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DAGSTUHL
2003

SHOE: A Blueprint for the Semantic Web

13 years 6 months ago
SHOE: A Blueprint for the Semantic Web
The term Semantic Web was coined by Tim Berners-Lee to describe his proposal for \a web of meaning," as opposed to the \web of links" that currently exists on the Internet. To achieve this vision, we need to develop languages and tools that enable machine understandable web pages. The SHOE project, begun in 1995, was one of the rst e orts to explore these issues. In this paper, we describe our experiences developing and using the SHOE language. We begin by describing the unique features of the World Wide Web and how they must in uence potential Semantic Web languages. Then we present SHOE, a language which allows web pages to be annotated with semantics, describe its syntax and semantics, and discuss our approaches to handling the problems of interoperability in distributed environments and ontology evolution. Finally, we provide an overview of a suite of tools for the Semantic Web, and discuss the application of the language and tools to two di erent domains.
Jeff Heflin, James A. Hendler, Sean Luke
Added 31 Oct 2010
Updated 31 Oct 2010
Type Conference
Year 2003
Where DAGSTUHL
Authors Jeff Heflin, James A. Hendler, Sean Luke
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