OWL stands for Web Ontology Language
OWL is built on top of RDF
OWL is for processing information on the web
OWL was designed to be interpreted by computers
OWL was not designed for being read by people
OWL is written in XML
OWL has three sublanguages
- OWL Lite , OWL DL , OWL Full
OWL is a W3C standard
RDF is a general method to decompose knowledge into small pieces, with some rules about the semantics or meaning of those pieces. The point is to have a method so simple that it can express any fact, and yet so structured that computer applications can do useful things with knowledge expressed in RDF.
Understanding RDF: the Resource Description Framework in Context (1999)Dan Brickley
Dan Brickley, 3rd European Commission Metadata Workshop, Luxemburg, April 12th 1999
Understanding RDF: the Resource Description Framework in Context
http://ilrt.org/discovery/2001/01/understanding-rdf/
I used these slides for an introductory lecture (90min) to a seminar on SPARQL. This slideset introduces the RDF query language SPARQL from a user's perspective.
OWL stands for Web Ontology Language
OWL is built on top of RDF
OWL is for processing information on the web
OWL was designed to be interpreted by computers
OWL was not designed for being read by people
OWL is written in XML
OWL has three sublanguages
- OWL Lite , OWL DL , OWL Full
OWL is a W3C standard
RDF is a general method to decompose knowledge into small pieces, with some rules about the semantics or meaning of those pieces. The point is to have a method so simple that it can express any fact, and yet so structured that computer applications can do useful things with knowledge expressed in RDF.
Understanding RDF: the Resource Description Framework in Context (1999)Dan Brickley
Dan Brickley, 3rd European Commission Metadata Workshop, Luxemburg, April 12th 1999
Understanding RDF: the Resource Description Framework in Context
http://ilrt.org/discovery/2001/01/understanding-rdf/
I used these slides for an introductory lecture (90min) to a seminar on SPARQL. This slideset introduces the RDF query language SPARQL from a user's perspective.
"SPARQL Cheat Sheet" is a short collection of slides intended to act as a guide to SPARQL developers. It includes the syntax and structure of SPARQL queries, common SPARQL prefixes and functions, and help with RDF datasets.
The "SPARQL Cheat Sheet" is intended to accompany the SPARQL By Example slides available at http://www.cambridgesemantics.com/2008/09/sparql-by-example/ .
The Semantic Web #9 - Web Ontology Language (OWL)Myungjin Lee
This is a lecture note #9 for my class of Graduate School of Yonsei University, Korea.
It describes Web Ontology Language (OWL) for authoring ontologies.
This workshop presentation from Enterprise Knowledge team members Joe Hilger, Founder and COO, and Sara Nash, Technical Analyst, was delivered on June 8, 2020 as part of the Data Summit 2020 virtual conference. The 3-hour workshop provided an interdisciplinary group of participants with a definition of what a knowledge graph is, how it is implemented, and how it can be used to increase the value of your organization’s datas. This slide deck gives an overview of the KM concepts that are necessary for the implementation of knowledge graphs as a foundation for Enterprise Artificial Intelligence (AI). Hilger and Nash also outlined four use cases for knowledge graphs, including recommendation engines and natural language query on structured data.
"SPARQL Cheat Sheet" is a short collection of slides intended to act as a guide to SPARQL developers. It includes the syntax and structure of SPARQL queries, common SPARQL prefixes and functions, and help with RDF datasets.
The "SPARQL Cheat Sheet" is intended to accompany the SPARQL By Example slides available at http://www.cambridgesemantics.com/2008/09/sparql-by-example/ .
The Semantic Web #9 - Web Ontology Language (OWL)Myungjin Lee
This is a lecture note #9 for my class of Graduate School of Yonsei University, Korea.
It describes Web Ontology Language (OWL) for authoring ontologies.
This workshop presentation from Enterprise Knowledge team members Joe Hilger, Founder and COO, and Sara Nash, Technical Analyst, was delivered on June 8, 2020 as part of the Data Summit 2020 virtual conference. The 3-hour workshop provided an interdisciplinary group of participants with a definition of what a knowledge graph is, how it is implemented, and how it can be used to increase the value of your organization’s datas. This slide deck gives an overview of the KM concepts that are necessary for the implementation of knowledge graphs as a foundation for Enterprise Artificial Intelligence (AI). Hilger and Nash also outlined four use cases for knowledge graphs, including recommendation engines and natural language query on structured data.
