Archives
Category: Semantic Applications
Science 2.0 – Social Networks for Scientists
The benefits of the Web 2.0 and Social Web are finally gaining wider recognition within the scientific and the (slowlier adjusting) academic community, with several online platforms evolving that seek
Build your own Facebook (Meebo, iPhone,…) apps and widgets with zembly
It’s true: Facebook apps can be pretty annoying, in particular because of some developers’ misconception of viral marketing as represented by the “Spam 20 friends first before using this serviceâ€
Collective intelligence – a matter of collective accountability
These days, everyone seems to be into smart mobs, swarm intelligence and crowdsourcing – maybe it’s about time to remember that a “collective on autopilot can be a cruel moron”,
Semantic Tagging with Faviki
In May, a new bookmarking service, Faviki, started which, unlike other bookmarking services, comes to the public semantically enhanced. ReadWriteWeb already had a first look at it and described it
Update: Data Availability is not Data Portability or: Looking to BEATNIK
Just a quick round-up and update to yesterday’s post about the data hippie bandwagon: TechCrunch wrote a piece in which “data portability” is referred to as “The New Walled Garden”
Data Availability, Data Portability and Everyone Else on the Data Hippie Bandwagon
Data Availability or Data Portability – who do you trust? MySpace’s recent announcement to adopt a number of ‘data availability standards’, together with Facebook’s Connect and Google’s Friend Connect announcements
Video: Links to DBpedia in TopBraid
Two weeks ago (but still worthwhile mentioning) Holger Knublauch from Topquadrant made a little video for his blog, highlighting how DBpedia can be used to link different domain models with
SWC-Interview is This Week’s Best
Last week, Marion Fugléwicz-Bren’s interview was published simultaneously on our website and on the PR Conversation blog. This week, the interview was featured in the This Week’s Best column of
SWC-Interview is This Week's Best
Last week, Marion Fugléwicz-Bren’s interview was published simultaneously on our website and on the PR Conversation blog. This week, the interview was featured in the This Week’s Best column of
Foundations of the Semantic Web
It has been half a year now that our German textbook on Foundations of the Semantic Web has appeared [1]. We received very positive feedback and see our book adopted