The document discusses creating linked open data from speeches and transcripts of the European Parliament. It describes the data structure for representing a speech as linked data, including properties like the speaker, date, title, text in multiple languages, and links to other speeches. It also discusses linking the data to external sources to identify speakers and add additional context about countries.
How to prepare a European Digital Library. Olaf Janssen speaking during the 2...Olaf Janssen
The document discusses The European Library (TEL), a service that provides access to the catalogues and digital collections of Europe's 47 national libraries through a central multilingual portal. It describes what TEL is, including its origins and goals. Standards and technologies used by TEL, such as metadata formats, collection descriptions, and access protocols are also outlined. Finally, strengths and weaknesses of using TEL as the basis for a future European Digital Library are considered.
Talk of Europe: Linked data of the European ParliamentLaura Hollink
The document summarizes the Talk of Europe project, which publishes data from proceedings of the European Parliament as linked open data. It includes over 14 million triples about 30,000 speeches given over 15 years. The data is made available through a SPARQL endpoint and can be used to analyze topics discussed, differences between members and parties, and other insights. Creative camps are held for people to work with the data.
1) The document summarizes the status and achievements of the EuropeanaConnect project after the first year.
2) Key achievements include adding over 41,000 audio items from 16 countries to Europeana, building the Europeana Audio Aggregation Platform, and making progress on the Semantic Layer and enabling multilingual access.
3) Challenges for the next phase include addressing intellectual property issues, encouraging more audio archive participation, and contributing to the Europeana Data Model and related specifications.
An insider’s Point of View: Building The European (Digital) Library. Presenta...Olaf Janssen
The European Library is a service that provides access to the catalogs and digital collections of 47 European national libraries through a central multilingual portal. It relies on common standards for access protocols, metadata, and collection descriptions. While operational, it currently only includes collections from libraries. A successful European Digital Library would need to incorporate additional partners like museums and archives, enable multilingual search capabilities, establish business models for long-term sustainability, and address copyright issues through large-scale digitization and preservation programs. Collaboration between members is essential to overcoming political and technical challenges.
Introduction to RDF and related Vocabularies/Languages. Introduction to SPARQLPretaLLOD
This document provides an introduction and overview of the OntoLex-Lemon model for representing lexicons and lexical resources in RDF. It begins with a brief history of related models and general requirements for the OntoLex model, including being compatible with OWL and RDF, supporting multilinguality, semantics by reference, and reuse of standards. It then describes the key components of the OntoLex model, including lexical entries with forms, senses, and references to ontology concepts; syntactic and semantic frames for representing syntax and linking to ontologies; and modules for representing multi-word expressions, variation, translation, and linguistic metadata. Future directions are mentioned including new modules for morphology, lexicography, frequency data, and more
Europeana and EUscreen. Joint AMIA/IASA Conference. Philadelphia- November 6,...Johan Oomen
This document summarizes a presentation about Europeana and the EUscreen project. Europeana is a digital library that aggregates cultural heritage from European institutions to provide a single access point. The EUscreen project contributes television archive content to Europeana by developing tools for metadata harvesting and normalization. It aims to provide 35,000 television objects to Europeana by 2012 to help users explore Europe's television heritage.
How to prepare a European Digital Library. Olaf Janssen speaking during the 2...Olaf Janssen
The document discusses The European Library (TEL), a service that provides access to the catalogues and digital collections of Europe's 47 national libraries through a central multilingual portal. It describes what TEL is, including its origins and goals. Standards and technologies used by TEL, such as metadata formats, collection descriptions, and access protocols are also outlined. Finally, strengths and weaknesses of using TEL as the basis for a future European Digital Library are considered.
Talk of Europe: Linked data of the European ParliamentLaura Hollink
The document summarizes the Talk of Europe project, which publishes data from proceedings of the European Parliament as linked open data. It includes over 14 million triples about 30,000 speeches given over 15 years. The data is made available through a SPARQL endpoint and can be used to analyze topics discussed, differences between members and parties, and other insights. Creative camps are held for people to work with the data.
1) The document summarizes the status and achievements of the EuropeanaConnect project after the first year.
2) Key achievements include adding over 41,000 audio items from 16 countries to Europeana, building the Europeana Audio Aggregation Platform, and making progress on the Semantic Layer and enabling multilingual access.
3) Challenges for the next phase include addressing intellectual property issues, encouraging more audio archive participation, and contributing to the Europeana Data Model and related specifications.
An insider’s Point of View: Building The European (Digital) Library. Presenta...Olaf Janssen
The European Library is a service that provides access to the catalogs and digital collections of 47 European national libraries through a central multilingual portal. It relies on common standards for access protocols, metadata, and collection descriptions. While operational, it currently only includes collections from libraries. A successful European Digital Library would need to incorporate additional partners like museums and archives, enable multilingual search capabilities, establish business models for long-term sustainability, and address copyright issues through large-scale digitization and preservation programs. Collaboration between members is essential to overcoming political and technical challenges.
Introduction to RDF and related Vocabularies/Languages. Introduction to SPARQLPretaLLOD
This document provides an introduction and overview of the OntoLex-Lemon model for representing lexicons and lexical resources in RDF. It begins with a brief history of related models and general requirements for the OntoLex model, including being compatible with OWL and RDF, supporting multilinguality, semantics by reference, and reuse of standards. It then describes the key components of the OntoLex model, including lexical entries with forms, senses, and references to ontology concepts; syntactic and semantic frames for representing syntax and linking to ontologies; and modules for representing multi-word expressions, variation, translation, and linguistic metadata. Future directions are mentioned including new modules for morphology, lexicography, frequency data, and more
Europeana and EUscreen. Joint AMIA/IASA Conference. Philadelphia- November 6,...Johan Oomen
This document summarizes a presentation about Europeana and the EUscreen project. Europeana is a digital library that aggregates cultural heritage from European institutions to provide a single access point. The EUscreen project contributes television archive content to Europeana by developing tools for metadata harvesting and normalization. It aims to provide 35,000 television objects to Europeana by 2012 to help users explore Europe's television heritage.
Chiara Latronico,Europeana Cloud - Ingestion Clinic, The European LibraryThe European Library
This document summarizes the ingestion process for adding content to The European Library portal and Europeana. It outlines the preparation, harvesting, validation, indexing, and delivery steps. Key topics discussed include the ingestion plan, rights documentation, validation in the acceptance portal, thumbnails, de-duplication, subsets, and collection descriptions. Providers are invited to share their experience and ask any questions.