10 Things I Learned in 10 Years as a Content StrategistRachel Lovinger
In the decade since I officially became a Content Strategist, I’ve learned many important principles of working with content. Some of them have influenced the kind of work I do, and some of them have helped me better understand how the field is developing and what directions it needs to grow in for this practice to become more effective with digital content.
In this presentation I’ll summarise my top ten learnings and describe how these principles have been critical to the work I’ve done these past 10 years. I’ll also discuss how people can dig deeper into the principles that they find most useful and relevant to their work.
Content Auditing: Unearthing the Substance of Your BrandRachel Lovinger
I gave this talk at Content Marketing World 2014. It talks about a content strategy practice - content auditing - and how it can benefit content marketing efforts. It includes links to some useful tools and resources.
In 2012, Jason Scott, Rachel Lovinger & a small crew filmed a documentary about the 20th year of DEFCON. Over the course of the next year Jason edited it together, and we premiered it at DEFCON 21. We also did this talk about the making of. You can watch a video of the talk here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d4VsmniMfpQ
Early in 2012, to commemorate the 20th year of the conference, Jason Scott was asked if he would be interested in filming a documentary about DEFCON, whose policies and attendees have traditionally rejected media scrutiny and access. He was interested. Working with his producer, Rachel Lovinger, and a crew of six, Jason filmed for most of 2012, including five 20-hour days in Las Vegas last year, and then spent another 9 months editing 278 hours of footage into what has become DEFCON: The Documentary. The finished film premiered at DEFCON XXI.
Jason and Rachel also gave this talk, which provided a look behind the scenes: discussing the planning and production process for this immense project, the ups and downs, and the learned lessons. [During the talk we showed clips and outtakes - those are not in this presentation].
This is a preview version of the Content Modelling Workshop that I've co-written with Cleve Gibbon. So far we've given this workshop in Cape Town and Minneapolis. Coming soon to Helsinki, and hopefully elsewhere. This deck introduces the ideas and methodologies of content modelling. It's a subset of the slides for the workshop. The full workshop also includes more information on structured content, benefits of content modelling, many group exercises and discussions, and tips on how to putting these practices to work in real projects.
Everyone's talking about responsive design, and how you need structured content in order to make it happen. But what does "structured content" really mean, and how do you make it happen?
A presentation given on 25 October 2012, at Content Strategy Forum 2012 in Cape Town, South Africa.
Slides from my Metadata Workshop at Content Strategy Applied 2012. The session included several hands on exercises, which is where a lot of the interesting conversation took place.
I presented these slides at Sisältöstrategiaseminaari 2012 (Content Strategy Seminar 2012) in Helsinki. The event was a co-production of Vapa Media and the University of Helsinki.
The presentation addresses why Content Strategy is a practice of such particular interest right now. It looks at how we got to where we are today, why content strategy matters, and a few future trends to watch.
A short version of a talk I've given before. This one was for the Semantic Tech & Business Conference in London in September 2011. It focuses on what makes content nimble, and how to combine standards, tools & processes to accomplish it.
This is a talk I gave at Confab 2011 about some metadata standards that will help make your content nimble. This is a follow up to the Nimble report (http://nimble.razorfish.com).
A presentation I gave at the Content Strategy Forum 2010, in Paris.
For those who couldn't make it to Paris, I gave this presentation again in Chicago in June, at Web Content 2010.
This is the (slightly) updated Chicago version.
A presentation I gave at MIMA Summit 2009. I also posted a list of Content Strategy resources on my blog. Some articles and sites that provide detailed information and tips on several of the content best practices that I mentioned in the presentation. http://bit.ly/15wtNI
Dev Dives: Train smarter, not harder – active learning and UiPath LLMs for do...UiPathCommunity
💥 Speed, accuracy, and scaling – discover the superpowers of GenAI in action with UiPath Document Understanding and Communications Mining™:
See how to accelerate model training and optimize model performance with active learning
Learn about the latest enhancements to out-of-the-box document processing – with little to no training required
Get an exclusive demo of the new family of UiPath LLMs – GenAI models specialized for processing different types of documents and messages
This is a hands-on session specifically designed for automation developers and AI enthusiasts seeking to enhance their knowledge in leveraging the latest intelligent document processing capabilities offered by UiPath.
