Re: ANN: Semantic University - for learning the Semantic Web (now easier to use)

2012-10-11 Thread Lee Feigenbaum
Hi Phil, I don't really find the use cases you suggest particularly compelling. Perhaps you could explain them in a bit more detail? Searching -- we do some degree of traditional SEO, and the lessons generally show up very well on major search engines Sorting -- I'm not sure what would be s

Re: Reminder: CDS Telecon about to start

2012-10-11 Thread Matthias Samwald
The minutes of the CDS call are available at http://www.w3.org/2012/10/11-hcls-minutes.html Thanks to Bob Powers for scribing. - Matthias From: Matthias Samwald Sent: Thursday, October 11, 2012 5:00 PM To: public-semweb-lifesci@w3.org Subject: Reminder: CDS Telecon about to start Dear all

Re: ANN: Semantic University - for learning the Semantic Web (now easier to use)

2012-10-11 Thread Phillip Lord
I didn't ask for semantic web technologies (other than RSS which *might* be RDF). Adding any computational metadata would, surely, be a good thing. I do not understand why people deal with the web so unseriously as a publication media. Although, curiously, you do have minimal metatags on your ow

Reminder: CDS Telecon about to start

2012-10-11 Thread Matthias Samwald
Dear all, This is a reminder that the CDS teleconference is about to start right now. - Matthias

Re: ANN: Semantic University - for learning the Semantic Web (now easier to use)

2012-10-11 Thread Eric Miller
Just chiming in quickly here -- our web dev shop wouldn't automatically include any of the semantic web technologies in a standard site template. Like Lee, we haven't seen a compelling use case to do anything beyond well-formed code. For example, Meta tags haven't been part of our code standar

Re: ANN: Semantic University - for learning the Semantic Web (now easier to use)

2012-10-11 Thread Phillip Lord
I am a little surprised that you can't see use cases for adding computationally extractable metadata to your articles. Searching, sorting, mashing up, referencing and so on. RSS is a different point; ignoring it's "what's new" role, it happens to be a reasonable source for computational metadat