- From: Sean B. Palmer <sean@mysterylights.com>
- Date: Thu, 9 Nov 2000 23:45:27 -0000
- To: "Kurt Cagle" <cagle@olywa.net>, "Aaron Swartz" <aswartz@swartzfam.com>
- Cc: <www-rdf-interest@w3.org>, <www-talk@w3.org>, "Ken Levy" <klevy@xmlfund.com>
Double reply: [1] To Kurt Cagle, [2] To Aaron Swartz > A weather report is easy to > encode, because there is a fairly limited vocabulary, but such a semantic > editor could also work in the opposite direction -- a user can add an item > to the set of rules simply by selecting the text in question, assigning it > to a specific encoding tag (or defining a new tag if the editor is in schema > generation mode), and storing it (or editing it as a regex). In this manner, > you could add semantic content very easily. [1] A rule, in it's own namespace, is a good way of getting the mechanism moving: i.e. to accomplish rule based processing. The whole point of a Semantic Web is that everything is findable in a very simple process: or so the theory goes. Therefore, in information terms, nothing should be beyond it. I hope everyone follows: the old Web constraints do not apply to the SW, we are working on a different system, no matter how much it resembles, and indeed evolves from. Of course I am only talking about the *aim* there, real life will probably be very different. Theory vs. Practise etc. > I bet -- looks like an AI-complete problem to me, at least for the general > case. Specific cases could be done with really complex heuristics, but > that'd be rather hairy. I'd love for this to work, but all I see you doing > is offloading the English parsing to the writer, rather than the reader. > You still need the software to parse the English. That's going to be really > hard to do, except in perhaps really specific cases. Certainly, it'll be a lot > harder to write than your average HTML editor! [2] English is just a complicated programming language. At the end of the day it is still processable, if not quite as easy as SGML/XML systems. With rules etc., it will be made easier. It's not really AI: just a very very complex system, that looks like AI. (There's a quote in there from someone I think). We are dealing with Engliah as a language, and as an information resource. The SW will help to break down that invisible barrier. Kindest Regards, Sean B. Palmer ---------------------------------------------------- The Semantic Web: A Resource - http://xhtml.waptechinfo.com/swr/ WAP Tech Info - http://www.waptechinfo.com/ Mysterylights.com - http://www.mysterylights.com/ ---------------------------------------------------- "The Internet; is that thing still around?" - Homer J. Simpson
Received on Thursday, 9 November 2000 18:46:25 UTC