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Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Notes for Educators: AMA Teaching Methods
- Chapter 1 Collaborative Engineering
- Chapter 2 Software Architecture and Integration Technologies
- Chapter 3 From a Specific Task to “Integration-Ready” Components
- Chapter 4 Integration with Voice
- Chapter 5 An Introduction to Knowledge Technologies
- Chapter 6 Write Once
- Chapter 7 The New Generation of Client–Server Software
- Chapter 8 Wireless Technologies
- Chapter 9 Programming Wireless Application Protocol Applications
- Chapter 10 A Single JavaCard Identity Key for All Doors and Services
- Chapter 11 The J2ME Family
- Chapter 12 Speech Technologies on the Way to a Natural User Interface
- Chapter 13 Integration with Knowledge
- Chapter 14 Distributed Life in the JXTA and Jini Communities
- Appendix 1 Java and C#: A Saga of Siblings
- Appendix 2 XML and Web Services
- Appendix 3 Source Examples
- Index
Chapter 5 - An Introduction to Knowledge Technologies
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 August 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Notes for Educators: AMA Teaching Methods
- Chapter 1 Collaborative Engineering
- Chapter 2 Software Architecture and Integration Technologies
- Chapter 3 From a Specific Task to “Integration-Ready” Components
- Chapter 4 Integration with Voice
- Chapter 5 An Introduction to Knowledge Technologies
- Chapter 6 Write Once
- Chapter 7 The New Generation of Client–Server Software
- Chapter 8 Wireless Technologies
- Chapter 9 Programming Wireless Application Protocol Applications
- Chapter 10 A Single JavaCard Identity Key for All Doors and Services
- Chapter 11 The J2ME Family
- Chapter 12 Speech Technologies on the Way to a Natural User Interface
- Chapter 13 Integration with Knowledge
- Chapter 14 Distributed Life in the JXTA and Jini Communities
- Appendix 1 Java and C#: A Saga of Siblings
- Appendix 2 XML and Web Services
- Appendix 3 Source Examples
- Index
Summary
Knowledge is power. (Ipsa Scientia Potestas Est)
—Sir Francis Bacon (1561–1626), MeditationsOntology is a controlled, hierarchical vocabulary for describing a knowledge system or knowledge-handling methods.
This chapter is an introduction to a development paradigm in which software and knowledge engineering are integrated. As always happens on the other side of an economic crisis, a new set of skills will be required. A growing number of developers will actively use the knowledge technologies reviewed in this chapter.
The chapter starts by talking about fundamental standards that currently bridge ontology and engineering: the Resource Description Framework (RDF), the Semantic Web language DAML+OIL (DARPA Agent Markup Language + Ontology Inference Layer), Topic Maps concepts, and their XML Topic Maps (XTM) standard knowledge exchange format.
We'll continue with a brief overview of data-mining methods with coming Java support and eventually discuss the challenging topic of generic knowledge, not just knowledge of a specific business domain, expressed in natural language. The final part of the chapter describes OpenCyc, probably the most exciting knowledge instrument today, and provides examples of using the CycL language and OpenCyc engine in distributed knowledge systems.
I hope this chapter does not take you, my reader, by surprise. Integration-ready systems and collaborative engineering need and help create knowledge technologies, which create a very healthy cycle.
A customer with a computer and computer skills is still the main target for computerized services today.
Even when searching Google.com for a specific topic, you need to know the specific terms of the industry this topic belongs to.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Integration-Ready Architecture and DesignSoftware Engineering with XML, Java, .NET, Wireless, Speech, and Knowledge Technologies, pp. 151 - 193Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2004