This document provides an overview of a tutorial on semantic digital libraries. The tutorial will introduce semantic web technologies and how they can be applied to digital libraries. It will present existing semantic digital library systems, discuss current problems and future directions, and include hands-on sessions for participants. Attendees will learn about semantic digital libraries, existing solutions, and how to run semantic digital library solutions on their own machines.
The Semantic Web and Libraries in the United States: Experimentation and Achi...New York University
This presentation reflects the paper titled "The Semantic Web and Libraries in the United States: Experimentation and Achievements," published in the proceedings of 75th IFLA General Conference and Assembly, Satellite Meeting: Emerging Trends in Technology: Libraries between Web 2.0, Semantic Web and Search Technology 8/19-20/2009, in Florence, Italy, presented by Sharon Yang, Rider University, Yanyi Lee, Wagner College, and Amanda Xu, St. John's University. Here is the URL to the full paper: http://www.ifla2009satelliteflorence.it/meeting3/program/assets/SharonYang.pdf
The Semantic Web and Libraries in the United States: Experimentation and Achi...New York University
This presentation reflects the paper titled "The Semantic Web and Libraries in the United States: Experimentation and Achievements," published in the proceedings of 75th IFLA General Conference and Assembly, Satellite Meeting: Emerging Trends in Technology: Libraries between Web 2.0, Semantic Web and Search Technology 8/19-20/2009, in Florence, Italy, presented by Sharon Yang, Rider University, Yanyi Lee, Wagner College, and Amanda Xu, St. John's University. Here is the URL to the full paper: http://www.ifla2009satelliteflorence.it/meeting3/program/assets/SharonYang.pdf
A quick presentation to talk about the benefits of structured knowledge, focused on parallax & freebase, and how their knowledge representation fits into the wider scope of the semantic web.
SDA2013 Pundit: Creating, Exploring and Consuming AnnotationsMarco Grassi
This paper presents Pundit, a novel semantic web annotation tool, and demonstrates its use in producing structured data out of users annotations. Pundit allows communities of scholars to produce machine-readable annotations that can be made public and thus consumable as web data via SPARQL and ad-hoc REST APIs.
Pundit is highly configurable and can deployed in custom instances to include well-defined and agreed annotation vocabularies. Such instances can be distributed as bookmaklets to community users so they can create uniformly structured data in a certain application scenario. Basing on the provided APIs, some demonstrative applications have been developed, exploring different use scenarios, ranging from philosophy to journalism and cultural heritage.
The main aim of this paper is to demonstrate how such uniformly structured annotations can be quickly re-used on the web to make information discoverable or to visualize it in interesting ways.
Annual LIANZA / SLANZA Weekend School, held Nelson, New Zealand on 28 April, 2007. This keynote presentation explores the Web 2.0 world, and the 'possibilities' for libraries in a digitally networked world.
Open data is a crucial prerequisite for inventing and disseminating the innovative practices needed for agricultural development. To be usable, data must not just be open in principle—i.e., covered by licenses that allow re-use. Data must also be published in a technical form that allows it to be integrated into a wide range of applications. The webinar will be of interest to any institution seeking ways to publish and curate data in the Linked Data cloud.
This webinar describes the technical solutions adopted by a widely diverse global network of agricultural research institutes for publishing research results. The talk focuses on AGRIS, a central and widely-used resource linking agricultural datasets for easy consumption, and AgriDrupal, an adaptation of the popular, open-source content management system Drupal optimized for producing and consuming linked datasets.
Agricultural research institutes in developing countries share many of the constraints faced by libraries and other documentation centers, and not just in developing countries: institutions are expected to expose their information on the Web in a re-usable form with shoestring budgets and with technical staff working in local languages and continually lured by higher-paying work in the private sector. Technical solutions must be easy to adopt and freely available.
About the Webinar
In May 2012, the Library of Congress announced a new modeling initiative focused on reflecting the MARC 21 library standard as a Linked Data model for the Web, with an initial model to be proposed by the consulting company Zepheira. The goal of the initiative is to translate the MARC 21 format to a Linked Data model while retaining the richness and benefits of existing data in the historical format.
