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March 2007

A Smarter Web

Continued from page 3

By John Borland

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This idea resonated with other Web researchers, and in the late 1990s it began to bear fruit. Its first major result was the Resource Description Framework (RDF), a new system for locating and describing information whose specifications were published as a complete W3C recommendation in 1999. But over time, proponents of the idea became more ambitious and began looking to the artificial­-­intelligence community for ways to help computers independently understand and navigate through this web of metadata.

Since 1998, researchers at W3C, led by Berners-Lee, had been discussing the idea of a "semantic" Web, which not only would provide a way to classify individual bits of online data such as pictures, text, or database entries but would define relationships between classification categories as well. Dictionaries and thesauruses called "ontologies" would translate between different ways of describing the same types of data, such as "post code" and "zip code." All this would help computers start to interpret Web content more efficiently.

In this vision, the Web would take on aspects of a database, or a web of databases. Databases are good at providing simple answers to queries because their software understands the context of each entry. "One Main Street" is understood as an address, not just random text. Defining the context of online data just as clearly--labeling a cat as an animal, and a veterinarian as an animal doctor, for example--could result in a Web that computers could browse and understand much as humans do, researchers hoped.

To go back to the Web-as-highway metaphor, this might be analogous to creating detailed road signs that cars themselves could understand and upon which they could act. The signs might point out routes, describe road and traffic conditions, and offer detailed information about destinations. A car able to understand the signs could navigate efficiently to its destination, with minimal intervention by the driver.

In articles and talks, Berners-Lee and others began describing a future in which software agents would similarly skip across this "web of data," understand Web pages' metadata content, and complete tasks that take humans hours today. Say you'd had some lingering back pain: a program might determine a specialist's availability, check an insurance site's database for in-plan status, consult your calendar, and schedule an appointment. Another program might look up ­restaurant reviews, check a map database, cross-reference open table times with your calendar, and make a dinner reservation.

At the beginning of 2001, the effort to realize this vision became official. The W3C tapped Miller to head up a new Semantic Web initiative, unveiled at a conference early that year in Hong Kong. Miller couldn't be there in person; his wife was in labor with their first child, back in Dublin. Miller saw it as a double birthday.

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Comments

  • Dewey
    james.c.robertson on 04/09/2007 at 2:53 PM
    Posts:
    1
    A gentle suggestion that OCLC (and librarians) aren't "obsessed with organizing and accessing information", but perhaps "dedicated" to it, instead.  The word "obsessed" reinforces a specific stereotype.
    Also, OCLC only took over ownership of the Dewey Decimal System in 1988.  While Dewey is still used widely in public library systems, most larger systems (like research libraries and universities) use the Library of Congress Classification System -- millions of books classified in the LC system are in the OCLC database.
    Rate this comment: 12345
  • Web Is Not Packaged Software
    jabailo on 06/16/2007 at 9:15 PM
    Posts:
    4
    Avg Rating:
    5/5
    The whole term "Web n.0" is based on naming conventions from packaged software in the 1980s (Word 2.0, Windows 3.11 ).    It's completely wrong for web and internet technologies.   There is no "release date" for these things -- they emerge.
    Rate this comment: 12345
  • very instresting
    ???? ????? ????? on 02/05/2008 at 12:27 AM
    Posts:
    1
    Very intresting article Thanks
    Rate this comment: 12345
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