Towards more smart, connected and open audiovisual archivesJohan Oomen
As a result of digitisation of analogue holdings and working processes, more and more material from audiovisual archies is being made available online. This marks a transformative shift, as archives and users are now sharing the same information space. Once digital and part of an open network, objects from audiovisual archives can be shared, recommended, remixed, embedded, cited, referenced to and so on. It is a far cry from several years ago, when users were obliged to visit brick and mortar institutions to access collections. This shift towards digital enables archives to fulfil their pubic missions better; crossing geographical boundaries, using new channels for content distribution, engage with user groups and use new technologies to make work processes more efficient and allow for new access points to collections. It also introduces fundamental challenges, forcing audiovisual archives to [1] rethink their role and function in the value chain of media production and modern society at large, [2] assess which activities and competences are vital to succeed in a digital context.
We envision the future audiovisual archives to be smart, connected and open; using smart technologies to optimise workflows for annotation and content distribution. Collaborating with third parties to co-design and co-develop new technologies in order to manifest themselves as frontrunners rather than followers. Being connected to other sources of information (other collections, contextual sources), to a variety of often niche user communities, researchers and the creative industries. To embrace the use of standards defined by external instances rather than by the cultural heritage communities themselves. Fully embrace ‘open’ as the default to have maximum impact in society: applying open licences for content delivery, using open source software and open standards wherever possible. Promote open access to publications and so on.
This keynote examines how the public mission of archives (i.e. supporting a myriad of users to utilize collections to learn, experience and create) can be achieved in a digital context. It addresses the challenges related to the role and function of institutions and provides practical insights in how archives can establish a culture of innovation to manage challenges they face today. It addresses some of the major questions audiovisual archives are faced with today.
Rio Info 2009 - Europeana - Bram van der WerfRio Info
The document provides an overview of Europeana, a digital platform that aims to aggregate Europe's digital cultural heritage. It discusses Europeana's vision and context, the current prototype, and plans for the first operational version in 2010. This will include over 10 million digitized objects from libraries, archives, museums and audiovisual collections across Europe. The document also outlines Europeana's open source development approach and various related projects that will contribute content.
- The EuropeanaLocal project aims to make digital cultural heritage content from local and regional European institutions accessible through Europeana.
- It focuses on helping smaller institutions overcome interoperability issues and make their metadata harvestable according to Europeana standards.
- Through EuropeanaLocal, millions of additional items from local and regional partners across Europe have been added to Europeana, significantly expanding its scope and cultural coverage.
Europeana Cloud - Alastair Dunning - November 2013Europeana
What is the Europeana Cloud project doing and why? Find out in this presentation from Alastair Dunning, project coordinator, from The European Library.
This document discusses linked data and a project by the Parliamentary Library and Information Service to implement linked data. It describes linked data and its use in libraries and government. It outlines the linked data workflow used, including preparing data using the Popolo ontology, cleaning and reconciling data, and publishing to a triple store and embedding in documents. The benefits realized include being able to perform complex queries across linked datasets and providing related external linked data.
EuropeanaLocal is an EC-funded project that aims to mobilize and assist local and regional cultural institutions in Europe to make their digital content interoperable and accessible through Europeana. The project works with over 50 partners across Europe, including national libraries and museums as well as local authorities and organizations. EuropeanaLocal partners have contributed nearly 3.5 million items to Europeana so far. The project also aims to promote standards and infrastructure like ESE and EDM, provide training, and test Europeana's tools and services.
FIAT/IFTA World Conference, Dubai 2013. Technical Session.
Preservation strategy and usage strategy is two interconnected strategies that tries to accomplish two very different things. Meaning you shouldn’t erode the structure of your data when new types of data comes in or when new projects want to do new things. The other way around: You shouldn’t be forces to implement your frontend applications restricted of your data structure. So it goes both ways. What we try to do. Is building tools between the two to allow mapping of data.
Enriching Linked Open Data with distributional semantics to study concept driftLaura Hollink
Presentation at the "Proximity in Information Retrieval" symposium on the occasion of the PhD thesis defense of Jeroen Vuurens
April 26, 2017, Delft University of Technology
Guest Lecture: Linked Open Data for the Humanities and Social SciencesLaura Hollink
The document discusses two projects, PoliMedia and Talk of Europe, that link government data to news data as linked open data. PoliMedia links speeches from the Dutch parliament between 1945-1995 to over 1.5 million newspaper articles, while Talk of Europe publishes the entire plenary debates of the European Parliament as linked open data consisting of over 14 million RDF statements about speeches between 1999-2014. Both projects model the data as structured events that can be queried to enable complex analysis across sources and time spans.
Lecture at the advanced course on Data Science of the SIKS research school, May 20, 2016, Vught, The Netherlands.
Contents
-Why do we create Linked Open Data? Example questions from the Humanities and Social Sciences
-Introduction into Linked Open Data
-Lessons learned about the creation of Linked Open Data (link discovery, knowledge representation, evaluation).
-Accessing Linked Open Data
This document provides a step-by-step demo scenario for an online news application that allows users to explore topics in newspaper articles, how frequently topics are mentioned, which topics co-occur, and images selected for articles. The application allows side-by-side comparison of topics between two newspapers or topics. Users can select a newspaper, choose a topic, and select topics, categories or image concepts to explore, seeing which topics frequently appear with the selected topic. Charts also allow selecting articles to view. The document demonstrates comparing coverage of Bernie Sanders between the New York Times and Washington Post.
Presentation at Digital Humanities Benelux 2015, Antwerp, Belgium: The possibilities and challenges of using linked data for academic research: the case of the Talk of Europe project. linked data for academic research: the case of the Talk of Europe project. Laura Hollink, Martijn Kleppe, Max Kemman, Astrid van Aggelen, Willem Robert Van Hage.
WWW2013: Web Usage Mining with Semantic AnalysisLaura Hollink
Laura Hollink, Peter Mika and Roi Blanco. Web Usage Mining with Semantic Analysis. In proceedings of the International World Wide Web Conference, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, May 2013.
Bringing parliamentary debates to the Semantic WebLaura Hollink
Presentation of the paper 'Bringing parliamentary debates to the Semantic Web' by Damir Juric, Laura Hollink and Geert-Jan Houben at the workshop on Detection, Representation, and Exploitation of Events in the Semantic Web (DeRiVE2012) in conjunction with the 11th International Semantic Web Conference 2012 in Boston, USA.