In this webinar, Eric Miller of Zepheira will report on progress towards this important goal, starting with an analysis of the translation problem and concluding with potential migration scenarios for a broad-based transition from MARC to a new bibliographic framework.
Neno/Fhat: Semantic Network Programming Language and Virtual Machine Specific...Marko Rodriguez
• The Semantic Web is a distributed, flexible modeling framework.
• The Semantic Web is primarily descriptive in nature. The Semantic Web is used to describe web-pages, services, systems, etc.
• Neno is an object-oriented language that was designed specifically for the Semantic Web.
• Fhat is a virtual machine represented in the Semantic Web.
• With Neno/Fhat the Semantic Web now has a procedural component. The Semantic Web now includes object methods, algorithms, and computing machines.
• The Semantic Web can be made to behave like a distributed, general-purpose computer. Not just an information repository.
Libraries around the world have a long tradition of maintaining authority files to assure the consistent presentation and indexing of names. As library authority files have become available online, the authority data has become accessible -- and many have been published as Linked Open Data (LOD) -- but names in one library authority file typically had no link to corresponding records for persons and organizations in other library authority files. After a successful experiment in matching the Library of Congress/NACO authority file with the German National Library's authority file, an online system called the Virtual International Authority File was developed to facilitate sharing by ingesting, matching, and displaying the relations between records in multiple authority files.
The Virtual International Authority File (VIAF) has grown from three source files in 2007 to more than two dozen files today. The system harvests authority records, enhances them with bibliographic information and brings them together into clusters when it is confident the records describe the same identity. Although the most visible part of VIAF is a HTML interface, the API beneath it supports a linked data view of VIAF with URIs representing the identities themselves, not just URIs for the clusters. It supports names for person, corporations, geographic entities, works, and expressions. With English, French, German, Spanish interfaces (and a Japanese in process), the system is used around the world, with over a million queries per day.
Speaker
Thomas Hickey is Chief Scientist at OCLC where he helped found OCLC Research. Current interests include metadata creation and editing systems, authority control, parallel systems for bibliographic processing, and information retrieval and display. In addition to implementing VIAF, his group looks into exploring Web access to metadata, identification of FRBR works and expressions in WorldCat, the algorithmic creation of authorities, and the characterization of collections. He has an undergraduate degree in Physics and a Ph.D. in Library and Information Science.
A quick presentation to talk about the benefits of structured knowledge, focused on parallax & freebase, and how their knowledge representation fits into the wider scope of the semantic web.
SDA2013 Pundit: Creating, Exploring and Consuming AnnotationsMarco Grassi
This paper presents Pundit, a novel semantic web annotation tool, and demonstrates its use in producing structured data out of users annotations. Pundit allows communities of scholars to produce machine-readable annotations that can be made public and thus consumable as web data via SPARQL and ad-hoc REST APIs.
Pundit is highly configurable and can deployed in custom instances to include well-defined and agreed annotation vocabularies. Such instances can be distributed as bookmaklets to community users so they can create uniformly structured data in a certain application scenario. Basing on the provided APIs, some demonstrative applications have been developed, exploring different use scenarios, ranging from philosophy to journalism and cultural heritage.
The main aim of this paper is to demonstrate how such uniformly structured annotations can be quickly re-used on the web to make information discoverable or to visualize it in interesting ways.
Annual LIANZA / SLANZA Weekend School, held Nelson, New Zealand on 28 April, 2007. This keynote presentation explores the Web 2.0 world, and the 'possibilities' for libraries in a digitally networked world.
Open data is a crucial prerequisite for inventing and disseminating the innovative practices needed for agricultural development. To be usable, data must not just be open in principle—i.e., covered by licenses that allow re-use. Data must also be published in a technical form that allows it to be integrated into a wide range of applications. The webinar will be of interest to any institution seeking ways to publish and curate data in the Linked Data cloud.
