Re: Public semantic web applications

We recently got notification from an Apache Jena user that the Australian
government now has a series of large spatial datasets online in production.

They have chosen the Semantic GeoSpatial Web concept to publish their data
and have implemented the methodology with the Apache Jena Fuseki GeoSPARQL
blade.

"The data is significant: authoritative census counting geometries,
hydrological catchment areas and so on. The census spatial feature
collections are online at:"

https://asgs.linked.fsdf.org.au/dataset/asgsed3/collections

And so has the geo.admin.ch team c/o Coordinating Agency for Federal
Geographic Information (GCG), COGIS in Switzerland

https://www.geo.admin.ch/en/geo-services/geo-services/linkeddata.html


These are just a few examples here in the Semantic GeoSpatial Web domain
how things move forward albeit slowly.

Beyond that there have been two contacts at investment banks in New York
City in touch with me in recent weeks that did look for Linked Data talent
to pursue a Semantic Web strategy based on RDF stack tools. So it's not all
doom and gloom out there.

Best,
Marco



On Mon, Oct 10, 2022 at 10:54 AM Contact - Cogsonomy <contact@cogsonomy.fr>
wrote:

> Dear List,
>
> I have soon to present to companies the advantages of ontologies and
> semantic web. If I have many examples in the research and biomedical
> domains (e.g. referentials, interoperability, SPARQL endpoints...), I am
> asked to popularize and present it with examples accessible to people
> who are not specialists. The aim is to show and convince of the
> usefulness of our domain for people who only know Big Data.
>
> So, do you have some examples such as websites or concrete applications
> (companies) where we can see easily the advantage of semantic web and
> ontologies (e.g. https://www.orpha.net) ?
>
> Many thanks in advance,
>
> Best regards,
>
>               Xavier
>
>
>
>

-- 


---
Marco Neumann

Received on Monday, 10 October 2022 12:44:03 UTC