You are hereExplorer's Guide to the Semantic Web

Explorer's Guide to the Semantic Web


Written for developers and programmers, this guide acquaints users with the basic technologies and their interrelations that will be instrumental in the development of the Semantic Web. Key technology areas are covered, such as knowledge modeling (RDF, Topic Maps), agents (DAML, FIPA), and Trust and Authentication.

This broad introduction takes a basic conceptual approach so that developers and programmers with a wide range of backgrounds understand the essential nature of the Semantic Web, how it works, and which technologies are being used or proposed for the Semantic Web’s development. Important points are illustrated with diagrams and code fragments to help develop a familiarity with the latest Semantic Web initiatives.

About the Author:

Thomas Passin is principal systems engineer at Mitretek Systems, a nonprofit systems and information engineering firm. He has been involved in data modeling and created several complex database-backed web sites and has also became engaged in a range of conceptual modeling approaches and graphical modeling technologies. He was a key member of a team that developed several demonstration XML-based web service applications, and worked on creating XML versions of draft standards originally written in ASN.1. He is the coauthor of Signal Processing in C. He lives in Reston, Virginia.

Table of Contents

1. The Semantic Web?
2. Description data with RDF
3. Navigation information with topic maps
4. Annotation
5. Searching
6. The role of logic
7. Ontology
8. Semantic Web services
9. Agents
10. Distributed trust and belief
11. Putting it all together
12. Appendix Case studies

Quelle: http://www.lob.de/cgi-bin/work/suche?stich1=1932394206&flag=int