This webinar describes the technical solutions adopted by a widely diverse global network of agricultural research institutes for publishing research results. The talk focuses on AGRIS, a central and widely-used resource linking agricultural datasets for easy consumption, and AgriDrupal, an adaptation of the popular, open-source content management system Drupal optimized for producing and consuming linked datasets.
Agricultural research institutes in developing countries share many of the constraints faced by libraries and other documentation centers, and not just in developing countries: institutions are expected to expose their information on the Web in a re-usable form with shoestring budgets and with technical staff working in local languages and continually lured by higher-paying work in the private sector. Technical solutions must be easy to adopt and freely available.
About the Webinar
In May 2012, the Library of Congress announced a new modeling initiative focused on reflecting the MARC 21 library standard as a Linked Data model for the Web, with an initial model to be proposed by the consulting company Zepheira. The goal of the initiative is to translate the MARC 21 format to a Linked Data model while retaining the richness and benefits of existing data in the historical format.
In this webinar, Eric Miller of Zepheira will report on progress towards this important goal, starting with an analysis of the translation problem and concluding with potential migration scenarios for a broad-based transition from MARC to a new bibliographic framework.
Neno/Fhat: Semantic Network Programming Language and Virtual Machine Specific...Marko Rodriguez
• The Semantic Web is a distributed, flexible modeling framework.
• The Semantic Web is primarily descriptive in nature. The Semantic Web is used to describe web-pages, services, systems, etc.
• Neno is an object-oriented language that was designed specifically for the Semantic Web.
• Fhat is a virtual machine represented in the Semantic Web.
• With Neno/Fhat the Semantic Web now has a procedural component. The Semantic Web now includes object methods, algorithms, and computing machines.
• The Semantic Web can be made to behave like a distributed, general-purpose computer. Not just an information repository.
Libraries around the world have a long tradition of maintaining authority files to assure the consistent presentation and indexing of names. As library authority files have become available online, the authority data has become accessible -- and many have been published as Linked Open Data (LOD) -- but names in one library authority file typically had no link to corresponding records for persons and organizations in other library authority files. After a successful experiment in matching the Library of Congress/NACO authority file with the German National Library's authority file, an online system called the Virtual International Authority File was developed to facilitate sharing by ingesting, matching, and displaying the relations between records in multiple authority files.
The Virtual International Authority File (VIAF) has grown from three source files in 2007 to more than two dozen files today. The system harvests authority records, enhances them with bibliographic information and brings them together into clusters when it is confident the records describe the same identity. Although the most visible part of VIAF is a HTML interface, the API beneath it supports a linked data view of VIAF with URIs representing the identities themselves, not just URIs for the clusters. It supports names for person, corporations, geographic entities, works, and expressions. With English, French, German, Spanish interfaces (and a Japanese in process), the system is used around the world, with over a million queries per day.
Speaker
Thomas Hickey is Chief Scientist at OCLC where he helped found OCLC Research. Current interests include metadata creation and editing systems, authority control, parallel systems for bibliographic processing, and information retrieval and display. In addition to implementing VIAF, his group looks into exploring Web access to metadata, identification of FRBR works and expressions in WorldCat, the algorithmic creation of authorities, and the characterization of collections. He has an undergraduate degree in Physics and a Ph.D. in Library and Information Science.
Semantic Web Technologies: Changing Bibliographic Descriptions?Stuart Weibel
Keynote presentation at the North Atlantic Health Science Library meeting, October 26, 2009.
An introduction to semantic web technologies and their relationship to libraries and bibliographic data.
Stuart Weibel, Senior Research Scientist, OCLC Research
Intelligent Expert systems can provide decisions for users for estimate from user preferences to find better destination from user profits. this present provides description of above system and suggest new approach for next researches.
