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Ontology tools resources. Inquirer Home Page. We mourn the loss of Philip Stone who died on January 31st, 2006, and we dedicate the continuation of this site to his memory. Established as the home website for the General Inquirer, a computer-assisted approach for content analyses of textual data, the site is designed to be a resource for learning about the Inquirer as well as a reference in using the Inquirer. For a copy of the "Strengths Compared" powerpoint presented at the Positive Psychology Conference, click here for the web version and here for the power point file to download. A note on email contact. You may contact Roger Hurwitz with questions about access to the General Inquirer (rhhu@csail.mit.edu) A reminder in the original page still holds true: please put "Inquirer" as the first word in any email you send to Roger. Demonstration Access The NSF-Sponsored "WebUse" project at the University of Maryland, developed by John Robinson and his staff, provides an opportunity to try out the General Inquirer on text you supply.

Pointers to Internet resources. Computer Content Analysis Programs. Web Data Mining, book by Bing Liu. SVM-Light Support Vector Machine. EuroWordNet:Building a multilingual database with wordnets for several European languages. Building a multilingual database with wordnets for several European languages. EuroWordNet was a European resources and development project supported by the Human Language Technology sector of the Telematics Applications Programme (also see the description of all the funded projects ). Project Reference number: Application Area: Language Resources, Language Engineering Start Date: March 1996 End Date: June 1999 EuroWordNet is a multilingual database with wordnets for several European languages (Dutch, Italian, Spanish, German, French, Czech and Estonian). The EuroWordNet project was completed in the summer of 1999.

The cooperative framework of EuroWordNet is continued through the Global WordNet Association. Further Contents: Building an MGrammar-based application for Famulus. At the 2008 Microsoft eScience Workshop, Alex Wade and I presented a tutorial on Famulus. The video recording is not yet online but you can download the slides. The tutorial was mostly filled with demos so you should check out the recording when it becomes available. Alex and I showed how Famulus could be used with the ecosystem of Microsoft technologies in order to easily create tools and services for repository-related solutions.

Visual Studio, ASP.NET, Silverlight, WPF, ADO.NET Data Services… the tutorial had everything :-) We even showed how one could create a Web page with a data grid control in order to display resources in the repository (the main point was that we didn’t have to write a single line of code). Everything was built on top of the Beta 1 release of Famulus. One demo in particular was built using Oslo’s MGrammar since I wanted to experiment with some of the Oslo suite of technologies. The Famulus Console is a textual, interactive application over the Famulus store.