Wednesday, 28. June 2006

winfs plans change

some say WinFS is dead but who knows, according to the blog post by some Microsoft dude, it is changing plans.

So if you want a semantic file system, join SemFS!

http://semfs.ontoware.org/

yes, we hope that SemFS will integrate with Nepomuk.
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Thursday, 22. June 2006

net neutrality - timbl

Tim Berners Lee blogged on Net Neutrality, click the links, get informed:

blog by Tim Berners Lee
video message

here is the whole message:

When I invented the Web, I didn't have to ask anyone's permission.
Now, hundreds of millions of people are using it freely.
I am worried that that is going end in the USA.

I blogged on net neutrality before, and so did a lot of other people.
(see e.g. Danny Weitzner, SaveTheInternet.com, etc.)
Since then, some telecommunications companies spent a lot of money
on public relations and TV ads, and the US House seems to have
wavered from the path of preserving net neutrality. There has been
some misinformation spread about. So here are some clarifications.
(

real video
Mpegs to come
)

Net neutrality is this:

If I pay to connect to the Net with
a certain quality of service, and you pay to connect with that
or greater quality of service, then we can communicate at that level.
That's all. Its up to the ISPs to make sure they interoperate so that
that happens.

Net Neutrality is NOT asking for the internet for free.

Net Neutrality is NOT saying that one shouldn't pay more money for high quality of service.
We always have, and we always will.

There have been suggestions that we don't need legislation because
we haven't had it. These are nonsense, because in fact we have had
net neutrality in the past -- it is only recently that real explicit
threats have occurred.

Control of information is hugely powerful.
In the US, the threat is that companies control what I can access for commercial reasons.
(In China, control is by the government for political reasons.)
There is a very strong short-term incentive for a company
to grab control of TV distribution over the Internet
even though it is against the long-term interests of the industry.

Yes, regulation to keep the Internet open is regulation.
And mostly, the Internet thrives on lack of regulation.
But some basic values have to be preserved.
For example, the market system depends on the rule that you can't photocopy money.
Democracy depends on freedom of speech.
Freedom of connection, with any application, to any party, is
the fundamental social basis of the Internet, and, now, the society based on it.

Let's see whether the United States is capable as acting according to its
important values, or whether it is, as so many people are saying,
run by the misguided short-term interested of large corporations.

I hope that Congress can protect net neutrality, so I can
continue to innovate in the internet space. I want to
see the explosion of innovations happening out there on the Web,
so diverse and so exciting, continue unabated.

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Monday, 19. June 2006

weird things to put on your blog

for example: how leo are you?


You are 67% Leo
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Sunday, 4. June 2006

how germans see the world - a big soccer ball

Dazzled by the craze for the soccer wm in Germany, I was wondering what to do with soccer. Then, yesterday night it struck me and I knew: the world is a soccer ball! We are living on a big leather ball, floating through space.

how soccer fans view the world

So behold: the ultimate Google Earth hack: The world is a soccer ball!

Click to see yourself (you need to have installed Google Earth first):
howgermansseetheworld.kml

The full story:
a KML overlay for google earth, created in painstaking work by Leo Sauermann,

This is how many people view the world these days. It is the biggest soccer ball that has ever been sighted. yes, very big, even bigger then the one spotted by Google previously.

How this was done?

First of all, it is important to know what a soccer ball is. A soccer ball is a "cut-away icosaeder". I read some details this webpage:
mathematische-basteleien.de/fussball.htm.
Then I looked for a way to model it in KML. As I have never done KML before, I had to look for tutorials and docu first.
Ok, the easiest way is to assume the center of the world as center of the soccer ball.
I needed the coordinates of the corner-points, these I found in a Java snippet that creates a rotating soccer ball.
This snippet of java helped me.
I copied the code and fumbled around for three hours until I could convert the xyz coordinates to lat/lon coordinates.
Also, Google Earth gave me headaches as it discriminates on polygons, if you draw then clockwise or counter-clockwise the color gets changes
(argh! And I thought my stlye was wrong).
After the corner-coordinates were setup, I created a KML file with the corners numbered.
Then I had to find all six-corner and five-corner objects and added them to an array.
Finally, I added all real soccer stadiums for the WM
and the previous biggest soccer ball
to the KML, as sugar on top - for you users.
Still open is how to put the FIFA logo on the ball...
enjoy, if you have questions:
leo@gnowsis.com
Leo Sauermann 2006

Sources

The source code and all needed to go on is on my homepage:
soccer.zip.
Also in SVN in the fuzzbutt project.

