Re: My Web Site Description in OWL

Hi Phil,

thank you very much for your answer and the suggestions on how to use 
POWDER for that.
Some comments inline:

Phil Archer wrote:
>
> Ah, an interesting one - and something we have grappled with before now.
>
> The problem is that, of course, at a network level there is no such 
> thing as a Web page, i.e. there's no way to say "if it's an element of 
> page x then infer fact y." You can really only do that in the browser.
>
> Actually OASIS ORE [1] might do what you want? 
I investigated OAI-ORE with respect to that and it partially does what I 
would like to do. Actually I worked on a model which is able to 
represent information about different resources and authors of them (the 
RICO model, see [1] for a presentation and [2] for a preliminary paper 
about it).
> But, what POWDER is really good at (indeed designed for) is... if you 
> include some sort of id in your image URIs - which might be in the 
> path or a query string, the you can say:
>
> <iriset>
>   <includehosts>example.com</includehosts>
>   <includepathstartswith>/images</includepathstartswith>
>   <includepathcontains>foo</includepathcontains>
> </iriset>
>
> And then associate all resources that match that URI structure with a 
> description (which can, of course, include authorship). You can create 
> as many Description Resources in a POWDER doc as you like, and we have 
> defaults as well, so you can say something like:
>
> If it's on example.com and the path starts with /foo then it's by Joe 
> Bloggs, but if it's anywhere else on example.com then it's by Jane 
> Smith. I give examples in XML but the GRDDL (XSLT) transform will get 
> you into RDF/OWL land (note the links in the blog rather than the WG 
> homepage for now).
>
> This may or may not help!
This is definitely of use for another application I am currently 
implementing. Actually your example can be immediately be implementable 
with Flickr for example which is nice (Flickr stores the images of each 
user in separate directories and provides URLs by which the contributor 
of an image can be identified) If I store images in a similar way the 
solution you suggest is of help for me. thanks!

Best regards,

Tobias

[2] 
http://www.sti-innsbruck.at/fileadmin/documents/researchseminar_ws0809/buerger.pdf
[3] 
http://ftp.informatik.rwth-aachen.de/Publications/CEUR-WS/Vol-417/paper1.pdf

>
> Phil.
>
> [1] http://www.openarchives.org/ore/
>
> Tobias Bürger wrote:
>>
>> Hi Phil,
>>
>> does POWDER also allow to state different creators for different 
>> resources (e.g. multiple images) in a web page? Think of a listing of 
>> a search result retrieved from Flickr in which you might want to 
>> refer to different creators....
>> I read the POWDER primer recently but could find any anwser to my 
>> question.
>>
>> Thank you in advance for your answer!
>>
>> Cheers,
>>
>> Tobias
>>
>> Phil Archer wrote:
>>>
>>> I'm grateful to David for making the connection here.
>>>
>>> Cristiano,
>>>
>>> POWDER may do just what you want. It allows you to apply, say, your 
>>> dcterms:creator property to every resource on your Web site in one 
>>> go, rather than resource by resource. It does this by applying 
>>> properties and value to all URIs that match your web site's domain 
>>> name (and/or any other restrictions you care to make). An XSLT will 
>>> transform a few lines of XML into OWL for you.
>>>
>>> The WG homepage is a little out of date but the documents linked 
>>> there are close to the final ones (let me know if you want the 
>>> temporary URIs of the more up to date versions). A blog post of mine 
>>> gives you (up to date) links to various bits of running code [1], 
>>> including that XSLT.
>>>
>>> If you prefer to communicate in Italian, POWDER WG Andrea Perego in 
>>> Varese is your man.
>>>
>>> Cheers
>>>
>>> Phil.
>>>
>>> [1] 
>>> http://www.w3.org/blog/powder/2009/01/16/situation_report_16_january_2009 
>>>
>>>
>>> Cristiano Longo wrote:
>>>> ehm ... no
>>>>
>>>> --- Lun 26/1/09, Booth, David (HP Software - Boston) 
>>>> <dbooth@hp.com> ha scritto:
>>>> Da: Booth, David (HP Software - Boston) <dbooth@hp.com>
>>>> Oggetto: RE: My Web Site Description in OWL
>>>> A: "cristiano_longo@yahoo.it" <cristiano_longo@yahoo.it>, 
>>>> "semantic-web@w3.org" <semantic-web@w3.org>
>>>> Data: Lunedì 26 gennaio 2009, 14:57
>>>>
>>>> Are you using POWDER?
>>>> http://www.w3.org/2007/powder/
>>>>  
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> David Booth, Ph.D.
>>>> HP Software
>>>> +1 617 629 8881 office  |  dbooth@hp.com
>>>> http://www.hp.com/go/software
>>>>
>>>> Statements made herein represent the views of the author and do not 
>>>> necessarily
>>>> represent the official views of HP unless explicitly so stated.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>  
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> ________________________________
>>>>
>>>>     From: semantic-web-request@w3.org 
>>>> [mailto:semantic-web-request@w3.org] On
>>>> Behalf Of Cristiano Longo
>>>>     Sent: Monday, January 26, 2009 6:17 AM
>>>>     To: semantic-web@w3.org
>>>>     Subject: My Web Site Description in OWL
>>>>             Hi, I'm trying to provide an rdf (preferably OWL) 
>>>> description of the
>>>> resources contained in my web site. At the higher level, a web site 
>>>> is a set of
>>>> web resources. RSS 1.0 may be a good starting point. It provides 
>>>> properties to
>>>> specify a title of a resource, an autor and the mime type. But I 
>>>> have two
>>>> questions :
>>>>         (1) I'm wrong if I use a Resource as target of the 
>>>> dc:creator property?
>>>>     (2) instead of string, there are uri's that represents media 
>>>> types?
>>>>         Then, i would like to say that the online resource contains 
>>>> information about
>>>> something. I think that seeAlso is not enough expressive.
>>>>         Suggestions?
>>>>         Thanks in advance,
>>>>     Cristiano Longo      
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>       
>>>
>>
>

-- 
_________________________________________________
Dipl.-Inf. Univ. Tobias Bürger

STI Innsbruck
University of Innsbruck, Austria
http://www.sti-innsbruck.at/ 

tobias.buerger@sti2.at
__________________________________________________ 

Received on Monday, 26 January 2009 15:45:59 UTC