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Atlas of Cyberspace - Full Content. Internet Mapping Project. "Internet Map": i siti del mondo in una mappa navigabile. Un progetto davvero interessante, quello realizzato da Ruslan Enikeev, autore della "Internet Map". Si tratta di un'iniziativa personale, senza scopo di lucro, l'autore chiede soltanto delle donazioni facoltative per tenere online il sito, altrimenti il suo progetto potrebbe presto scomparire. VUE - Map Based Searching and Semantic Analysis Screencast. Content Analyst Company Home Page.

E-Discovery Software, Services & Solutions - FTI Technology. Taxonomy software from innovation leader Synaptica. Taxonomy Warehouse: Software, Consultants, Events, Blogs & Books All About Taxonomies. Top 10 Semantic Web Products of 2010. Every year ReadWriteWeb selects the top 10 products or developments across a range of categories. We kick off the 2010 'Best Of' series with our selection of the top 10 Semantic Web products and implementations of the year. This year we've chosen 5 products by semantically charged startups and 5 implementations by large organizations. The startups represent the cutting edge of Semantic Web. Each has made an impact on the Internet this year, with user growth and innovation. The organizations we've selected - which include Facebook, Google and the BBC - offered the best examples of large scale deployment of semantic technology.

ReadWriteWeb's 2010 In Review: A note on terminology:we are using 'Semantic Web' and 'Semantic technology' somewhat interchangeably, although many people believe that the term Semantic Web (upper case) should only be applied to W3C-approved technologies such as RDF and SPARQL. Freebase In July Google acquired one of the leading Semantic Web companies, Metaweb. GetGlue. Semantic Web: What Is The Killer App? The Semantic Web has been in the making for some time and people think it is nearing maturity. We have written about this trend extensively, with our two most notable posts being an analysis of the challenges of the classic bottom-up approach and the promise of the new top-down one. Regardless of how the Semantic Web will come about, for it to flourish it needs to hit the mainstream. There is no way that consumers will appreciate the elegance and mathematical soundness of RDF and OWL.

People don't care about math, they care about utility and even more, about fun. What the Semantic Web needs, then, is a killer app. Whatever it is, it needs to layer an understanding of semantics on top of a consumer application. The consumer application needs to be so cool and so viral that people will be open to learning that it is powered by semantic technologies. In this post, we analyze several existing and potential applications of semantic technologies and look for the killer app.

Genie In The Bottle. Trend-Setting Products of 2011. In our September 2003 issue, we introduced the first list of trend-setting products. At the time, we thought sorting the products into specific categories-document management, business process management, enterprise search, content management, portals, smart enterprise suites, etc. -was appropriate, and we'd help bring order to the landscape. But even then the lines were blurring, of course, so we abandoned that strategy in 2004.

They are even more blurry now. The juggernaut of consolidation keeps charging along, so what were single-point solutions a decade ago now include a broad spectrum of capabilities. For this year's list, the judging panel of colleagues, analysts, system integrators and users evaluated more than 800 products. As in years past, assembling the list involves a yearlong collaborative effort that culminates with a series of conference calls to finalize the list that follows.

Altep: Inspicio-document review platform capable of providing access to any document type. A Day in the Life of the Internet [INFOGRAPHIC] The Internet is, by most scientific estimates, friggin' huge. While only about one-third of the world's population is connected, the amount of data we generate and consume is likely to blow your hair back.

Perhaps the best way to put all those petabytes in perspective is to look at what goes down in a single day. How much "stuff" happens on the Internet every 24 hours? Would you believe that 294 billion emails are sent? That 2 million blog posts are written? That 864,000 hours of video are uploaded to YouTube alone? How am I supposed to watch all of that when I'm only on season one of Downton Abbey? SEE ALSO: 10 Reasons Twitter Is Sexier Than Facebook The infographic below, courtesy of MBAonline.com, breaks it down even further. Image courtesy of iStockphoto, iPandastudio. Web Target - web marketing magazine. London Web Summit 2012, Seedrs vince tra le start up.