See also the homepage of the PoliMedia project: http://polimedia.nl/
"What does it really mean for your system to be available, or how to define w...Fwdays
We will talk about system monitoring from a few different angles. We will start by covering the basics, then discuss SLOs, how to define them, and why understanding the business well is crucial for success in this exercise.
Chiara Latronico,Europeana Cloud - Ingestion Clinic, The European LibraryThe European Library
This document summarizes the ingestion process for adding content to The European Library portal and Europeana. It outlines the preparation, harvesting, validation, indexing, and delivery steps. Key topics discussed include the ingestion plan, rights documentation, validation in the acceptance portal, thumbnails, de-duplication, subsets, and collection descriptions. Providers are invited to share their experience and ask any questions.
Towards more smart, connected and open audiovisual archivesJohan Oomen
As a result of digitisation of analogue holdings and working processes, more and more material from audiovisual archies is being made available online. This marks a transformative shift, as archives and users are now sharing the same information space. Once digital and part of an open network, objects from audiovisual archives can be shared, recommended, remixed, embedded, cited, referenced to and so on. It is a far cry from several years ago, when users were obliged to visit brick and mortar institutions to access collections. This shift towards digital enables archives to fulfil their pubic missions better; crossing geographical boundaries, using new channels for content distribution, engage with user groups and use new technologies to make work processes more efficient and allow for new access points to collections. It also introduces fundamental challenges, forcing audiovisual archives to [1] rethink their role and function in the value chain of media production and modern society at large, [2] assess which activities and competences are vital to succeed in a digital context.
We envision the future audiovisual archives to be smart, connected and open; using smart technologies to optimise workflows for annotation and content distribution. Collaborating with third parties to co-design and co-develop new technologies in order to manifest themselves as frontrunners rather than followers. Being connected to other sources of information (other collections, contextual sources), to a variety of often niche user communities, researchers and the creative industries. To embrace the use of standards defined by external instances rather than by the cultural heritage communities themselves. Fully embrace ‘open’ as the default to have maximum impact in society: applying open licences for content delivery, using open source software and open standards wherever possible. Promote open access to publications and so on.
This keynote examines how the public mission of archives (i.e. supporting a myriad of users to utilize collections to learn, experience and create) can be achieved in a digital context. It addresses the challenges related to the role and function of institutions and provides practical insights in how archives can establish a culture of innovation to manage challenges they face today. It addresses some of the major questions audiovisual archives are faced with today.
Rio Info 2009 - Europeana - Bram van der WerfRio Info
The document provides an overview of Europeana, a digital platform that aims to aggregate Europe's digital cultural heritage. It discusses Europeana's vision and context, the current prototype, and plans for the first operational version in 2010. This will include over 10 million digitized objects from libraries, archives, museums and audiovisual collections across Europe. The document also outlines Europeana's open source development approach and various related projects that will contribute content.
- The EuropeanaLocal project aims to make digital cultural heritage content from local and regional European institutions accessible through Europeana.
- It focuses on helping smaller institutions overcome interoperability issues and make their metadata harvestable according to Europeana standards.
- Through EuropeanaLocal, millions of additional items from local and regional partners across Europe have been added to Europeana, significantly expanding its scope and cultural coverage.
Europeana Cloud - Alastair Dunning - November 2013Europeana
What is the Europeana Cloud project doing and why? Find out in this presentation from Alastair Dunning, project coordinator, from The European Library.
This document discusses linked data and a project by the Parliamentary Library and Information Service to implement linked data. It describes linked data and its use in libraries and government. It outlines the linked data workflow used, including preparing data using the Popolo ontology, cleaning and reconciling data, and publishing to a triple store and embedding in documents. The benefits realized include being able to perform complex queries across linked datasets and providing related external linked data.
EuropeanaLocal is an EC-funded project that aims to mobilize and assist local and regional cultural institutions in Europe to make their digital content interoperable and accessible through Europeana. The project works with over 50 partners across Europe, including national libraries and museums as well as local authorities and organizations. EuropeanaLocal partners have contributed nearly 3.5 million items to Europeana so far. The project also aims to promote standards and infrastructure like ESE and EDM, provide training, and test Europeana's tools and services.
FIAT/IFTA World Conference, Dubai 2013. Technical Session.
Preservation strategy and usage strategy is two interconnected strategies that tries to accomplish two very different things. Meaning you shouldn’t erode the structure of your data when new types of data comes in or when new projects want to do new things. The other way around: You shouldn’t be forces to implement your frontend applications restricted of your data structure. So it goes both ways. What we try to do. Is building tools between the two to allow mapping of data.
Similar to Creating and Analysing Linked Open Data for the EU Parliament (10)
Enriching Linked Open Data with distributional semantics to study concept driftLaura Hollink
Presentation at the "Proximity in Information Retrieval" symposium on the occasion of the PhD thesis defense of Jeroen Vuurens
April 26, 2017, Delft University of Technology
Guest Lecture: Linked Open Data for the Humanities and Social SciencesLaura Hollink
The document discusses two projects, PoliMedia and Talk of Europe, that link government data to news data as linked open data. PoliMedia links speeches from the Dutch parliament between 1945-1995 to over 1.5 million newspaper articles, while Talk of Europe publishes the entire plenary debates of the European Parliament as linked open data consisting of over 14 million RDF statements about speeches between 1999-2014. Both projects model the data as structured events that can be queried to enable complex analysis across sources and time spans.
Lecture at the advanced course on Data Science of the SIKS research school, May 20, 2016, Vught, The Netherlands.
Contents
-Why do we create Linked Open Data? Example questions from the Humanities and Social Sciences
-Introduction into Linked Open Data
-Lessons learned about the creation of Linked Open Data (link discovery, knowledge representation, evaluation).
-Accessing Linked Open Data
This document provides a step-by-step demo scenario for an online news application that allows users to explore topics in newspaper articles, how frequently topics are mentioned, which topics co-occur, and images selected for articles. The application allows side-by-side comparison of topics between two newspapers or topics. Users can select a newspaper, choose a topic, and select topics, categories or image concepts to explore, seeing which topics frequently appear with the selected topic. Charts also allow selecting articles to view. The document demonstrates comparing coverage of Bernie Sanders between the New York Times and Washington Post.
