Hello everybody,

I'm Francois Scharffe, PhD student at the Semantic Technology Institute in Innsbruck. I will graduate very soon and will join INRIA in Grenoble, France for a Postdoc as of the 1st of April (no joke !). My main interest is the alignment of ontologies and the integration of semantic data. I've been during my PhD studies developping a language for representing complex alignments between ontologies, as well as a library of patterns of correspondences between ontologies entities. More recently I've started to work on a system for matching RDF datasets. I'm interested in following the discussions of this group and to contribute whenever possible.

Cheers,
Francois


M. Scott Marshall wrote:
Several new people have joined HCLS IG http://www.w3.org/2001/sw/hcls/ lately. Welcome! We have a tradition of sending an Introduction so the mailing list to help participants get to know each other and find common interests. Would those of you who haven't yet done so please send an introduction to the list? The introductions to date are archived here (thanks to Duncan Hull's initiative): http://esw.w3.org/topic/Introductions

If you are new to HCLS IG, be sure to look at http://esw.w3.org/topic/HCLSIG. There you will find an overview of the group's task forces. Each task force meets either weekly or bi-weekly in a teleconference. Time and day of the week, as well as access instructions are on the main wiki page for each task force.

The use of IRC and Zakim (a teleconference bridge) help 'telcon' participants to more easily communicate and capture information. Below, you will find some information that will help you to make the most of our online teleconferences.

Best,
Scott

--------------------------------------------------------------------------

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IRC
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* If you do not have an IRC client installed on your computer, you can get one of the many free one (search "irc client" and your platform), or you can use a web-based client.

One possible web-based client you might try is Mibbit (http://www.mibbit.com/chat/). If you use mibbit, fill out the blanks like this: you need to click on "Server" (highlighted in red in attached image) to reveal the "Server address" field. NOTE: this meeting will use the "hcls" channel, NOT "hcls2" as seen in the attached screenshot.

(Note that I suggest using port 80 from mibbit. The W3C irc server supports this, and it neatly bypasses enterprise firewall issues that many users seem to be having with port 6667.)


+++++
Zakim
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Teleconferencing at the W3C is based on a customized telconferencing
system called Zakim [3][4]. Zakim is combined with IRC to facilitate a
meeting with a set of services including tracking of speaker queues,
registering names to caller's telephones, and generating transcripts of
the meeting.

Prior to the call, please either check that you can access Web IRC [5],
which requires a W3C login and password, or install and run an IRC
client program on the machine that you will use during the conference [6].

QuickView Guide to Zakim Commands

      IRC command        Touchtone    Description
----------------------------------------------------------------------
|  q+                   | 41#   | add me to the speaker's queue      |
|  q-                   | 40#   | remove me from the speaker's queue |
|  zakim, mute <name>   | 61#   | Mute my phone                      |
|  zakim, unmute <name> | 60#   | Unmute my phone                    |
----------------------------------------------------------------------

A few basic guidelines will help new participants in the Kickoff Telcon
to get off on the right foot:

Calling in
When you call in, please announce your name after the two tone beep that
marks entry to the meeting. Please mute your phone immediately after
announcing yourself. This will prevent background noise from entering
the shared audio for the teleconference.

Muting your phone
 From a touch tone phone, 61# Mutes and 60# unmutes. "zakim, mute
<name>" also works, as well as "zakim, unmute <name>". Don't forget to
unmute when it's your turn to speak!

Raising your hand to talk
 From IRC, the command is "q+", which places your IRC name on the queue.
41# is the touch tone equivalent. This system helps to ensure that
everyone gets a chance to speak. q- or 40# takes your name off the queue.

[1] http://esw.w3.org/topic/HCLSIG/
[2] http://esw.w3.org/topic/HCLSIG/Meetings/2008-06-12_Conference_Call
[3] http://www.w3.org/2001/12/zakim-irc-bot.html
[4] http://www.w3.org/2002/01/UsingZakim
[5] http://cgi.w3.org/member-bin/irc/irc.cgi
[6] http://www.w3.org/Project/IRC/#Client




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