Thomas Thurner

semantic technolgies for non-SQL-writers

isd_banner3Andreas Blumauer (Semantic Web Company) talked with Brian Donnelly about a new system on the market called “Semantic Discovery System” (SDS), which helps to do sophisticated queries across existing datasets. Also talking why complex scripts or triple stores should not be exposed to the end-users anymore.

SDS is doing, what semantic web enterprises promised for years: An application that allows users to formulate sophisticated questions on their datasets and getting back data without writing SQL statements or going down to OWL concepts.

SDS leave the data in its orignal format and doing no transformation into triple stores. And then give the user through a graphical desktop software – with the use of OWL and SPARQL – the possibility to formulate questions on this datasets. So this is a software engine that focuses “at business people with a tool as easy to use as Excel or Mind Manager – with zero need to know or care about OWL, SPARQL” as Donnelly explains.

The next times will show if Donnelly’s “Semantic Discovery System” may be a semantic web killer application. In any case it seems to be a good step in bringing semantic technologies out of the teccie’s corner onto the desktops of business users.

Read the full interview at www.semantic-web.at

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]
Thomas Schandl

Tom Tague on Open Calais 4

The recent release of Open Calais v4 offers excting new possibilities by making a great contribution to Linked Data efforts.

Previous releases of Thomson Reuter’s Open Calais web service already produced promising results by extracting named entities, facts and events from user submitted contet – especially news articles. Now these extracted concepts come with an URI and are linked into the LOD cloud – specifically to DBpedia, Freebase, Musicbrainz, CIA world fact book and others. Tom Tague

On this occasion Tom Tague, vice president of the Calais creators ClearForest, answered questions the Semantic Web Company had about the goals of Open Calais. 

The latest release of Open Calais produces metadata conforming to linked data principles. You provide this great service free to everyone via your web service.
What led to that decision, which benefits are there for Thomson Reuters?

Thomson Reuters has the largest trusted content sources in the world – but we don’t have all the content in the world. We believe that the world is going to want to integrate highly managed and trustworthy content assets such as those provided by Thomson Reuters with the low latency, highly diverse content exploding on the web. Fundamentally what we’re trying to achieve is nearly effortless interoperability of content between any two partners – Calais enables this by extracting the semantic metadata buried in your content but then takes it a step further. By linking those semantic elements to the Linked Data cloud we are setting the stage for the dramatic enhancement of any content source – and we hope that many will choose Thomson Reuters as one of the methods for enhancing that content.

It seems with Open Calais you use a hybrid business model, which integrates end users in a form of enterprise collaboration into value creation.
Do you think such a business model is viable during the long run and what are your experience so far?

As of right now Calais isn’t truly a “Business”.  It’s a strategic initiative that’s setting at least a piece of the stage for the Linked Content Economy. Our goal is to understand how this new content economy is going to involve and to make certain that we have a leadership position as it moves from a concept to reality.

Apart from the thousands of users submitting content to Open Calais, there is also a community of developers making their own applications around your core app. How important are the social dynamics of the Open Source community for the success of Open Calais?

Extraordinarily important. Calais is a web service – which means it’s relevant to about 0.0001% of the population. We are absolutely reliant on the creativity, energy and domain expertise of our developer community to translate Calais from a technology to an end-user relevant capability. And – as a user-driven project we also rely on our developers and users to give us feedback on what they like, what they don’t and where they think we should head.
What are your plans regarding to offering your service in German?

We hope to get there in 2009. We’ve released basic French and are gearing up for additional languages in the coming year.

Thank you, Tom, for your answers! We look forward to more applications like Semantic Proxy and Linked Facts that demonstrate the great protential of the Calais engine.

Thomas Thurner

examples how the semantic web may be monetized

Two new services based on semantic technologies came up recently: Jinni a recommendation portal for movies and tv shows and BooRah’s Restaurant Reputation Report. Both are good examples how the semantic web may be monetized.

jinni_jan09Jinni provides recommendations, answering a free given search. Based on semantic technologies Jinni uses Natural Language Processing on plot, mood, style, setting, soundtrack and more in combination with an ontology, created by film professionals (like Jinni says). When it launched in December, Jinni had 10,000 movie, TV and video titles.

In Jinni you don’t need to know about exact title, actor, director, place or year of production to get an result, you can enter simply a phrase describing the mood, genre or place the movie is about, and you will guided through a facilitated search to narrow your search and get at the end what you want. Or alternative, if you search for a movie and you have only a vague idea of the plot, you can formulate a plot’s description in free phrasing. As it also offers APIs for Internet and TV content providers you can make your way direct to an online store to download or purchase the movie.

boorahlogoAnother idea how to develop business orientated semantic web services comes with BooRah. BooRah is a service targeting restaurant owners to provide them reports of positive and negative reviews of food, service and ambiance at their restaurants. For that the service monitors negative and positive trends across hundreds of online review sites. Now restaurant owners can subscribe to receive a PDF of their monthly reports for an introductory price of $15 and a regular price of $25 per month. This PDFs came with charts, trends, rankings, summaries and some quotes from users, month by month. The reports may enable those restaurant owners to react and improve their services in the specific field. A simple but straight forward way to make money with semantic technologies

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]
Tassilo Pellegrini

Exploring and discussing the values of netizens

Prof. Rafael Capurro, one of the world’s most renowned experts of Information Ethics, together with his colleagues Max Senges (Ex-Google Researcher) and Michael Nagenborg (Robotics & Privacy Expert) has set up a collaborative project to “explore and discuss the values of netizens”. Please participate by contributing to their survey! (See below, I simply copied the email text.)

Dear all

It is my pleasure to introduce you to Rafael Capurro and Michael Nagenborg both experts in Informationethics. Following a podcast interview i held with Rafael (available @ archive.org ), we pursued his suggestion to initiate a dialogue about what underlying values users care about in their online lifes?

We have developed a short questionnaire which we invite you to fill out and spread amongst your network @ http://internetrightsandprinciples.org/node/63

This survey is meant as first step to gather some empirical data so we can (a) deliberate and discuss these themes further in the forum (where we have setup a dedicated discussion thread @ http://internetrightsandprinciples.org/node/64 and (b) strategize & formulate our project (and funding) proposals based on empirical evidence.

Again, please invite your friends and peers to contribute to this exploration of what user really care about when online.

Looking forward to discuss with you
Rafael, Michael and Max

internet-rights

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]