Speakers:
👨🏫 Andras Palfi, Senior Product Manager, UiPath
👩🏫 Lenka Dulovicova, Product Program Manager, UiPath
Kubernetes & AI - Beauty and the Beast !?! @KCD Istanbul 2024Tobias Schneck
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.
Key Trends Shaping the Future of Infrastructure.pdfCheryl Hung
Keynote at DIGIT West Expo, Glasgow on 29 May 2024.
Cheryl Hung, ochery.com
Sr Director, Infrastructure Ecosystem, Arm.
The key trends across hardware, cloud and open-source; exploring how these areas are likely to mature and develop over the short and long-term, and then considering how organisations can position themselves to adapt and thrive.
GDG Cloud Southlake #33: Boule & Rebala: Effective AppSec in SDLC using Deplo...James Anderson
Effective Application Security in Software Delivery lifecycle using Deployment Firewall and DBOM
The modern software delivery process (or the CI/CD process) includes many tools, distributed teams, open-source code, and cloud platforms. Constant focus on speed to release software to market, along with the traditional slow and manual security checks has caused gaps in continuous security as an important piece in the software supply chain. Today organizations feel more susceptible to external and internal cyber threats due to the vast attack surface in their applications supply chain and the lack of end-to-end governance and risk management.
The software team must secure its software delivery process to avoid vulnerability and security breaches. This needs to be achieved with existing tool chains and without extensive rework of the delivery processes. This talk will present strategies and techniques for providing visibility into the true risk of the existing vulnerabilities, preventing the introduction of security issues in the software, resolving vulnerabilities in production environments quickly, and capturing the deployment bill of materials (DBOM).
Speakers:
Bob Boule
Robert Boule is a technology enthusiast with PASSION for technology and making things work along with a knack for helping others understand how things work. He comes with around 20 years of solution engineering experience in application security, software continuous delivery, and SaaS platforms. He is known for his dynamic presentations in CI/CD and application security integrated in software delivery lifecycle.
Gopinath Rebala
Gopinath Rebala is the CTO of OpsMx, where he has overall responsibility for the machine learning and data processing architectures for Secure Software Delivery. Gopi also has a strong connection with our customers, leading design and architecture for strategic implementations. Gopi is a frequent speaker and well-known leader in continuous delivery and integrating security into software delivery.
Search and Society: Reimagining Information Access for Radical FuturesBhaskar Mitra
The field of Information retrieval (IR) is currently undergoing a transformative shift, at least partly due to the emerging applications of generative AI to information access. In this talk, we will deliberate on the sociotechnical implications of generative AI for information access. We will argue that there is both a critical necessity and an exciting opportunity for the IR community to re-center our research agendas on societal needs while dismantling the artificial separation between the work on fairness, accountability, transparency, and ethics in IR and the rest of IR research. Instead of adopting a reactionary strategy of trying to mitigate potential social harms from emerging technologies, the community should aim to proactively set the research agenda for the kinds of systems we should build inspired by diverse explicitly stated sociotechnical imaginaries. The sociotechnical imaginaries that underpin the design and development of information access technologies needs to be explicitly articulated, and we need to develop theories of change in context of these diverse perspectives. Our guiding future imaginaries must be informed by other academic fields, such as democratic theory and critical theory, and should be co-developed with social science scholars, legal scholars, civil rights and social justice activists, and artists, among others.
Transcript: Selling digital books in 2024: Insights from industry leaders - T...BookNet Canada
The publishing industry has been selling digital audiobooks and ebooks for over a decade and has found its groove. What’s changed? What has stayed the same? Where do we go from here? Join a group of leading sales peers from across the industry for a conversation about the lessons learned since the popularization of digital books, best practices, digital book supply chain management, and more.
