- From: Dan Brickley <danbri@danbri.org>
- Date: Wed, 09 Jul 2008 12:11:24 +0100
- To: Bijan Parsia <bparsia@cs.man.ac.uk>, Peter Ansell <ansell.peter@gmail.com>
- Cc: Richard Cyganiak <richard@cyganiak.de>, semantic-web at W3C <semantic-web@w3c.org>, public-lod@w3.org
Bijan Parsia wrote:
> On Jul 9, 2008, at 1:48 AM, Peter Ansell wrote:
> [snip]
>> For the record, I am not trying to flame anyone, just trying to tease
>> out usable alternatives,
>
> Then I would suggest not claiming that the people you are disputing with
> are out of touch, unrealistic, fuddy-duddys.
I probably introduced that theme into the conversation; sorry about that.
I wrote "Call me old fashioned, but owl:sameAs means what it means as
defined in the OWL specs." in
http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/semantic-web/2008Jul/0139.html
In http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/semantic-web/2008Jul/0146.html
Peter writes:
> Sorry, just trying to highlight the fact that a core group of semantic
> type academics don't want to acknowledge or provide alternatives for a
> gap which could, if warnings about not using owl:sameAs liberally are
> real, actually break down the whole idea when one wants to move from
> their little local ontology to a distributed semantic web.
Peter, I hope you can see how this kind of language might be unhelpful.
In particular, stereotyping people as "academics" does nothing to
further the collaboration that is essential to getting this semweb stuff
rolled out. There is no shame in being academic or scholarly around
here. Nor in reading books. Nor for that matter in working for a company.
I am also puzzled by the claim that it is the duty of this "core group
of semantic type academics" to define the desired mapping language. We
put a *lot* of effort into building a decentralised system here. Anyone
can go and write up some new vocabulary.
Members of this mailing list (including Bijan and 100s of others) have
varied experience working in academic, commercial, standards, opensource
and many other settings. Reducing each other to one-dimensional
stereotypes (the "ivory tower professor" etc.) does a huge disservice to
the wealth of experience we have on this mailing list. Please do not do
it. Acting like schoolkids is also a questionable use of bandwidth. Even
when funny...
This project (W3C RDF, OWL etc aka the 'Semantic Web' project) did not
come from academia, it came originally from an industry-oriented
standards body, addressing requirements drawing on content labelling,
digital library and Webby activities through a technology (essentially
MCF) that was submitted to W3C by a browser company, but which had
intellectual heritage in the KR world. Which might go some way to
explaining the eclectic salad of people, technology and ideas around
here, and some of the communication challenges we face.
Strong interest from the academic world came a few years into the RDF/SW
project. But if you look at the people involved they have often been
crossovers between a variety of worlds. RDF and OWL are without a doubt
stronger, more robust and more ('realworld'-)deployable because of the
contributions of people you might call "academic". Book-reading types.
The version of RDF that shipped in 1999 was something of a mess: the
spec was intriguing and evocative, but hard to understand and implement.
Being poetically evocative is not something you generally want in an
engineering spec. The specs we have now (and the addition of OWL) are
some improvement on that, largely due to the collaboration we built
between people from this list and nearby. Which is why I'll make a fuss
if I see listmembers slip into stereotyping and cartoonish tribalism. We
can do better...
cheers,
Dan
--
http://danbri.org/
Received on Wednesday, 9 July 2008 11:12:10 UTC