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Aemoo. Aemoo supports exploratory search over the Web. Through a simple keyword-based search interface, users can query Aemoo about the linking network of any entity, which is collected by aggregating knowledge from diverse sources such as linked data, Wikipedia, Twitter, and Google News. We remark that Aemoo exploits all links existing in Wikipedia: DBpedia dataset based on the Wikipedia infoboxes is only 7% of such knowledge. Furthermore, it parses streams of data (currently Twitter and Google news), identifies additional links between entities, and allows the user to explore them by keeping the interaction homogeneous.

As soon as there is a link between two entities, Aemoo shows contextualized explanations of that link to the user. Knowledge aggregation is performed according to cognitively-sound principles through the exploitation of knowledge patterns: This has been rigorously evaluated with a user study. Case Study: Enhancement and Integration of Corporate Social Soft. Alexandre Passant, Electricité de France R&D and LaLIC, Université Paris-Sorbonne, France June 2008 General Description Introduction Electricité de France, the largest electricity company in France, recently introduced the use of social software within its R&D department, embracing the Enterprise 2.0 movement. Querying data across applications is not straightforward as different applications use different formats (database structure or output format) to model their data Knowledge created using wikis cannot be easily understood by computers.

The solution To solve these problems and offer new and value-added services to end-users, we developed a solution that uses Semantic Web technologies and relies on various components that act together and provide a mediation system between those services and the users. Since our first requirement was to provide a common and machine-readable model of meta-data for content from any service, we decided to that the model should be implemented in RDF.

Enterprise 2.0 2008 - What Is Enterprise 2.0? Enterprise 2.0 Evangelist. Enterprise social software. Enterprise 2.0 is "the use of emergent social software platforms within companies, or between companies and their partners or customers".[1] It aims to help employees, customers and suppliers collaborate, share, and organize information via Web 2.0 technologies. History[edit] Harvard Business School Professor Andrew McAfee coined the term "Enterprise 2.0" in 2006 to describe how the Web 2.0 "technologies could be used on organizations' intranet and extranets".[2] Common business capabilities[edit] Expertise location[edit] Expertise-location capability provides corporations with the ability to solve business problems that are difficult to articulate or communicate explicitly and that involve highly skilled people.

[citation needed] Dynamic people-profiles and -searches are increasingly[quantify] seen as integral components of a support environment that encourages unplanned collaboration and informal interactions as effective ways to solve business problems. Corporate blogging[edit]