Synopses & Reviews
With this book, the promise of the Semantic Web -- in which machines can find, share, and combine data on the Web -- is not just a technical possibility, but a practical reality Programming the Semantic Web demonstrates several ways to implement semantic web applications, using current and emerging standards and technologies. You'll learn how to incorporate existing data sources into semantically aware applications and publish rich semantic data.
Each chapter walks you through a single piece of semantic technology and explains how you can use it to solve real problems. Whether you're writing a simple mashup or maintaining a high-performance enterprise solution,Programming the Semantic Web provides a standard, flexible approach for integrating and future-proofing systems and data.
This book will help you:
- Learn how the Semantic Web allows new and unexpected uses of data to emerge
- Understand how semantic technologies promote data portability with a simple, abstract model for knowledge representation
- Become familiar with semantic standards, such as the Resource Description Framework (RDF) and the Web Ontology Language (OWL)
- Make use of semantic programming techniques to both enrich and simplify current web applications
Synopsis
Stuck in the theory stage for years, semantic web technology is finally emerging in practice. This book explains how you can make use of semantic programming techniques to enrich and simplify your web applications, with real code examples you can use immediately. Programming the Semantic Web sorts through semantic standards and software, focusing on the technologies and patterns you'll find most useful in today's web programming environments. Each chapter takes you through a single piece of semantic technology, showing how you can use it to solve real problems, such as incorporating data sources into semantically aware applications. This book is one of the few resources available on the practical applications of semantic web.
Synopsis
Stuck in the theory stage for years, semantic Web technology is finally emerging in practice. This book explains how to make use of these programming techniques in order to enrich and simplify Web applications.
Synopsis
Build Flexible Applications with Graph Data
About the Author
Toby Segaran is the author of "Programming Collective Intelligence", a very popular O'Reilly title. He was the founder of Incellico, a biotech software company later acquired by Genstruct. He currently holds the title of Data Magnate at Metaweb Technologies and is a frequent speaker at technology conferences.
Colin Evans combines machine learning and semantic analysis into a deadly one-two punch against information entropy and noisy data. The results of his efforts appear as millions of facts in Freebase. Prior to joining Metaweb, Colin helped users organize their world through his work on the IRIS semantic desktop project at SRI.
Jamie Taylor started one of the first ISPs in San Francisco while developing an Internet laboratory for studying economic equilibria. His goal was to get a better connection at home. He finally got a real job as CTO at DETERMINE Software (now a part of Selectica) helping create order in the unstructured world of Enterprise contract management. He is now helping to organize the world's structured information at Metaweb where he oversees data operations.
Table of Contents
Foreword; Preface; Conventions Used in This Book; Using Code Examples; Safari® Books Online; How to Contact Us; Semantic Data; Chapter 1: Why Semantics?; 1.1 Data Integration Across the Web; 1.2 Traditional Data-Modeling Methods; 1.3 Semantic Relationships; 1.4 Metadata Is Data; 1.5 Building for the Unexpected; 1.6 "Perpetual Beta"; Chapter 2: Expressing Meaning; 2.1 An Example: Movie Data; 2.2 Building a Simple Triplestore; 2.3 Merging Graphs; 2.4 Adding and Querying Movie Data; 2.5 Other Examples; Chapter 3: Using Semantic Data; 3.1 A Simple Query Language; 3.2 Feed-Forward Inference; 3.3 Searching for Connections; 3.4 Shared Keys and Overlapping Graphs; 3.5 Basic Graph Visualization; 3.6 Semantic Data Is Flexible; Standards and Sources; Chapter 4: Just Enough RDF; 4.1 What Is RDF?; 4.2 The RDF Data Model; 4.3 RDF Serialization Formats; 4.4 Introducing RDFLib; 4.5 SPARQL; Chapter 5: Sources of Semantic Data; 5.1 Friend of a Friend (FOAF); 5.2 Linked Data; 5.3 Freebase; Chapter 6: What Do You Mean, "Ontology"?; 6.1 What Is It Good For?; 6.2 An Introduction to Data Modeling; 6.3 Just Enough OWL; 6.4 Using Protégé; 6.5 Just a Bit More OWL; 6.6 Some Other Ontologies; 6.7 This Is Not My Beautiful Relational Schema!; Chapter 7: Publishing Semantic Data; 7.1 Embedding Semantics; 7.2 Dealing with Legacy Data; 7.3 RDFLib to Linked Data; Putting It into Practice; Chapter 8: Overview of Toolkits; 8.1 Sesame; 8.2 Other RDF Stores; 8.3 SIMILE/Exhibit; Chapter 9: Introspecting Objects from Data; 9.1 RDFObject Examples; 9.2 RDFObject Framework; 9.3 How RDFObject Works; Chapter 10: Tying It All Together; 10.1 A Job Listing Application; 10.2 Job Listing Data; 10.3 Serving the Website; 10.4 A Generic Viewer; 10.5 Getting Company Data; 10.6 Specialized Views; 10.7 Publishing for Others; 10.8 Expanding the Data; 10.9 Sophisticated Queries; 10.10 Visualizing the Job Data; 10.11 Further Expansion; Epilogue; Chapter 11: The Giant Global Graph; 11.1 Vision, Hype, and Reality; 11.2 Participating in the Global Graph Community; 11.3 Bracing for Continuous Change; Colophon;