Semantic - Based Querying Using Ontology in Relational Database of Library Ma...dannyijwest
The traditional Web stores huge amount of data in the form of Relational Databases (RDB) as it is good at
storing objects and relationships between them. Relational Databases are dynamic in nature which allows
bringing tables together helping user to search for related material across multiple tables. RDB are
scalable to expand as the data grows. The RDB uses a Structured Query Language called SQL to access
the databases for several data retrieval purposes. As the world is moving today from the Syntactic form to
Semantic form and the Web is also taking its new form of Semantic Web. The Structured Query of the RDB
on web can be a Semantic Query on Semantic Web.
Digital Libraries are the services of Web 1.0; with Next Generation Internet we will need digital libraries that will deliver both semantic and social services.
Reading group presentation on how TreeMaps can be used to browse various information spaces; this presentation introduces TagsTreeMap component as well (http://wiki.corrib.org/index.php/TagsTreeMap)
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.
Builder.ai Founder Sachin Dev Duggal's Strategic Approach to Create an Innova...Ramesh Iyer
In today's fast-changing business world, Companies that adapt and embrace new ideas often need help to keep up with the competition. However, fostering a culture of innovation takes much work. It takes vision, leadership and willingness to take risks in the right proportion. Sachin Dev Duggal, co-founder of Builder.ai, has perfected the art of this balance, creating a company culture where creativity and growth are nurtured at each stage.
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.
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.
Encryption in Microsoft 365 - ExpertsLive Netherlands 2024Albert Hoitingh
In this session I delve into the encryption technology used in Microsoft 365 and Microsoft Purview. Including the concepts of Customer Key and Double Key Encryption.
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.
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
Essentials of Automations: Optimizing FME Workflows with ParametersSafe Software
Are you looking to streamline your workflows and boost your projects’ efficiency? Do you find yourself searching for ways to add flexibility and control over your FME workflows? If so, you’re in the right place.
Join us for an insightful dive into the world of FME parameters, a critical element in optimizing workflow efficiency. This webinar marks the beginning of our three-part “Essentials of Automation” series. This first webinar is designed to equip you with the knowledge and skills to utilize parameters effectively: enhancing the flexibility, maintainability, and user control of your FME projects.
Here’s what you’ll gain:
- Essentials of FME Parameters: Understand the pivotal role of parameters, including Reader/Writer, Transformer, User, and FME Flow categories. Discover how they are the key to unlocking automation and optimization within your workflows.
- Practical Applications in FME Form: Delve into key user parameter types including choice, connections, and file URLs. Allow users to control how a workflow runs, making your workflows more reusable. Learn to import values and deliver the best user experience for your workflows while enhancing accuracy.
- Optimization Strategies in FME Flow: Explore the creation and strategic deployment of parameters in FME Flow, including the use of deployment and geometry parameters, to maximize workflow efficiency.
- Pro Tips for Success: Gain insights on parameterizing connections and leveraging new features like Conditional Visibility for clarity and simplicity.
We’ll wrap up with a glimpse into future webinars, followed by a Q&A session to address your specific questions surrounding this topic.
Don’t miss this opportunity to elevate your FME expertise and drive your projects to new heights of efficiency.
UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series, part 4DianaGray10
Welcome to UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series part 4. In this session, we will cover Test Manager overview along with SAP heatmap.
The UiPath Test Manager overview with SAP heatmap webinar offers a concise yet comprehensive exploration of the role of a Test Manager within SAP environments, coupled with the utilization of heatmaps for effective testing strategies.
Participants will gain insights into the responsibilities, challenges, and best practices associated with test management in SAP projects. Additionally, the webinar delves into the significance of heatmaps as a visual aid for identifying testing priorities, areas of risk, and resource allocation within SAP landscapes. Through this session, attendees can expect to enhance their understanding of test management principles while learning practical approaches to optimize testing processes in SAP environments using heatmap visualization techniques
What will you get from this session?
1. Insights into SAP testing best practices
2. Heatmap utilization for testing
3. Optimization of testing processes
4. Demo
Topics covered:
Execution from the test manager
Orchestrator execution result
Defect reporting
SAP heatmap example with demo
Speaker:
Deepak Rai, Automation Practice Lead, Boundaryless Group and UiPath MVP
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.
