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What Is The Semantic Web?
Last updated: November 09, 2007

Five years ago when you said "I found out about that on the Web,", everyone knew what you were talking about. By means of hyperlinking or using a Web search engine you found a Web site with information you wanted.

Today people may talk about the World Wide Web, Web 2.0 or the Semantic Web. There are a lot of misconceptions about their similarities and differences, and also where the technologies inherent to each overlap, if they overlap at all.  The biggest misconception is that the terms Semantic Web and Web 2.0 mean the same thing.

Web 2.0 Is Not the Semantic Web
Web 2.0 is all about people. It's a social thing. The second generation of the World Wide Web is focused on the ability for people to collaborate and share information online. Where the Web contains static HTML pages, Web 2.0 is dynamic, in that it serves applications to users and offers open communications with an emphasis on Web-based communities.

Web 2.0, because it focuses on people and communications, encompasses a large number of technologies and standards. AJAX, Ruby, XHTML, SOAP and many more. Here the technology is less important to people — they don't care about the standards and technologies running these applications, they just want the end result, which is social interaction in an attractive and easy-to-use application.

What is the Semantic Web?
Where Web 2.0 is focused on people, the Semantic Web is focused on machines. The Web requires a human operator, using computer systems to perform the tasks required to find, search and aggregate its information. It's impossible for a computer to do these tasks without human guidance because Web pages are specifically designed for human readers. The Semantic Web is a project that aims to change that by presenting Web page data in such a way that it is understood by computers, enabling machines to do the searching, aggregating and combining of the Web's information — without a human operator.

Key Terms To Understanding  Semantic Web:

Semantic Web
An extension of the current Web that provides an easier way to find, share, reuse and combine information more easily. It's based on machine-readable information and builds on XML technology's capability to define customized tagging schemes and RDF's  flexible approach to representing data.

RDF
Short for Resource Description Framework. RDF is a general framework for describing a Web site's metadata, or the information about the information on the site. It provides interoperability between applications that exchange machine-understandable information on the Web.

Related Webopedia Categories:
Semantic Web

From Documents To Data
The Semantic Web is not a separate entity from the World Wide Web. It is an extension to the Web that adds new data and metadata to existing Web documents, extending those documents into data. This extension of Web documents to data is what will enable the Web to be processed automatically by machines and also manually by humans. To do this RDF (
Resource Description Framework) is used to turn basic Web data into structured data that software can make use of. RDF works on Web pages and also inside applications and databases.

Webopedia Definition: RDF
Short for Resource Description Framework, RDF is a general framework for describing a Web site's metadata, or the information about the information on the site. It provides interoperability among applications that exchange machine-understandable information on the Web. RDF details information such as a site's sitemap, the dates of when updates were made, keywords that search engines look for and the Web page's intellectual property rights.

Developed under the guidance of the World Wide Web Consortium, RDF was designed to allow developers to build search engines that rely on the metadata and to allow Internet users to share Web site information more readily. RDF relies on XML as an interchange syntax, creating an ontology system for the exchange of information on the Web.

Who Uses Semantic Web Technology?
It has taken years to put the pieces together that comprise the Semantic Web, including the standardization of RDF, the W3C release of the Web Ontology Language (OWL), and standardization on SPARQL, which adds querying capabilities to RDF. So with standards and languages in place, we can see Semantic Web technologies being used by early adopters.

Semantic Web technologies are popular in in areas such as research and life sciences where it can help researchers by aggregating data on different medicines and illnesses that have multiple names in different parts of the world.  On the Web, Twine is offering a knowledge networking application has been built with Semantic Web technologies. The Joost online television service also uses Semantic technology on the backend. Here Semantic technology is used to help Joost users understand the relationships between pieces of content, enabling them to find the types of content they want most. oracle offers a Semantic Web view of its Oracle Technology Network, called the OTN Semantic Web to name a few of those companies who are implementing Semantic Web technologies.

DID YOU KNOW... Who Invented the Semantic Web?
Sir Timothy John Berners-Lee is credited with the invention of the World Wide Web, when in 1980 he a project based on the concept of hypertext, to facilitate sharing and updating information among researchers. In 1994 he founded the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C). Berners-Lee is also the motivation behind the idea of a Semantic Web where the idea was to turn the Web into a single repository of information instead of a vast collection of Web sites and pages.


Vangie 'Aurora' Beal
Writer, www.Webopedia.com
Last updated: November 09, 2007


Related Links

Tim Berners-Lee
Tim Berners-Lee is the Director of the World Wide Web Consortium, Senior Researcher at MIT's CSAIL where he leads the Decentralized Information Group (DIG), and Professor of Computer Science at Southampton ECS.

W3C Semantic Web Frequently Asked Question
The Semantic Web provides a common framework that allows data to be shared and reused across application, enterprise, and community boundaries. It is a collaborative effort led by W3C with participation from a large number of researchers and industrial partners.

Integrating Applications on the Semantic Web 
The Semantic Web is an extension of the current Web in which information is given well-defined meaning, better enabling computers and people to work in cooperation. It is based on the idea of having data on the Web defined and linked such that it can be used for more effective discovery, automation, integration, and reuse across various applications.

Semantic Web 
The voice of Semantic Web technology.

SmartMenu: Getting the Browser to Understand 
As soon as we bookmark something the semantics is lost. How do we get the browser to know the link represents a movie we liked or a glass of wine we enjoyed?

W3C Semantic Web 
The Semantic Web provides a common framework that allows data to be shared and reused across application, enterprise, and community boundaries. It is a collaborative effort led by W3C with participation from a large number of researchers and industrial partners.

What Is the Resource Description Framework? 
You might be familiar with RDF as a technology for describing resources like images, audio, and video. However, take a deeper look into its core model, syntax and features to see how this framework is shaping the semantic Web.

Semantic Web History: Nodes and Arcs 1989-1999
This is a work in progress, and an early release of the document for feedback from the RDF Interest Group. It is intended as an informal discussion document, and is not a formal publication of any working group, or of the W3C itself.

The Semantic Web
The Semantic Web will bring structure to the meaningful content of Web pages, creating an environment where software agents roaming from page to page can readily carry out sophisticated tasks for users.

The Difference Between the Internet and the World Wide Web
Many people use the terms Internet and World Wide Web (a.k.a. the Web) interchangeably, but in fact the two terms are not synonymous. The Internet and the Web are two separate but related things.




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