Presentation at Digital Humanities Benelux 2015, Antwerp, Belgium: The possibilities and challenges of using linked data for academic research: the case of the Talk of Europe project. linked data for academic research: the case of the Talk of Europe project. Laura Hollink, Martijn Kleppe, Max Kemman, Astrid van Aggelen, Willem Robert Van Hage.
WWW2013: Web Usage Mining with Semantic AnalysisLaura Hollink
Laura Hollink, Peter Mika and Roi Blanco. Web Usage Mining with Semantic Analysis. In proceedings of the International World Wide Web Conference, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, May 2013.
Bringing parliamentary debates to the Semantic WebLaura Hollink
Presentation of the paper 'Bringing parliamentary debates to the Semantic Web' by Damir Juric, Laura Hollink and Geert-Jan Houben at the workshop on Detection, Representation, and Exploitation of Events in the Semantic Web (DeRiVE2012) in conjunction with the 11th International Semantic Web Conference 2012 in Boston, USA.
See also the homepage of the PoliMedia project: http://polimedia.nl/
"What does it really mean for your system to be available, or how to define w...Fwdays
We will talk about system monitoring from a few different angles. We will start by covering the basics, then discuss SLOs, how to define them, and why understanding the business well is crucial for success in this exercise.
How information systems are built or acquired puts information, which is what they should be about, in a secondary place. Our language adapted accordingly, and we no longer talk about information systems but applications. Applications evolved in a way to break data into diverse fragments, tightly coupled with applications and expensive to integrate. The result is technical debt, which is re-paid by taking even bigger "loans", resulting in an ever-increasing technical debt. Software engineering and procurement practices work in sync with market forces to maintain this trend. This talk demonstrates how natural this situation is. The question is: can something be done to reverse the trend?
In the realm of cybersecurity, offensive security practices act as a critical shield. By simulating real-world attacks in a controlled environment, these techniques expose vulnerabilities before malicious actors can exploit them. This proactive approach allows manufacturers to identify and fix weaknesses, significantly enhancing system security.
This presentation delves into the development of a system designed to mimic Galileo's Open Service signal using software-defined radio (SDR) technology. We'll begin with a foundational overview of both Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) and the intricacies of digital signal processing.
The presentation culminates in a live demonstration. We'll showcase the manipulation of Galileo's Open Service pilot signal, simulating an attack on various software and hardware systems. This practical demonstration serves to highlight the potential consequences of unaddressed vulnerabilities, emphasizing the importance of offensive security practices in safeguarding critical infrastructure.
AppSec PNW: Android and iOS Application Security with MobSFAjin Abraham
Mobile Security Framework - MobSF is a free and open source automated mobile application security testing environment designed to help security engineers, researchers, developers, and penetration testers to identify security vulnerabilities, malicious behaviours and privacy concerns in mobile applications using static and dynamic analysis. It supports all the popular mobile application binaries and source code formats built for Android and iOS devices. In addition to automated security assessment, it also offers an interactive testing environment to build and execute scenario based test/fuzz cases against the application.
This talk covers:
Using MobSF for static analysis of mobile applications.
Interactive dynamic security assessment of Android and iOS applications.
Solving Mobile app CTF challenges.
Reverse engineering and runtime analysis of Mobile malware.
How to shift left and integrate MobSF/mobsfscan SAST and DAST in your build pipeline.
Lee Barnes - Path to Becoming an Effective Test Automation Engineer.pdfleebarnesutopia
So… you want to become a Test Automation Engineer (or hire and develop one)? While there’s quite a bit of information available about important technical and tool skills to master, there’s not enough discussion around the path to becoming an effective Test Automation Engineer that knows how to add VALUE. In my experience this had led to a proliferation of engineers who are proficient with tools and building frameworks but have skill and knowledge gaps, especially in software testing, that reduce the value they deliver with test automation.
In this talk, Lee will share his lessons learned from over 30 years of working with, and mentoring, hundreds of Test Automation Engineers. Whether you’re looking to get started in test automation or just want to improve your trade, this talk will give you a solid foundation and roadmap for ensuring your test automation efforts continuously add value. This talk is equally valuable for both aspiring Test Automation Engineers and those managing them! All attendees will take away a set of key foundational knowledge and a high-level learning path for leveling up test automation skills and ensuring they add value to their organizations.
Must Know Postgres Extension for DBA and Developer during MigrationMydbops
Mydbops Opensource Database Meetup 16
Topic: Must-Know PostgreSQL Extensions for Developers and DBAs During Migration
Speaker: Deepak Mahto, Founder of DataCloudGaze Consulting
Date & Time: 8th June | 10 AM - 1 PM IST
Venue: Bangalore International Centre, Bangalore
Abstract: Discover how PostgreSQL extensions can be your secret weapon! This talk explores how key extensions enhance database capabilities and streamline the migration process for users moving from other relational databases like Oracle.
Key Takeaways:
* Learn about crucial extensions like oracle_fdw, pgtt, and pg_audit that ease migration complexities.
* Gain valuable strategies for implementing these extensions in PostgreSQL to achieve license freedom.
* Discover how these key extensions can empower both developers and DBAs during the migration process.
* Don't miss this chance to gain practical knowledge from an industry expert and stay updated on the latest open-source database trends.
Mydbops Managed Services specializes in taking the pain out of database management while optimizing performance. Since 2015, we have been providing top-notch support and assistance for the top three open-source databases: MySQL, MongoDB, and PostgreSQL.
Our team offers a wide range of services, including assistance, support, consulting, 24/7 operations, and expertise in all relevant technologies. We help organizations improve their database's performance, scalability, efficiency, and availability.
Contact us: info@mydbops.com
Visit: https://www.mydbops.com/
Follow us on LinkedIn: https://in.linkedin.com/company/mydbops
For more details and updates, please follow up the below links.
Meetup Page : https://www.meetup.com/mydbops-databa...
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Blogs: https://www.mydbops.com/blog/
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"Frontline Battles with DDoS: Best practices and Lessons Learned", Igor IvaniukFwdays
At this talk we will discuss DDoS protection tools and best practices, discuss network architectures and what AWS has to offer. Also, we will look into one of the largest DDoS attacks on Ukrainian infrastructure that happened in February 2022. We'll see, what techniques helped to keep the web resources available for Ukrainians and how AWS improved DDoS protection for all customers based on Ukraine experience
"$10 thousand per minute of downtime: architecture, queues, streaming and fin...Fwdays
Direct losses from downtime in 1 minute = $5-$10 thousand dollars. Reputation is priceless.