Generating a custom Ruby SDK for your web service or Rails API using Smithyg2nightmarescribd
Have you ever wanted a Ruby client API to communicate with your web service? Smithy is a protocol-agnostic language for defining services and SDKs. Smithy Ruby is an implementation of Smithy that generates a Ruby SDK using a Smithy model. In this talk, we will explore Smithy and Smithy Ruby to learn how to generate custom feature-rich SDKs that can communicate with any web service, such as a Rails JSON API.
Neuro-symbolic is not enough, we need neuro-*semantic*Frank van Harmelen
Neuro-symbolic (NeSy) AI is on the rise. However, simply machine learning on just any symbolic structure is not sufficient to really harvest the gains of NeSy. These will only be gained when the symbolic structures have an actual semantics. I give an operational definition of semantics as “predictable inference”.
All of this illustrated with link prediction over knowledge graphs, but the argument is general.
24. A Sample Bibliographic Record Copyright 2000 The J. Paul Getty Trust & College Art Association, Inc . Terms taken from Controlled Vocabularies Vincent van Gogh; painter: Gogh, Vincent van (Dutch painter, 1853-1890) Creation-Creator/Role J. Paul Getty Museum Current Location-Repository Name irises , nature , soil , etc. Subject-Matter 1889, earliest: 1889, latest: 1889 Creation-Date Irises Title paintings Object/Work type Paintings Classification
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36. Tutorial – Semantic Digital Libraries - Existing Semantic Digital Libraries Solutions - Sebastian R. Kruk , Bernhard Haslhofer, Philipp Nußbaumer , Sandy Payette, Tomasz Woroniecki
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38. Tutorial 7 – Semantic Digital Libraries - Existing Semantic Digital Libraries Solutions – JeromeDL Sebastian R. Kruk , Tomasz Woroniecki
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46. Bibliographic Description in JeromeDL <?xml version ="1.0" encoding ="UTF-8" ?> <rdf:Description rdf:about ="http://...id=828374765" > <dc:title> JeromeDL - Adding Semantic Web Technologies to DLs </dc:title> <dc:creator> Sebastian Kruk </dc:creator> <dc:description> In recent years... </dc:description> </rdf:Description> 01450cas 922004331i 450000100...019c19329999gw qr|p| ||||0 |0ger | a0044-2992 9a200412140219bVLOADc200404071525dvkulc200310071018dvbjc200303101205dkopumky200209211341zVLOAD aGD U/MPcGD U/MPdGD U/MFdGD U/KKsdWR O/EJ0 ager1 aZ. Kunstgesch. 0aZeitschrift für Kunstgeschichte00aZeitschrift für Kunstgeschichte.18aZfK aMünchen ;aBerlin :bDeutscher Kunstverlag,c1932-. c26-29 cm. aKwart.0 a1 Bd. (Juni 1932)-. aOpis na podst.: LCC. aW 1932 założycielami czasopisma byli Wilhelm Waetzoldt i Ernst Gall.... These all can be represented in RDF @ InProceedings { jeromedexa2005, author = "Sebastian Ryszard Kruk and ... ", title = "{JeromeDL - Adding Semantic ...}", booktitle = "{In Proceedings to DEXA 2005}", year = 2005}
80. Information Retrieval in JeromeDL Fulltext Index Structure Repository MarcOnt Repository Resources’ Content FOAFRealm Repository (typed) keywords RDF & NL Query OpenSearch RSS collaborative filtering types translation semantic query expansion RDF Repositories Secure Snapshot local interface distributed interface
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82. Tutorial – Semantic Digital Libraries - Existing Semantic Digital Libraries Solutions – BRICKS Bernhard Haslhofer University of Vienna Austria Philipp Nußbaumer Research Studios Austria
101. Tutorial – Semantic Digital Libraries - Existing Semantic Digital Libraries Solutions – Fedora Sandy Payette Director, Fedora Project Cornell University