Copyright notice

This KML is licensed under creative-commons Attribution license
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/
inspiration and code taken from:
  • http://www.bigsoccer.com/forum/archive/index.php/t-279086.html
  • http://www.gearthblog.com/blog/archives/2006/05/worlds_biggest.html
  • http://www.mathe-online.at/mathint/wfun/i.html#bogenmass
  • http://earth.google.com/kml/kml_tags.html
  • http://www.jjam.de/Java/Applets/3D_Effekte/Fussball.html
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Ed Davies (guest) - 5. Jun, 10:43

Dymaxion Maps

Reminds me of the Dymaxion map:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dymaxion_map

Ed Davies.

leobard - 6. Jun, 09:35

good point

yes, its similar in its approach, soccer balls are flattened icosahedrons.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Truncated_icosahedron

and on that wikipedia entry are also all necessary mathematics needed to model the soccer ball geometrically
leobard - 7. Jun, 09:18

I forgot flickr groups!

User Adrian Christopher Koss pointed me to upload the picture to a flickr group, http://www.flickr.com/groups/wm2006/

a good tip and a good way to publish this work - multi-channel.

leobard - 12. Jun, 14:51

blogged by casharinna

the picture was blogged by casharinna

http://blog.yam.com/casharinna/archives/1737168.html

Friday, 2. June 2006

Thesis on Semantic Meeting Annotation published

Man Luo's Diploma Thesis on Semantic Meeting Annotation is published. She developed a prototype, based on Gnowsis alpha 0.8, to manage Meetings semantically, identifying problems in PIM and solving them using Jena and Java.

You can download: Semantic Meeting Annotation

The treasures for you Semantic Web hackers:
  • She cites many of you guys out there, from Dennis Quan to Xiao & Cruz.
  • A nice application prototype came out.
  • Jena was used to transform one RDF vocabulary to another, like Leigh Dodds did here. Her Java/Jena code on that is here. And she uses these rules.
Abstract
Nowadays, the personaldesktop contains an enormous amount of information, which we use, process, and search in our daily work. Facing so much information, people pay more attention to Personal Information Management (PIM), which enables people to gather, organize, and synthesize information with flexibility and speed.

A significant use for PIM is in business environments, for instance, categorizing business-partners contact information; arranging the agenda; retrieving business information in internet and so on. Among the business actions meetings are important components, and accordingly the management of meeting is treated as a cornerstone of PIM. It assists people to annotate meeting information, collect related materials, and manage different meeting notes, etc.Using current PIM tools, we still face the problems of filing information and information overload. In order to exceed today's state, this thesis presents a meeting management tool based on the Semantic Desktop environment-- Gnowsis, which is an extension of desktop computers using Semantic Web techniques.

We call this tool Semantic Meeting Annotation. It builds on a Meeting Ontology that defines all the elements and relations in the meeting domain using the Web Ontology Language (OWL). The ontology binds with the annotation application to provide the user a semantic annotation environment, that is, the user can annotate meeting information with all kinds of data, and create links between a meeting and the related data according to the semantic relations defined in the meeting ontology. Other applications (e.g. Microsoft Outlook) based on the Semantic Desktop technology are integrated.

Additionally, the semantic meeting annotation is used to infer new knowledge, based on existing annotation information and rules, by this the user's effort to enter information is reduced. The implementation is using the Jena inference engine and a series of inference rules.

We think that, using semantic meeting annotation will enable the user to annotate a meeting effectively and semantically.
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