Untangling Web Information
Ostracus writes "The next big stage in the evolution of the Internet, according to many experts and luminaries, will be the advent of the Semantic Web — that is, technologies that let computers process the meaning of Web pages instead of simply downloading or serving them up blindly. Microsoft's acquisition of the semantic search engine Powerset earlier this year shows faith in this vision. But thus far, little Semantic Web technology has been available to the general public. That's why many eyes will be on Twine, a Web organizer based on semantic technology that launches publicly today."
First, before anything even really started, The Semantic Web was merely a pipe dream.
.... twice. And we were happy.
... the Semantic Web went mainstream and started getting real.
...
But that was the long long ago, so let's fast forward a few years. When its future looked most bleak, Sir Tim (who can summon fire and explosions at will) told us what to expect
Then a few years passed and nothing.
Until the 2006 World Wide Web conference made us suspicious of the Semantic Web. We spread rumors about the Semantic Web and told all the cooler technologies that the Semantic Web was just out to rape our privacy. So we challenged the Semantic Web. And claimed it would fail.
Just when I was expecting Sir Tim to get underneath a blanket & release a sobbing YouTube video of everyone being bastards for attacking The Semantic Web right when she was going through really tough times and that we should all just leave her alone
I've got no problem with people pushing technologies but this one sounds more like a soap opera than anything. Has the Semantic Web changed anything for anyone on Slashdot? I haven't seen anything directly if it has
My work here is dung.
as an "early adopter" all i can say is this is the most overhyped and pathetic bookmarking site i've seen in a while.
all it does is let you bookmark URLs (via the amazing tech of "bookmarklet"), and then print them URLs embedded in a lot of tags (awww, yeah, RDF, semantics-schemantics). if that is what the semantic web ought to be, thanks, but how about no.
i tried to upload a picture via their e-mail system from my phone. it was a jpeg with embedded location data. guess what I got -- I got an "item" classified as "attachment".
so, again, twine? how about no.
Indeed, <meta content="sex, porn, titties, hotties, clit, cunt, naked, nude">
Of course it's not really a porn site, but the site operator found that it gave him hits. My (admittedly limited) look at the "semantic web" shows no sign that it will be any less suceptable to being gamed.
Free Martian Whores!
All the semantic web gives you is the ability to layer a logical design over data. It's like a database design, except it's "open world", meaning there can be many different designs, it's up to the agent to pick the one it trusts, and it can't really make assumptions based on what it doesn't know.
The only inferences made are those that have been imagined by some human designer. And they might be very wrong , if the designer was wrong.
The "kinds" of inferences available are also pretty limited, like hierarchy or transitivity, or set membership. Useful, yes, but stepping stones...
-Stu
I worked at a big tech company doing SemWeb, where my experience was exactly the same. Everyone was scratching their head.
Now I've moved into Healthcare IT environment, where SemWeb makes perfect sense. Its like the best tool for the job.
The essential difference is what end of the stick you are picking up. The tech folks who are trying to shoe-horn RDF/OWL onto anything n everything (e.g. search) are failing. On the other hand, Healthcare/Life science folks who have to work with heavy knowledge intensive stuff, its working like a charm.
The SemWeb story is quite similar to Amazon Kindle.. wherein the tech folks are hating it whereas real users are all over it.. So it might seem like a failure to all you tech bozos.. but the domain experts are lovin' it.