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103. Fedora Semantic Digital Libraries enable … Scholarly and Scientific Workbenches “ Web 2.0” Collaborative Repositories Museum Exhibits with Lesson Plans Linking Data and Publications blog and wiki
113. Use Case: scholarly objects and annotation in the humanities musuem and library objects commercial web content scholarly objects URI-100 xx:recommends URI-55 yy:certifies
132. NSDL 2.0 – The Whole Ecosystem … Protocol: OAI-PMH HTTP REST NDR API STEM Collections Search Service Archive Service Fedora-based NDR
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134. Fedora Web Site: www.fedora.info Community Open Source Tools: www.fedora.info/tools Fedora Wiki: www.fedora.info/wiki Tutorial: : http://openarchives.org/fedora/ESWC-Fedora.zip
135. Tutorial – Semantic Digital Libraries - Comparison and the Future - Sebastian R. Kruk , Bernhard Haslhofer, Philipp Nußbaumer , Sandy Payette, Tomasz Woroniecki
150. System Features Comparison General Properties JeromeDL BRICKS Fedora OS Support Any Any Any Hardware Requirements 500MB RAM, min 128MB HD 500MB RAM, min 100MB HD 500MB RAM, min 100MB HD Software Requirements Java 1.5, Tomcat 5.5, Sesame Java 1.4/1.5, Jena Java 1.5, Tomcat, Kowari/Mulgara or MPTStore Current Stage Research Stable version 2.0.1 Second Prototype Production Version 2.2 No. Installations 12+ ~ 8 ~50 monitored; large # of downloads unmonitored Support Model Open Source Open Source Open Source
151. System Features Comparison Architectural Aspects JeromeDL BRICKS Fedora Distribution Distributed searching (P2P), aggregated browsing (hierarchical) Fully decentralized (P2P) federation via nameresolver search services; Alvis P2P Architecture Granularity Low (main building blocks) High (many Components) High (core repository service with configurable modules; loosely coupled services) DB - Support Any Sesame-compliant backend Any Jena compliant backend MySQL, Postgres, Oracle, McKoi; Kowari/Mulgara
152. System Features Comparison Content & Metadata Aspects JeromeDL BRICKS Fedora Content Types All All All Content Models JeromeDL ontology Any Any Metadata Schema MarcOnt + extensions Any RDF/S & OWL schema Any XML Schema, RDF/S & OWL schema Query types Full-text, Filed-Search, Ontology-based, NL Query Templates Full-text, Field-Search, Ontology-based (sparql) Field Search, Ontology-based (itql, rdql, sparql, spo), Full-Text (Lucene or Zebra backed service)
153. System Features Comparison Security & DRM Aspects JeromeDL BRICKS Fedora Security Model FOAFRealm RBAC XACML Policy Granularity Resource Component, Method, Object Object, Datastream, Dissemination method DRM Model Fair use DRM under development MPEG-21 REL DRM Datastreams DRM Enabling Tool Support Watermarking
154. System Features Comparison Semantic Aspects & Community Features JeromeDL BRICKS Fedora Reasoning Recommendation engine based on Prolog Configurable inference engine Holding pattern; look to Mulgara; Tagging Free tagging, Wordnet-based Annotation middleware component middleware/apps (e.g., NSDL/NDR; PLoSONE/Topaz) Taxonomies Any (JOnto) Any Any Knowledge Sharing SSCF component via middleware upon BRICKS via middleware upon Fedora Communities SIOC and FOAF compli a nce
161. Comparing Web 1.0 / Web 2.0 / Semantic Web 2.0 Semantic Social Networks Online Social Networks Buddy Lists, Address Books Semantic Social Information Spaces - - Social Semantic Digital Libraries Google Scholar, Book Search CiteSeer, Project Gutenberg Semantic Forums and Community Portals Community Portals Message Boards Semantic Blogs Blogs Personal Websites Semantic Search Google Personalised, DumbFind Altavista, Google Semantic Wikis Wikis Content Management Systems Semantic Web 2.0 Web 2.0 Web 1.0
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166. Discussion – Feedback The Librarian from Unseen University in Ankh-Morpork (formerly Dr. Horace Worblehat)