As part of the talk, we will consider the architectural strategies necessary for the development of highly loaded fintech solutions. We will focus on using queues and streaming to efficiently work and manage large amounts of data in real-time and to minimize latency.
We will focus special attention on the architectural patterns used in the design of the fintech system, microservices and event-driven architecture, which ensure scalability, fault tolerance, and consistency of the entire system.
As AI technology is pushing into IT I was wondering myself, as an “infrastructure container kubernetes guy”, how get this fancy AI technology get managed from an infrastructure operational view? Is it possible to apply our lovely cloud native principals as well? What benefit’s both technologies could bring to each other?
Let me take this questions and provide you a short journey through existing deployment models and use cases for AI software. On practical examples, we discuss what cloud/on-premise strategy we may need for applying it to our own infrastructure to get it to work from an enterprise perspective. I want to give an overview about infrastructure requirements and technologies, what could be beneficial or limiting your AI use cases in an enterprise environment. An interactive Demo will give you some insides, what approaches I got already working for real.
Keywords: AI, Containeres, Kubernetes, Cloud Native
Event Link: https://meine.doag.org/events/cloudland/2024/agenda/#agendaId.4211
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These are the slides for the presentation, "Component Testing: Bridging the gap between frontend applications" that was presented at QA or the Highway 2024 in Columbus, OH by Zachary Hamm.
From Natural Language to Structured Solr Queries using LLMsSease
This talk draws on experimentation to enable AI applications with Solr. One important use case is to use AI for better accessibility and discoverability of the data: while User eXperience techniques, lexical search improvements, and data harmonization can take organizations to a good level of accessibility, a structural (or “cognitive” gap) remains between the data user needs and the data producer constraints.
That is where AI – and most importantly, Natural Language Processing and Large Language Model techniques – could make a difference. This natural language, conversational engine could facilitate access and usage of the data leveraging the semantics of any data source.
The objective of the presentation is to propose a technical approach and a way forward to achieve this goal.
The key concept is to enable users to express their search queries in natural language, which the LLM then enriches, interprets, and translates into structured queries based on the Solr index’s metadata.
This approach leverages the LLM’s ability to understand the nuances of natural language and the structure of documents within Apache Solr.
The LLM acts as an intermediary agent, offering a transparent experience to users automatically and potentially uncovering relevant documents that conventional search methods might overlook. The presentation will include the results of this experimental work, lessons learned, best practices, and the scope of future work that should improve the approach and make it production-ready.
Getting the Most Out of ScyllaDB Monitoring: ShareChat's TipsScyllaDB
ScyllaDB monitoring provides a lot of useful information. But sometimes it’s not easy to find the root of the problem if something is wrong or even estimate the remaining capacity by the load on the cluster. This talk shares our team's practical tips on: 1) How to find the root of the problem by metrics if ScyllaDB is slow 2) How to interpret the load and plan capacity for the future 3) Compaction strategies and how to choose the right one 4) Important metrics which aren’t available in the default monitoring setup.
LF Energy Webinar: Carbon Data Specifications: Mechanisms to Improve Data Acc...DanBrown980551
This LF Energy webinar took place June 20, 2024. It featured:
-Alex Thornton, LF Energy
-Hallie Cramer, Google
-Daniel Roesler, UtilityAPI
-Henry Richardson, WattTime
In response to the urgency and scale required to effectively address climate change, open source solutions offer significant potential for driving innovation and progress. Currently, there is a growing demand for standardization and interoperability in energy data and modeling. Open source standards and specifications within the energy sector can also alleviate challenges associated with data fragmentation, transparency, and accessibility. At the same time, it is crucial to consider privacy and security concerns throughout the development of open source platforms.
This webinar will delve into the motivations behind establishing LF Energy’s Carbon Data Specification Consortium. It will provide an overview of the draft specifications and the ongoing progress made by the respective working groups.
Three primary specifications will be discussed:
-Discovery and client registration, emphasizing transparent processes and secure and private access
-Customer data, centering around customer tariffs, bills, energy usage, and full consumption disclosure
-Power systems data, focusing on grid data, inclusive of transmission and distribution networks, generation, intergrid power flows, and market settlement data
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Imagine an IoT processing system that is already quite mature and production-ready and for which client coverage is growing and scaling and performance aspects are life and death questions. The system has Redis, MongoDB, and stream processing based on ksqldb. In this talk, firstly, we will analyze scaling approaches and then select the proper ones for our system.
"NATO Hackathon Winner: AI-Powered Drug Search", Taras KlobaFwdays
This is a session that details how PostgreSQL's features and Azure AI Services can be effectively used to significantly enhance the search functionality in any application.
In this session, we'll share insights on how we used PostgreSQL to facilitate precise searches across multiple fields in our mobile application. The techniques include using LIKE and ILIKE operators and integrating a trigram-based search to handle potential misspellings, thereby increasing the search accuracy.
We'll also discuss how the azure_ai extension on PostgreSQL databases in Azure and Azure AI Services were utilized to create vectors from user input, a feature beneficial when users wish to find specific items based on text prompts. While our application's case study involves a drug search, the techniques and principles shared in this session can be adapted to improve search functionality in a wide range of applications. Join us to learn how PostgreSQL and Azure AI can be harnessed to enhance your application's search capability.
This talk will cover ScyllaDB Architecture from the cluster-level view and zoom in on data distribution and internal node architecture. In the process, we will learn the secret sauce used to get ScyllaDB's high availability and superior performance. We will also touch on the upcoming changes to ScyllaDB architecture, moving to strongly consistent metadata and tablets.
Poznań ACE event - 19.06.2024 Team 24 Wrapup slidedeck
Creating and Analysing Linked Open Data for the EU Parliament
1. Creating and Analysing Linked Open Data for the
EU Parliament
Laura Hollink
Centrum Wiskunde & Informatica (CWI)
Information Access Group
June 7, 2017
DG ITEC European Parliament visit to CWI
2. Information Access group: Big Data Variety and
Veracity
Combining Linked Open Data / Semantic Web technology
with Statistical approaches for:
• Web scale data integration, with provenance tracking
“where did my data come from?”
• Modelling multiple perspectives on the same data
“how is the same event covered in different datasets?”
• Pattern discovery in digital traces of user behavior
“how is my data being used?”
