Archives
Old Post Category: Vocabularies & Languages
Packing my bags for VoCamp Oxford
(by Matthias Samwald) I am packing my bags once again: The first VoCamp (hosted at Oxford University, UK) is about to start this week. So, what is a VoCamp supposed
What the Semantic Web can learn from Open Hypermedia
I didn’t know about the Open Hypermedia protocol (OHP) until I read a blog post today by Dave Millard, a Lecturer of Computer Science at the University of Southampton, UK.
The Wild vs The Orderly: Folksonomies and Semantics (TRIPLE-I 2008)
This second day of TRIPLE-I 2008 was my personal folksonomy day, even though the theme was already set yesterday, with Andreas Hotho‘s invited talk about “Extracting Semantics from Folksonomies” which
Just released: UMBEL – A New Vocabulary for the Semantic Web
News has reached me this morning that UMBEL has now been publicly released! UMBEL is a new vocabulary for the Semantic Web – I first learned about it when Andreas
SWC’s Matthias Samwald contributes to W3C notes
Early June saw the release of two notes drafted by the Semantic Web Health Care and Life Sciences (HCLS) Interest Group within the W3C. One of the contributors, and editor
SWC's Matthias Samwald contributes to W3C notes
Early June saw the release of two notes drafted by the Semantic Web Health Care and Life Sciences (HCLS) Interest Group within the W3C. One of the contributors, and editor
Improving OWL
I am sure you are aware that the Web Ontology Language OWL is currently undergoing a revision by the W3C OWL Working Group. The revised version will be known as
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