Thomas Thurner

Semantic-like tools to pimp your blog

Presently more and more tools come up in the Web 2.0 – Domain, which bring semantic technologies into blogger´s everyday life. Zemanta was for sure a break-through in annotation of blog entries. I’m running this service on my private and my corporate blog. It is easy to integrate in every common blog-software and it is really a save of time in my daily work. Unfortunaly it is avaible only for english blogs.

bild-2Another service which came up recently is Quintura, which provides search capabilities for your own blog with a visual map of tags or hints based on an index created of the own blog entries. It is easy to customize for the own blog’s style with the use of a simple interface. Quintura offers code-snippets to copy to your blog-post or sidebar. Even if it is no semantic search engine in the narrow sense, Quintura provide a fine semantic-like interface for a meaning-sensitive search. See how Quintura is implemented into The Semantic Puzzle at our sidebar.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]
Andreas Blumauer

Linked Data in Enterprises – some ideas for business models

Today in the morning, I wrote a short blog philosophizing about linked data and the value for enterprises. I asked a couple of questions and in its core I was wondering: “Which services and keyplayers will drive the web of data in the next few months?”

In the meantime I had the pleasure to listen to Talis´ Semantic Web Gang Podcast (January 2009 with Tom Tague from Calais) and some answers came into my mind:

  1. Some service providers will provide the highest accuracy regarding the links or tags (and the “things behind them) they provide for a given ressource or document (like Open Calais does). Tom Tague mentioned in the podcast quite often how important disambiguation is to provide the highest quality.
  2. Some will provide end-points to a given “thing” like a company, a person etc. in addition to free ones like DBpedia, but they always will try to refer to established URIs like the ones in DBpedia or Open Calais URIs, e.g. IBM´s URI @ Calais). Those companies will provide more facts, for example about a person, as those which are available now for free. They will build on the LOD infrastructure and will live in symbiosis with group number 3. They will control to whom additional facts will be given to but they will build exactly on the same interoperable framework as the “Linking Open Data” community does.
  3. Some companies will build applications on top of the linked data infrastructure. They have two kinds of knowledge: Who has the best end-points to a complex “thing” which consists of a couple of other atomic things (which necessarily exist in the web of data)? Who is interested in such a mashup?

My prediction: One possible business model will be pretty much the same as iTunes is built upon at the moment: You can listen to a song for free – but only a couple of seconds , if you want more, you pay 99 cents.

If you want to know a little bit about Werner Faymann (who is Austria´s prime minister) you go to an application which makes use from DBpedia (or the like) starting at http://dbpedia.org/page/Werner_Faymann.

If you pay 99 cents (or a bit more…) you get even more facts about Mr. Faymann, nicely mash-uped with other facts from the LOD cloud and together with special content from some other linked data sources, produced with relatively low costs due the high interoperability the Semantic Web provides – thanks to W3C and the whole community.

Andreas Blumauer

Pimp your Google

Sure, that´s not the end of the flagpole – but “a little semantics goes a long way” (Jim Hendler): With two Firefox add-ons, you can pimp your Google and you will get (1) a better overview over the search results, (2) kind of a moderated search and (3) information from Wikipedia along with the results.

Install Cloudlet and Googlepedia (Don´t forget to donate!) and you will see something like this:

pimp_your_google

Sure, both “mashups” are not based on RDF, and the “TagCloud” is not as accurate as we wished, but let us be patient again. At least this picture makes end-users yearning for a bit more semantics (which goes a long way…) on top of the usual lists of search results.

Gerd Stumme

BibSonomy – the blue social bookmark and publication sharing system

BibSonomy is a Web 2.0 style collaborative bookmarking and publication management system. In the style of YouTube, Flickr and Del.icio.us, it allows you to store the metadata of your own publications and of all papers that you consider interesting, It also allows to store bookmarks – and to share them with others.The Semantic Web Blog already reported about BibSonomy on The Wild vs The Orderly: Folksonomies and Semantics (TRIPLE-I 2008) in September 2008. The BibSonomy team is very active, and has implemented many new features.

googlesonomyIt is thus high time to tell you about them. Let’s start with the new layout, introduced in December. It’s much closer to the Web 2.0 look & feel, with pastel colors and rounded corners. The navigation has become a bit more consistent, and you can now select if you want to see both bookmarks and publications, or just one of the two. BibSonomy is also available in German now. Most other extensions of BibSonomy are about integration with other systems. The most useful are:

  • GoogleSonomy is a new firefox addon which integrates search results from BibSonomy directly in your Google search. The addon is customizable so that you can decide whether to search in your personal publications and/or bookmarks, or to search over all BibSonomy posts.The extension is available from the Mozilla Addon Page.
  • BibSonomy now also allows to export citation information to Zotero. Zotero is a Firefox extension, which helps you to collect, manage and cite publications locally in your browser. The other way around is not fully automized yet. However, there is a copy and paste workaround.
  • Bloggers who are using WordPress can integrate data from BibSonomy into their posts – for instance your tag cloud, or your last three publications (or all of them). Conversely, your blog posts will (almost) automatically be published on BibSonomy. A more general way of including BibSonomy content into your system is BibSonomy’s JSON feed. JSON (JavaScript Object Notation) is a lightweight data-interchange format, which is now available for all BibSonomy pages.
  • As alternative login procedure, BibSonomy now also supports OpenID, which is an open, decentralized standard, allowing users to log onto many different services on the web using the same identity identification (single sign-on). This kind of authentication is provided by a growing number of websites, including large ones like AOL, Google, Microsoft, MySpace, Yahoo and many others. You may even have an OpenID without knowing so, e.g. when you have a Flickr account. Why not using it for logging in to BibSonomy as well?
  • The family of scrapers for automatically extracting references from digital libraries or publishers’ websites has been extended, allowing you to store publication metadata automatically from over 60 sites. The scraping service can be used independently from BibSonomy for other purposes by everyone needing access to bibliographic metadata.

If you want to learn more about these features, visit the BibSonomy blog. Last but not least there exists a new BibSonomy developer site. It provides access to some of the BibSonomy modules. All source code is released under GPL LGPL licenses. If you want to experiment with the code, have a look!

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]