3. Linked Open Data
A method of publishing structured data on the
Web in such a way that it can be linked and used
by machines as well as people.
http://5stardata.info
• https://www.data.gov/
• https://data.gov.uk/
• http://dati.camera.it/
• http://opendata.cz/
• https://www.data.gv.at/
• https://data.overheid.nl/
• https://data.europa.eu/
4. Linked Open Data about the EP Plenary
http://www.europarl.europa.eu
5. Data Structure
A speech
Pat Cox
datespeaker
2004-05-03
Formal opening of
the first sitting of
the enlarged
European
Parliamenttitle
An item on the
agenda
partOf
MemberOf
Parliament
rdf:type
An session day
partOf
6. Data Structure
A speech
Pat Cox
datespeaker
2004-05-03
Formal opening of
the first sitting of
the enlarged
European
Parliamenttitle
An item on the
agenda
partOf
MemberOf
Parliament
rdf:type
An session day
partOf
All speeches by
MEP Pat Cox in
May 2004, with
“Formal Opening”
in the title.
7. A speech
...This is indeed a
homecoming...@en
Pat Cox
date
text
speaker
2004-05-03
Formal opening of
the first sitting of
the enlarged
European
Parliamenttitle
An item on the
agenda
partOf
...Dette er i høj grad
en hjemkomst...@da
"Loud and sustained
applause"@en
unclassified
Metadata
http://www.europarl.europa.eu/...
videoURI
MemberOf
Parliament
rdf:type
Ireland
country
The next speech
next
An session day
partOf
Data Structure
A speech
Pat Cox
datespeaker
2004-05-03
Formal opening of
the first sitting of
the enlarged
European
Parliamenttitle
An item on the
agenda
partOf
MemberOf
Parliament
rdf:type
An session day
partOf
All speeches by
MEP Pat Cox in
May 2004, with
“Formal Opening”
in the title.
8. A speech
...This is indeed a
homecoming...@en
Pat Cox
date
text
speaker
2004-05-03
Formal opening of
the first sitting of
the enlarged
European
Parliamenttitle
An item on the
agenda
partOf
...Dette er i høj grad
en hjemkomst...@da
"Loud and sustained
applause"@en
unclassified
Metadata
http://www.europarl.europa.eu/...
videoURI
MemberOf
Parliament
rdf:type
Ireland
country
The next speech
next
An session day
partOf
Data Structure
A speech
Pat Cox
datespeaker
2004-05-03
Formal opening of
the first sitting of
the enlarged
European
Parliamenttitle
An item on the
agenda
partOf
MemberOf
Parliament
rdf:type
An session day
partOf
A speech
...This is indeed a
homecoming...@en
Pat Cox
date
text
speaker
2004-05-03
Formal opening of
the first sitting of
the enlarged
European
Parliamenttitle
An item on the
agenda
partOf
...Dette er i høj grad
en hjemkomst...@da
"en"
language
"Loud and sustained
applause"@en
unclassified
Metadata
http://www.europarl.europa.eu/...
videoURI
MemberOf
Parliament
rdf:type
Ireland
country
The next speech
next
translated
An session day
partOf
All speeches by
MEP Pat Cox in
May 2004, with
“Formal Opening”
in the title.
9. A speech
...This is indeed a
homecoming...@en
Pat Cox
date
text
speaker
2004-05-03
Formal opening of
the first sitting of
the enlarged
European
Parliamenttitle
An item on the
agenda
partOf
...Dette er i høj grad
en hjemkomst...@da
"Loud and sustained
applause"@en
unclassified
Metadata
http://www.europarl.europa.eu/...
videoURI
MemberOf
Parliament
rdf:type
Ireland
country
The next speech
next
An session day
partOf
Data Structure
A speech
Pat Cox
datespeaker
2004-05-03
Formal opening of
the first sitting of
the enlarged
European
Parliamenttitle
An item on the
agenda
partOf
MemberOf
Parliament
rdf:type
An session day
partOf
A speech
...This is indeed a
homecoming...@en
Pat Cox
date
text
speaker
2004-05-03
Formal opening of
the first sitting of
the enlarged
European
Parliamenttitle
An item on the
agenda
partOf
...Dette er i høj grad
en hjemkomst...@da
"en"
language
"Loud and sustained
applause"@en
unclassified
Metadata
http://www.europarl.europa.eu/...
videoURI
MemberOf
Parliament
rdf:type
Ireland
country
The next speech
next
translated
An session day
partOf
All speeches by
MEP Pat Cox in
May 2004, with
“Formal Opening”
in the title.
All speeches
mentioning
“homecoming”
10. A speech
...This is indeed a
homecoming...@en
Pat Cox
date
text
speaker
2004-05-03
Formal opening of
the first sitting of
the enlarged
European
Parliamenttitle
An item on the
agenda
partOf
...Dette er i høj grad
en hjemkomst...@da
"Loud and sustained
applause"@en
unclassified
Metadata
http://www.europarl.europa.eu/...
videoURI
MemberOf
Parliament
rdf:type
Ireland
country
The next speech
next
An session day
partOf
Data Structure
A speech
Pat Cox
datespeaker
2004-05-03
Formal opening of
the first sitting of
the enlarged
European
Parliamenttitle
An item on the
agenda
partOf
MemberOf
Parliament
rdf:type
An session day
partOf
A speech
...This is indeed a
homecoming...@en
Pat Cox
date
text
speaker
2004-05-03
Formal opening of
the first sitting of
the enlarged
European
Parliamenttitle
An item on the
agenda
partOf
...Dette er i høj grad
en hjemkomst...@da
"en"
language
"Loud and sustained
applause"@en
unclassified
Metadata
http://www.europarl.europa.eu/...
videoURI
MemberOf
Parliament
rdf:type
Ireland
country
The next speech
next
translated
An session day
partOf
All speeches by
MEP Pat Cox in
May 2004, with
“Formal Opening”
in the title.
