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  • Our author Germán Toro del Valle achieved 9 posts in January 2012.

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Posts Tagged ‘vocabularies’

Linked Open Vocabularies (LOV) by Mondeca

Thursday, March 31st, 2011

Linked Open VocabularyThe LOV dataset contains the description of RDFS vocabularies or OWL ontologies defined for and used by datasets in the Linked Data Cloud. Whenever available each vocabulary includes references to the datasets using it, in particular those listed in CKAN. The descriptions use in particular the VOAF vocabulary to state different ways such vocabularies can rely on, extend, specify, annotate or otherwise link to each other, and reuse a lot of vocabularies it describes, such asDublin Core, voiD, BIBO, and many more.

Clicking on the vocabulary’s namespaces (including the balloons), the user can navigate the vocabularies and get further information about them.

You can find all the information at http://labs.mondeca.com/dataset/lov/index.html

Author: Germán Toro del Valle, Telefónica Investigación y Desarrollo
Tags: initiative, linked-data, ontologies, vocabularies
Posted in Related initiatives | No Comments »

HyperTwitter: weaving a Web of linked data, tweet by tweet

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

HyperTwitter allows users to consolidate or relate pairs of:

  • Twitter hashtags,
  • user IDs, and
  • arbitrary URIs.

by a simple yet powerful syntax. For example, users can easily state that two hashtags mean the same:

#muenchen = #munich

The Hypertwitter application can extract and interpret such special tweets (Twitter messages) for two purposes, namely:

  1. To expand your queries / search in Twitter (e.g. turn a query for tweets containing #muenchen into those also containing #munich), and
  2. to create an RDF graph of all such statements for usage in other Web applications.

Now, given the millions of Twitter users, this could naturally lead to chaos, so there are two a simple yet effective ways to control which subset of statements should be considered:

  1. Just use your own tweets.
  2. Create a new public or private Twitter list that contains all users whose tweets you want us to consider. We call the list used for HyperTwitter the “trust list”.

In the simplest form, you will just trust your own statements, so you would use your Twitter ID without a list.

You can find all the information at http://semantictwitter.appspot.com/.

Author: Germán Toro del Valle, Telefónica Investigación y Desarrollo
Tags: hashtags, initiative, NLP, twitter, vocabularies
Posted in Related initiatives | No Comments »

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