Link to video recording: https://bnctechforum.ca/sessions/selling-digital-books-in-2024-insights-from-industry-leaders/
Presented by BookNet Canada on May 28, 2024, with support from the Department of Canadian Heritage.
Smart TV Buyer Insights Survey 2024 by 91mobiles.pdf91mobiles
91mobiles recently conducted a Smart TV Buyer Insights Survey in which we asked over 3,000 respondents about the TV they own, aspects they look at on a new TV, and their TV buying preferences.
The Art of the Pitch: WordPress Relationships and SalesLaura Byrne
Clients don’t know what they don’t know. What web solutions are right for them? How does WordPress come into the picture? How do you make sure you understand scope and timeline? What do you do if sometime changes?
All these questions and more will be explored as we talk about matching clients’ needs with what your agency offers without pulling teeth or pulling your hair out. Practical tips, and strategies for successful relationship building that leads to closing the deal.
Software Delivery At the Speed of AI: Inflectra Invests In AI-Powered QualityInflectra
In this insightful webinar, Inflectra explores how artificial intelligence (AI) is transforming software development and testing. Discover how AI-powered tools are revolutionizing every stage of the software development lifecycle (SDLC), from design and prototyping to testing, deployment, and monitoring.
Learn about:
• The Future of Testing: How AI is shifting testing towards verification, analysis, and higher-level skills, while reducing repetitive tasks.
• Test Automation: How AI-powered test case generation, optimization, and self-healing tests are making testing more efficient and effective.
• Visual Testing: Explore the emerging capabilities of AI in visual testing and how it's set to revolutionize UI verification.
• Inflectra's AI Solutions: See demonstrations of Inflectra's cutting-edge AI tools like the ChatGPT plugin and Azure Open AI platform, designed to streamline your testing process.
Whether you're a developer, tester, or QA professional, this webinar will give you valuable insights into how AI is shaping the future of software delivery.
"Impact of front-end architecture on development cost", Viktor TurskyiFwdays
I have heard many times that architecture is not important for the front-end. Also, many times I have seen how developers implement features on the front-end just following the standard rules for a framework and think that this is enough to successfully launch the project, and then the project fails. How to prevent this and what approach to choose? I have launched dozens of complex projects and during the talk we will analyze which approaches have worked for me and which have not.
State of ICS and IoT Cyber Threat Landscape Report 2024 previewPrayukth K V
The IoT and OT threat landscape report has been prepared by the Threat Research Team at Sectrio using data from Sectrio, cyber threat intelligence farming facilities spread across over 85 cities around the world. In addition, Sectrio also runs AI-based advanced threat and payload engagement facilities that serve as sinks to attract and engage sophisticated threat actors, and newer malware including new variants and latent threats that are at an earlier stage of development.
The latest edition of the OT/ICS and IoT security Threat Landscape Report 2024 also covers:
State of global ICS asset and network exposure
Sectoral targets and attacks as well as the cost of ransom
Global APT activity, AI usage, actor and tactic profiles, and implications
Rise in volumes of AI-powered cyberattacks
Major cyber events in 2024
Malware and malicious payload trends
Cyberattack types and targets
Vulnerability exploit attempts on CVEs
Attacks on counties – USA
Expansion of bot farms – how, where, and why
In-depth analysis of the cyber threat landscape across North America, South America, Europe, APAC, and the Middle East
Why are attacks on smart factories rising?
Cyber risk predictions
Axis of attacks – Europe
Systemic attacks in the Middle East
Download the full report from here:
https://sectrio.com/resources/ot-threat-landscape-reports/sectrio-releases-ot-ics-and-iot-security-threat-landscape-report-2024/
Let's dive deeper into the world of ODC! Ricardo Alves (OutSystems) will join us to tell all about the new Data Fabric. After that, Sezen de Bruijn (OutSystems) will get into the details on how to best design a sturdy architecture within ODC.
UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series, part 3DianaGray10
Welcome to UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series part 3. In this session, we will cover desktop automation along with UI automation.
Topics covered:
UI automation Introduction,
UI automation Sample
Desktop automation flow
Pradeep Chinnala, Senior Consultant Automation Developer @WonderBotz and UiPath MVP
Deepak Rai, Automation Practice Lead, Boundaryless Group and UiPath MVP