- From: Daniel W. Connolly <connolly@beach.w3.org>
- Date: Fri, 17 Nov 1995 11:10:31 -0500
- To: davidmsl@anti.tesi.dsi.unimi.it (Davide Musella)
- Cc: kmm@w3.org, dsr@w3.org, khare@w3.org, hallam@w3.org
- Cc: www-html@w3.org
I'd like to point out that this thread has escaped the bounds of HTML, and has become a discussion of knowledge representation in general. It happens quite a bit. Much of the value of HTML is its ability to capture and represent knowledge in an informal or semi-formal way. But folks often run into the boundaries of its expressive capability, and look for ways out. The META tag is intended for experiments on the edge of HTML's expressive capability. I haven't seen "the answer" to this problem that I'd like to standardize. The point of my message is to encourage those of you who are seriously interested in this topic to become familiar with the existing work in the field: both the traditional library science cataloging (sp?) stuff, and the more wigged-out AI knowledge representation stuff. Reading the background literature will show just how interesting and complex this problem is. Hmm... maybe that's not 100% a good thing: the web was largely built by folks who didn't know enough realize that it couldn't be done :-) At W3C, our notes on the subject area are kept at: "Collaboration, Knowledge Representation and Automatability" http://www.w3.org/pub/WWW/Collaboration/ Last updated 07 Nov 1995 This stuff is also intimately related to naming and addressing, which see: WWW Names and Addresses, URIs, URLs, URNs, URCs http://www.w3.org/pub/WWW/Addressing/ $Id: Overview.html,v 1.2 1995/07/28 22:23:04 connolly Exp $ In particlar, I'd like to point out the work by Daniel LaLiberte at NCSA, Stu Weibel at OCLC, and others: http://union.ncsa.uiuc.edu:80/HyperNews/get/www/URCs.html I keep some notes on a related theme, "Resource Discovery and Reliable Links" at: http://www.w3.org/pub/WWW/People/Connolly/drafts/citations.html In particular, please check out Harvest: http://rd.cs.colorado.edu/harvest/ and the ARPA knowledge sharing initiative: ARPA Knowledge Sharing Effort public library http://www-ksl.stanford.edu/knowledge-sharing/ Fri Oct 7 17:30:19 1994 and the work by Martin Roscheisen Christian Mogensen at stanford on BRIOS: http://www-pcd.stanford.edu/ANNOT_DOC/ Dan
Received on Friday, 17 November 1995 11:10:55 UTC