaborative Platforms”, “Enterprise 2.0″ and the reality of Learning in all kinds of organisations?

I have done a lot of teaching in the last few years (especially at Universities of Applied Sciences) and in reality there is no systematic approach how New Media is used, neither for teaching at schools nor for continuing education at most companies.

But as time passes by more and more students and employees are fully aware of platforms like elgg, busuu or helpful search tools like cluuz.

Soon they will be asking: Why do we still moodle around?

Author: Andreas Blumauer

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Jury Award for Semantic Wikis in eGovernment, and: Semantic MediaWiki for Wikipedia?

September 24th, 2008

An implementation of Semantic MediaWiki in public administration reiceved a jury award yesterday in the final ceremony of the highly coveted multimedia state award (Staatspreis Multimedia) 2008 in Vienna: Administration Research Center KDZ’s platform for the cooperation of administrations (Plattform Verwaltungskooperation) in Austria, Germany, Italy and Switzerland received praise for its use of open, semantic technologies in their effort to further the collaboration between administrations and administrative staff. Those of you who can read German: read the response from Bernhard Krabina, KDZ, here or contact him here, if you’d like to learn more. The top state award itself went to HPC Dual, a combination of electronic and physical mail delivery.

Also published yesterday was an interview with Matthias Schindler, former member of board of Wikimedia Germany, at the occasion of the publication of a physical Wikipedia, i.e. a one-volume encyclopedia in print (publisher: Wissen Media, a Bertelsmann division). According to the English Wikipedia, “the volume is planned to include abbreviated entries for the 50,000 most commonly used search terms of the prior two years. The book is to be priced at 19.95 euros, with one euro from every sale going to the German chapter of the Wikimedia Foundation.”

The interviewers also asked Schindler for his “encyclopedic Wikipedia dream” - I hope his response will catch on in the Wikimedia chapters worldwide:

I would one day like to see a large edition of Wikipedia (including a German language edition), which makes use of the Semantic MediaWiki extension. The dream in a nutshell, without consideration of the current state of research and development: A wikipedia that can be read not only by humans, but also by computers, a Wikipedia that can offer concrete answers to concrete questions and that creates content individually for users, something that they can make use of; great if Wikipedia played the role of the first, mainstream Semantic Web application. While this is still in the process of coming together, there are enough other things for us to do.

(btw, my translation).

Concrete answers to concrete questions, a personalized Wikipedia - I am not even aiming that high at the moment.

Just consider the absurd amount of lists in Wikipedia, all of which are maintained manually. Take for instance the list of hardcore punk bands, the list of fictional countries (to be distinguished from the list of European fictional countries) or the list of military operations.

How often do you think these need an update? And if a new hardcore punk band is added - will the creators of the new article think about adding it to the list? What about articles which make make a reference to or mention things that are or should be on a particular list?

As a list has the inherent claim of being complete, it shouldn’t be left to humans to create and maintain them - leave that to the machines! Vote Semantic MediaWiki for Wikipedia!

Author: Jana Herwig

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Update (and More Discounts!) on Fall Developer Events and Conferences

September 15th, 2008

Here is a quick update on Calais developer events as well as new discounts on conferences where the Calais team will be presenting in the weeks ahead.  We hope to see you there, so let us know if you can make it! 

NOTE: The MIT EmTech '08 conference is next week, so act now to get your discounted OpenCalais community rate.

  1. MIT's EmTech '08 - September 23 - 25, Cambridge, MA (with Calais developer luncheon on 9/25)
  2. The European Semantic Technology Conference (ESTC2008) - September 24-26, Vienna, Austria
  3. The Web 3.0 Conference - October 16-17, Santa Clara, CA
  4. 7th International Semantic Web Conference (ISWC2008) - October 26-30, Karlsruhe, Germany
  5. The Defrag Conference - November 5-6, Denver, CO
  6. Mashup Camp - November 17-19, Mountain View, CA

DETAILS AND DISCOUNTS:

MIT's EmTech '08 - September 23 - 25, Cambridge, MA

The Calais team will be out in force at the Emerging Technologies Conference @ MIT, with a booth, a developer luncheon and discounted pricing for members of the OpenCalais community.

The luncheon takes place Thursday, September 25th from 12:30 - 1:50 p.m. ET.  Tom will share "Five Easy Ways to Add Value with Calais" to provide developers with helpful tips and ideas to kick-start their efforts.

Visit the OpenCalais community discounts page from MIT to register.  Discounted options include attending the entire conference, coming for one day, or coming for just the Calais developer luncheon. 

