Lotico: Difference between revisions
(5 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 68: | Line 68: | ||
===[[Semantics and Cultural Heritage meet-up at The British Museum]]=== | ===[[Semantics and Cultural Heritage meet-up at The British Museum]]=== | ||
The British Museum, in cooperation with Lotico, will host a meet-up on the subject of semantics and cultural heritage in the Museum’s Asian Department Study room. Three talks are planned: Mapping Cultural Heritage Information to CIDOC-CRM, Representing Artist's Archives in the CIDOC-CRM family and Automatic annotation of the Ancient Egyptian Book of the Dead using CIDOC-CRM, FRBRoo and Museum Linked Data. | |||
===[[The Working Ontologist Dean Allemang and MarkLogic's Stephen Buxton]]=== | ===[[The Working Ontologist Dean Allemang and MarkLogic's Stephen Buxton]]=== | ||
Line 84: | Line 82: | ||
A conversation with Andy Seaborne about Jena, SPARQL, TDB and RDF at scale recorded live at the Lotico Semantic Web event in San Francisco | A conversation with Andy Seaborne about Jena, SPARQL, TDB and RDF at scale recorded live at the Lotico Semantic Web event in San Francisco | ||
===[ | ===[[Using The Semantic Web To Answer Questions|Linked Data in Watson:Using The Semantic Web To Answer Questions]]=== | ||
A team at IBM Research is working to build Watson, a computing system that can understand and answer complex questions with enough precision and speed to compete against the best human quiz show competitors. As with the previous AI grand challenge attempted at IBM Research, (playing chess at a grand master level) the principle challenges for machines to achieve expert performance are fundamentally different than for people. | |||
===[[Getting started with SPARQL by Bob DuCharme]]=== | ===[[Getting started with SPARQL by Bob DuCharme]]=== | ||
Web inventor Tim Berners-Lee once said that <i>"trying to use the Semantic Web without SPARQL is like trying to use a relational database without SQL."</i> The W3C standard SPARQL query language is getting nearer to its 1.1 release, and more and more people are using it with free and commercial software to retrieve data from public and private sources. | Web inventor Tim Berners-Lee once said that <i>"trying to use the Semantic Web without SPARQL is like trying to use a relational database without SQL."</i> The W3C standard SPARQL query language is getting nearer to its 1.1 release, and more and more people are using it with free and commercial software to retrieve data from public and private sources. | ||
Line 165: | Line 164: | ||
[[Semantic Web technologies at BBN, SHARD & Semantic Software Architecture (EIW)|Semantic Web technologies at BBN]] | [[Semantic Web technologies at BBN, SHARD & Semantic Software Architecture (EIW)|Semantic Web technologies at BBN]] | ||
[[ | [[Stardog, Needle and Virtuoso|Stardog, Needle & Virtuoso]] | ||
[[SHARD - A distributed triple-store built on top of Hadoop]] | [[SHARD - A distributed triple-store built on top of Hadoop]] |
Revision as of 16:48, 26 May 2020
Welcome to lotico - an open, distributed community, a Semantic Social Network that brings LOcation, TIme, COmmunity and ideas together for You and more than 79,000 members worldwide.
A selection of local community groups
|
community spotlight: Past EventsRecentJena-based Components for Building Semantic Web Applications Semantic Annotation in Content Management Systems SHACL - Shaping the Big Ball of Data Mud: W3C's Shapes Constraint Language Applying Ontologies to Linked Data - Ontotext at John Wiley & Sons Techniques used in RDF Data Publishing at Nature Publishing Group NLP, Text Analytics, and Semantic Technologies Wikidata & rNews - Structuring the world's data Data Stories - Modelling Historical Events & Design Digital Narratives with Data Graphs with SQL & IBM DB2 - RDF Graph Store Semantic Technologies in Financial Services Semantic Web technologies at BBN SHARD - A distributed triple-store built on top of Hadoop Neo4j - The Benefits of Graph Databases PLoS - The Public Library of Science and Publishing on the Semantic Web RIF - W3C Rules Interchange Format with Chris Welty W3C Corner
SPARQL |