All speeches
mentioning
“homecoming”
All speeches by
someone from
Ireland
11. A speech
...This is indeed a
homecoming...@en
Pat Cox
date
text
speaker
2004-05-03
Formal opening of
the first sitting of
the enlarged
European
Parliamenttitle
An item on the
agenda
partOf
...Dette er i høj grad
en hjemkomst...@da
"Loud and sustained
applause"@en
unclassified
Metadata
http://www.europarl.europa.eu/...
videoURI
MemberOf
Parliament
rdf:type
Ireland
country
The next speech
next
An session day
partOf
Data Structure
A speech
Pat Cox
datespeaker
2004-05-03
Formal opening of
the first sitting of
the enlarged
European
Parliamenttitle
An item on the
agenda
partOf
MemberOf
Parliament
rdf:type
An session day
partOf
A speech
...This is indeed a
homecoming...@en
Pat Cox
date
text
speaker
2004-05-03
Formal opening of
the first sitting of
the enlarged
European
Parliamenttitle
An item on the
agenda
partOf
...Dette er i høj grad
en hjemkomst...@da
"en"
language
"Loud and sustained
applause"@en
unclassified
Metadata
http://www.europarl.europa.eu/...
videoURI
MemberOf
Parliament
rdf:type
Ireland
country
The next speech
next
translated
An session day
partOf
All speeches by
MEP Pat Cox in
May 2004, with
“Formal Opening”
in the title.
All speeches
mentioning
“homecoming”
All speeches by
someone from
Ireland
All speeches
originally in Danish
12. A speech
...This is indeed a
homecoming...@en
Pat Cox
date
text
speaker
2004-05-03
Formal opening of
the first sitting of
the enlarged
European
Parliamenttitle
An item on the
agenda
partOf
...Dette er i høj grad
en hjemkomst...@da
"Loud and sustained
applause"@en
unclassified
Metadata
http://www.europarl.europa.eu/...
videoURI
MemberOf
Parliament
rdf:type
Ireland
country
The next speech
next
An session day
partOf
Data Structure
A speech
Pat Cox
datespeaker
2004-05-03
Formal opening of
the first sitting of
the enlarged
European
Parliamenttitle
An item on the
agenda
partOf
MemberOf
Parliament
rdf:type
An session day
partOf
A speech
...This is indeed a
homecoming...@en
Pat Cox
date
text
speaker
2004-05-03
Formal opening of
the first sitting of
the enlarged
European
Parliamenttitle
An item on the
agenda
partOf
...Dette er i høj grad
en hjemkomst...@da
"en"
language
"Loud and sustained
applause"@en
unclassified
Metadata
http://www.europarl.europa.eu/...
videoURI
MemberOf
Parliament
rdf:type
Ireland
country
The next speech
next
translated
An session day
partOf
All speeches by
MEP Pat Cox in
May 2004, with
“Formal Opening”
in the title.
All speeches
mentioning
“homecoming”
All speeches by
someone from
Ireland
All speeches
originally in Danish
All speeches that
have no
translations
13. A speech
...This is indeed a
homecoming...@en
Pat Cox
date
text
speaker
2004-05-03
Formal opening of
the first sitting of
the enlarged
European
Parliamenttitle
An item on the
agenda
partOf
...Dette er i høj grad
en hjemkomst...@da
"Loud and sustained
applause"@en
unclassified
Metadata
http://www.europarl.europa.eu/...
videoURI
MemberOf
Parliament
rdf:type
Ireland
country
The next speech
next
An session day
partOf
Data Structure
A speech
Pat Cox
datespeaker
2004-05-03
Formal opening of
the first sitting of
the enlarged
European
Parliamenttitle
An item on the
agenda
partOf
MemberOf
Parliament
rdf:type
An session day
partOf
A speech
...This is indeed a
homecoming...@en
Pat Cox
date
text
speaker
2004-05-03
Formal opening of
the first sitting of
the enlarged
European
Parliamenttitle
An item on the
agenda
partOf
...Dette er i høj grad
en hjemkomst...@da
"en"
language
"Loud and sustained
applause"@en
unclassified
Metadata
http://www.europarl.europa.eu/...
videoURI
MemberOf
Parliament
rdf:type
Ireland
country
The next speech
next
translated
An session day
partOf
All speeches by
MEP Pat Cox in
May 2004, with
“Formal Opening”
in the title.
All speeches
mentioning
“homecoming”
All speeches by
someone from
Ireland
All speeches
originally in Danish
All speeches that
have no
translations
All speeches where
someone replied to
someone from
Ireland in a debate
about the Financial
Crisis
15. Links to external sourcesA speech
Pat Cox
speaker
Geonames:IrelandIreland owl:sameAs
4,622,917 EUR1,038m
population
currencyhighest mountain
A speech
Pat Cox
speaker
Ireland
country
16. Links to external sourcesA speech
Pat Cox
speaker
Geonames:IrelandIreland owl:sameAs
4,622,917 EUR1,038m
population
currencyhighest mountain
A speech
Pat Cox
speaker
Ireland
country
How many times
did the countries
with the highest
population count
speak about
“regufees”?
17. Links to external sourcesA speech
Pat Cox
speaker
Geonames:IrelandIreland owl:sameAs
4,622,917 EUR1,038m
population
currencyhighest mountain
A speech
Pat Cox
speaker
Geonames:IrelandIreland owl:sameAs
4,622,917 EUR1,038m
http://dbpedia.org/
resource/Pat_Cox
owl:sameAs
28-11-1952
Trinity College
Dublin
journalist
population
currencyhighest mountain
birthdate alma mater rdf:type
A speech
Pat Cox
speaker
Ireland
country
How many times
did the countries
with the highest
population count
speak about
“regufees”?
18. Links to external sourcesA speech
Pat Cox
speaker
Geonames:IrelandIreland owl:sameAs
4,622,917 EUR1,038m
population
currencyhighest mountain
A speech
Pat Cox
speaker
Geonames:IrelandIreland owl:sameAs
4,622,917 EUR1,038m
http://dbpedia.org/
resource/Pat_Cox
owl:sameAs
28-11-1952
Trinity College
Dublin
journalist
population
currencyhighest mountain
birthdate alma mater rdf:type
A speech
Pat Cox
speaker
Ireland
country
How many times
did the countries
with the highest
population count
speak about
“regufees”?
Are there MEPs born
outside Europe?
19. Links to external sourcesA speech
Pat Cox
speaker
Geonames:IrelandIreland owl:sameAs
4,622,917 EUR1,038m
population
currencyhighest mountain
A speech
Pat Cox
speaker
Geonames:IrelandIreland owl:sameAs
4,622,917 EUR1,038m
http://dbpedia.org/
resource/Pat_Cox
owl:sameAs
28-11-1952
Trinity College
Dublin
journalist
population
currencyhighest mountain
birthdate alma mater rdf:type
A speech
Pat Cox
speaker
Geonames:IrelandIreland owl:sameAs
4,622,917 EUR1,038m
http://dbpedia.org/
resource/Pat_Cox
owl:sameAs
28-11-1952
Trinity College
Dublin
journalist
population
currencyhighest mountain
birthdate alma mater rdf:type
EP on dati.camera.it
owl:sameAs
A speech
Pat Cox
speaker
Ireland
country
How many times
did the countries
with the highest
population count
speak about
“regufees”?