The European Semantic Technology Conference (ESTC2008) - September 24-26, Vienna, Austria

Barak Pridor, CEO, ClearForest, a Thomson Reuters company and creator of the Calais Web service, speaks at EXTC2008 in Vienna on Thursday, September 25th.

Barak co-presents the keynote address that day, Extraction and resolution capabilities for entities, events and facts, along with Peter Jackson, Chief Scientist for the Thomson Reuters Professional division.

The Web 3.0 Conference - October 16-17, Santa Clara, CA

Calais lead Tom Tague will be speaking on the Semantic Startup 101 - Successes, challenges and strategic decisions panel along with Powerset's Mark Johnson and others.

The Web 3.0 conference organizers has offered a $100 discount to Calais fans and OpenCalais community members, which you can secure by using the code SPKGF08 when you register.

7th International Semantic Web Conference (ISWC2008) - October 26-30, Karlsruhe, Germany

Michal Findkelstein-Landau, Calais' Director of Content Strategy, will provide an overview of the Calais Web service, including technical elements, current applications and insight on how to add value with Calais today.

The Defrag Conference - November 5-6, Denver, CO

Calais is a Defrag silver sponsor and Tom Tague is also speaking alongside Yahoo! Search's Amit Kumar and Siderean's Bradley Allen in the Next Level Discovery panel on Tuesday the 4th.

Mashup Camp - November 17-19, Mountain View, CA 

Calais is a sponsor of Mashup Camp and will be hosting a speed geeking table.  We will be competing in the 'Best Solution Provider Tool' competition, and are working on a Calais mashup developer contest of our own (stay tuned for details).

Registration for Mashup Camp is free if you don't mind sharing your email with sponsors, or you can pay a nominal fee to avoid doing so.  Either way, save your space in advance.

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TRIPLE-I 2008 ends with a bang, not a whimper

September 5th, 2008

This last day of TRIPLE-I, the conference consisting of three events (I-SEMANTICS,I-KNOW, I-MEDIA) was probably my favourite one, even though I am of course a bit biased: It was Linked Data day, with a keynote by Tom Heath which I will cover in more detail on Monday, but we need to be heading home now.

The key issue for me still is the quest for making the Web of Data a reality, and I once again noted that the main question raised within the Semantic Web community continues to be: “We have such a great technology - why isn’t everybody adopting?” I guess that the answers somewhere are along the lines of this comment from Greg Boutin:

Things will get better as more and more folks get interested in it, and “translators” from the early majority (see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diffusion_(business) ) start to kick in and explain what this is in plain language.

Defining a process for introducing Linked Data like a new product to the market - that is what I’d like!

The last keynote today was given by Dickson Lukose from the Research and Development agency MIMOS in Malaysia - the Malaysian government seems to be putting a lot of money into IT R & D at the moment. Anyone looking for a good place to get a startup funded might consider doing it in Malaysia!

This blog post concludes with a 12 seconds good-bye message from Michael Hausenblas, saying hello to the web of Data Practitioners Days in Vienna on Oct 22-23, the next SemWeb Community event here in Austria. See you there!


Michael Hausenblas says goodbye TRIPLE-I, c u at WebofData.info on 12seconds.tv

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This Week’s Semantic Web

September 1st, 2008

Selected links related to Semantic Web technologies for the week ending 2008-09-01, all weeks. Also available in RDF as linked data or via GRDDL.

Summer Special!

(or Winter Special! down under)

FOAFlets of the Carribean

FOAFlets of the Caribbean

No blurb, just links.

In the Media

Docs

Software News

Vocabs/Ontologies

Events etc.

Miscellany

Quote of the Week

…fighting the web is like holding back the ocean; it will route around you or it will wear you down, but will never go away, and it will never tire or give up.

- DeWitt Clinton, On Fighting the Web Itself

Summer Bonus Quote of the Week

“Language-independent” just means they invented a new language.

- Kevin Reid

~

Sources include Planet RDF, various other blogs, Semantic Web Interest Group IRC Chatlogs & Scratchpad, ESW Wiki, SemWebCentral, Sweet Tools, W3C Semantic Web Activity, mailing lists, personal emails etc etc. If you see anything suitable this coming week, please mail meor use the del.icio.us tag “TWSW” - thanks!

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The condemned live longer

September 1st, 2008

Two days ago, the Bloomberg financial newswire decided to update its 17-page Steve Jobs obituary — and inadvertently published it in the process. Embarrassing faux pas or top example of bad taste and bad style? Anyway, things like this keep happening in the media – just remember Friedrich Gulda’s fake-death some years ago – intentionally or not. No wonder that you can find a List of premature obituaries on Wikipedia. And no wonder that Steve Jobs is already on the list.

