- From: Kingsley Idehen <kidehen@openlinksw.com>
- Date: Thu, 31 Jan 2008 09:34:00 -0500
- CC: W3C SWEO IG <public-sweo-ig@w3.org>
All, Linkedata planet is an upcoming conference that will be dealing with a range of topics that fall into the data portability space. Here is the call for papers announcement: LinkedData Planet (http://www.linkedataplanet.com) June 17-18, 2008 New York City, New York Come share your expertise with linked data and semantic technologies and learn from others at LinkedData Planet in New York City (June 17-18, 2008). In creating the modern generation of enterprise and web applications, we typically integrate information from multiple sources. Relating data from disparate sources presents a challenge of deriving information. However, semantic tools and technologies are evolving that enable us to understand information derived by linking data from different sources, including data from applications, databases, ontologies and content management systems. Semantic technologies and tools support techniques such as tagging online information to make it more readily accessible for data integration. This makes it easier to understand data in relation to other data, even if some of this data is inside your firewall, some is in a business partner's system, and some is part of the growing collection of useful publicly available data on the web. LinkedData Planet provides insights into those technologies that enable us to: * connect data contained in silos within organizations in a meaningful way *extract and correlate data from web sites and databases for purposes such as analyzing trends and decision support, customer and vendor relationship management, and social networking. The concept of linked data is gaining mindshare with developers, users and the more than 200 software companies developing semantic tools. A community including architects, developers and web builders is advancing the evolution of the World Wide Web from "linked documents" to a web of "linked data". Organizations such as Adobe, Google, OpenLink Software, Oracle, SAP, the W3C and the grassroots Linking Open Data community have provided technology and thought leadership during the embryonic stages of this transition. Semantic technology has gained traction in the enterprise and linked data is accessible via the web. Notable examples include DBpedia, the Zoominfo search engine, the Bambora travel recommendation site, social networking sites, semantic web services and SPARQL query language and protocol- compliant servers and data management systems. There are also linked data browsers and a growing number of sites exposing machine-readable data using micro-formats, RDFa, and GRDDL. Linked Data Planet sessions will cover topics such as: * Retrieval technologies: XQuery, SPARQL, and SQL * Middleware: SQL-RDF mapping, GRDDL, RDFa, and other RDF data converters (RDFizers) * Tools, RDF browsers, linked data search engines, publishing tools * Open & Portable Data * Ontologies and OWL * Semantic web services * Exploiting social networking technology * Combining data from SQL databases, GIS and content management systems The LinkedData Planet audience will include system architects, enterprise architects, web site designers, software developers, consultants and technical managers, all looking to learn more about linking the growing collection of available data sources and technologies to get more value from their data for their organizations. Interested speakers should submit a proposal online rather than send a paper proposal. We are interested in proposals for one hour technical education presentations. Please do not propose a marketing-oriented session or product pitch. The deadline for speaker submissions is Friday, February 15, 2008. When: June 17-18, 2008 Where: Roosevelt Hotel 45 E 45th St New York, New York 10017 Conference producer: Jupitermedia Corporation Co-chairs: Bob DuCharme, Ken North -- Regards, Kingsley Idehen Weblog: http://www.openlinksw.com/blog/~kidehen President & CEO OpenLink Software Web: http://www.openlinksw.com
Received on Thursday, 31 January 2008 14:34:15 UTC