Are there MEPs born
outside Europe?
20. Links to external sourcesA speech
Pat Cox
speaker
Geonames:IrelandIreland owl:sameAs
4,622,917 EUR1,038m
population
currencyhighest mountain
A speech
Pat Cox
speaker
Geonames:IrelandIreland owl:sameAs
4,622,917 EUR1,038m
http://dbpedia.org/
resource/Pat_Cox
owl:sameAs
28-11-1952
Trinity College
Dublin
journalist
population
currencyhighest mountain
birthdate alma mater rdf:type
A speech
Pat Cox
speaker
Geonames:IrelandIreland owl:sameAs
4,622,917 EUR1,038m
http://dbpedia.org/
resource/Pat_Cox
owl:sameAs
28-11-1952
Trinity College
Dublin
journalist
population
currencyhighest mountain
birthdate alma mater rdf:type
EP on dati.camera.it
owl:sameAs
A speech
Pat Cox
speaker
Ireland
country
How many times
did the countries
with the highest
population count
speak about
“regufees”?
Are there MEPs born
outside Europe?
What role do
Italian MEPs
have in Italy?
22. Links to external sources
A speech
Pat Cox
speaker
President 2004
2002
politicalFunction
European
parliamant
vice-chair ELDE
politicalFunction
role institution
end
1998
beginning
1994
substitute
Committee on
Budgetary Control
politicalFunction
role institution
end
1992
beginning
1989
end
beginning
role institution
A speech
Pat Cox
speaker
country
23. Links to external sources
A speech
Pat Cox
speaker
President 2004
2002
politicalFunction
European
parliamant
vice-chair ELDE
politicalFunction
role institution
end
1998
beginning
1994
substitute
Committee on
Budgetary Control
politicalFunction
role institution
end
1992
beginning
1989
end
beginning
role institution
How did the
members of the
Human Rights
committee speak
about “refugees”?
A speech
Pat Cox
speaker
country
24. Links to external sources
A speech
Pat Cox
speaker
President 2004
2002
politicalFunction
European
parliamant
vice-chair ELDE
politicalFunction
role institution
end
1998
beginning
1994
substitute
Committee on
Budgetary Control
politicalFunction
role institution
end
1992
beginning
1989
end
beginning
role institution
How did the
members of the
Human Rights
committee speak
about “refugees”?
A speech
Pat Cox
speaker
country
Who was a member
of more than three
committees at the
same time?
25. What we have now:
linked open government data
for the EP
1. a dataset in structured, standard web-formats ready for download
2. links to external sources (that use these same standard web-formats)
3. a web service where the data can be queried (using a web-standard
query language), in combination with these external sources.
People can build on this by building apps, creating links.
links made
by the EC
Talk of Europe project:
http://talkofeurope.eu/
27. Example query: number of speeches per country
AT BE BG CY CZ DE DK EE ES FI FR GB GR HR HU IE IT LT LU LV MT NL PL PT RO SE SI SK
Mentions of 'human rights' by country
01000200030004000500060007000
28. The number of speeches translated per language
0
10000
20000
30000
2000 2005 2010 2015
year
scount
g
Croatian
Czech
Danish
Dutch
English
Estonian
Finnish
French
German
Greek
Hungarian
Italian
Latvian
Lithuanian
Maltese
Polish
Portuguese
Romanian
Slovak
Slovenian
Spanish
Swedish
29. Example query: number of debates with the topics
nuclear weapon / nuclear energy, per language
30. Example query: MEPs born outside Europe
Members of Parliament
(DBpedia contains info on
birthplace, birth date, schools,
careers, residence, family, etc. )
34. ION Data
1. We crawled 5
newspapers for a year
2. Detected topics
3. Published it as
Linked Open Data
4. Built an application on
top
Article URL
Image caption Image featuresExtracted topics
Date Headline
Image URL
Contents of the ION corpus
Washington
Post
New York
Times
Daily Mail
The Inde-
pendent
Huffington
Post
Country
Nr. of articles 87.457 57.747 86.095 23.974 68.434
Nr. of images 54.063 42.613 83.269 21.272 34.874
Nr. of topics detected (Wikipedia pages) 491.513 371.680 368.302 98.610 245.829
Nr. of topics detected (categories) 1.730.271 1.280.850 1.554.609 497.981 1.232.599
37. On our wish-list: linking news to the EP debates
"Slovenia" in the plenary meetings of the European Parliament
Year
Nr.ofmentions
020406080100
1999 2000 2001 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2010 2011 2012 2013
38. On our wish-list: linking news to the EP debates
"Slovenia" in the plenary meetings of the European Parliament
Year
Nr.ofmentions
020406080100
1999 2000 2001 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2010 2011 2012 2013
39. Collaborators
Jacco van Ossenbruggen
Laura Hollink
Marnix van Berchum
Martijn Kleppe Max Kemman Jill Briggeman
Henri Beunders Jan Odijk Steven Krauwer
Astrid van Aggelen
40. Talk of Europe project: http://talkofeurope.eu/
Talk of Europe data: purl.org/linkedpolitics
Talk of Europe project video: https://youtu.be/GxA53gkCe0o
PoliMedia demo: http://polimedia.nl/
PoliMedia project video: https://youtu.be/u24oRCj7xrQ
ION demo: http://ion.project.cwi.nl/
My website: http://cwi.nl/~hollink/
A. van Aggelen, L. Hollink, M. Kemman, M. Kleppe & H. Beunders. The debates
of the European Parliament as Linked Open Data. Semantic Web Journal, pp.
1-10, DOI: 10.3233/SW-160227, 2017.
M. Kleppe, L. Hollink, J. Oomen, M. Kenman, D. Juric, J. Blom, H. Beunders.
PoliMedia - Improving the Analyses of Radio & Newspaper coverage of Political
Debates. First prize winner of the LinkedUp Veni Competition at the Open
Knowledge Conference (OKCon), Geneva, September 2013.
I’d be happy to answer any questions
L. Hollink, A. Bedjeti, M. van Harmelen and D. Elliott. A Corpus of Images and
Text in Online News. In proceedings of the 10th edition of the Language
Resources and Evaluation Conference, 23-28 May 2016, Portorož, Slovenia