Such fake obituaries are also being produced in context with the Semantic Web. Is the Semantic Web (Web 3.0) Dead On Arrival? asked for instance Dave Naffziger on his Blog in 2007. And a little later a Yahoo researcher declared the Semantic Web dead, too.

To my mind – although I’m a non-techie but „only“ an observing journalist – declaring people or things dead is the best possible way to make them live for a long time – by providing them with lots of more meaning, prominence and impact. You may even say it’s one of the oldest principles in PR. So the traditional proclamation The King is dead. Long live the King. (French: Le Roi est mort, vive le Roi!) has more than a historical component.
So keep developing,
Marion
P.S. Only Austrians may publish this;-)A humurous obituary of Austria, published in 1918 in Krakow, Poland

Image by Wiki Commons, where a translation can be found, too

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hakia at Upcoming Search Events

August 15th, 2008

Next week marks the kick-off of several upcoming events for hakia, beginning with Search Engine Strategies (SES) in San Jose. As the technology world begins it’s Fall tradeshow extravaganza, we too are gearing up to showcase some of our own considerable progress as we continue to work towards finishing development of the hakia search engine.

This Monday, hakia’s Chief Architect, Kartal Guner, will speak on a panel entitled “Semantic Search: How will it change our lives?” Along with other distinguished colleagues in search, Kartal will discuss hakia’s QDEX technology and the implications of semantics for the future at search. If you plan to attend SES, we strongly encourage you to stop by at the panel on Monday at 11:15 a.m. PT.

Also in September, hakia’s Chief Scientific Officer Dr. Christian Hempelmann will travel to Vienna, Austria to deliver a speech on the “Doing Semantic Internet Search Semantically,” at the European Semantic Technology Conference. Christian will provide a general overview of our OntoSem capabilities, as well as discuss the key issues facing Web search today. Down the road in October, hakia will exhibit at SMX East, right here in our backyard of New York City. Stay tuned for more details and exciting news about our booth presence at this particular event!

All three events promise to deliver valuable insight into the business aspects of search, an area in which we are working diligently, particularly through the availability of our technology licensing program and Syndication Web Services. We’re looking forward to seeing some familiar faces and meeting new search fanatics, from the West Coast to Europe.

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Win a Full Conference Pass for LinkedData Planet 2008

May 3rd, 2008

The Semantic Web Company in Vienna, Austria is giving away a full conference pass worth $1,095 for the LinkedData Planet Conference! LinkedData Planet 2008 will be taking place on June 17-18, 2008 in New York with confirmed keynote speakers Sir Tim Berners-Lee, Kingsley Idehen and Ian Davis.

Want to enter the competition? Write a brief description of your vision of the impact that linking Open Data will have on business, politics and culture, as well as the pros and cons involved. More details can be found here.

They're looking for ideas in the following categories:

  • Mashups
  • Ontologies and schemas
  • Policies for the practice of linking Open Data
  • Search applications
  • Scenarios for lifestyles

The prize is certainly worth the effort! The full conference pass gives you access to:

  • All Conference Sessions for June 17-18
  • Conference Breakfasts, Lunches and Networking Events
  • Conference Bag and take-home specialty items
  • Access to online conference proceedings

Got something to say? Leave a comment!

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Coming in to land

October 8th, 2006

It's nearly time to return to London for a pause and a stretch. Since I quit my job at the BBC almost exactly a year ago, I've spent 4 months snowboarding, attended 6 conferences and spoken at 3 (LIFT06, ETech, SXSW, XTech, Railsconf and Foocamp), worked on at least 5 freelance contracts, lived in 3 different countries (France, Holland and the USA) and spent time in at least 5 others (Spain, Switzerland, Germany, Austria, Finland). I've travelled more than 40,000 miles by air, taken a flight every 2 weeks on average, and probably met more people in one year than in all the previous years of my life put together.

Although it's no substitute for simply avoiding wasteful airtravel, after doing the calculations for this post I paid for a 15,000 lbs CO2 carbon offset from TerraPass.

My final stop on the current journey is the Near Field Interactions workshop at NordiCHI in Oslo. I'll be representing Thinglink along with Ulla-Maaria Mutanen.

On October 17th I'll be back in my own flat in Hackney, East London and considering my next steps. 2007 has a lot to live up to. Of course, the planning for XTech 2007 has already begun and I've just submitted my talk proposal for next year's ETech.

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