Published by Equipo GNOSS
28/10/2013
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Next Web: web 3.0, web semántica y el futuro de internet
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Next Web es un espacio donde en estos más de 10 años se ha recopilado y analizado el desarrollo de la web y el modo en el que el conjunto de tecnologías emergentes que están haciendo posible internet están influyendo en el desarrollo de una vida socio-digital feliz, la construcción de la identidad digital de las personas y las organizaciones y la aceleración de los procesos sociales de aprendizaje. Todo ello gracias al ejercicio de la sociabilidad simultánea y al acceso a la información e inteligencia ubicuas.
Empresas, agentes de capital riesgo, instituciones, investigadores, profesores, ‘start-ups’, ‘bloggers’, internautas avanzados, activistas en internet y, en general, todos aquellos que crean en el poder de transformación social de la tecnología, tienen su espacio en Next Web, comunidad promovida por el Equipo GNOSS.
Published by Equipo GNOSS
28/10/2013
Published by Equipo GNOSS
10/08/2012
Published by Ricardo Alonso Maturana
30/07/2012
The Economist has published an article regarding the need to open up publically funded science. The article states, “If there is any endeavour whose fruits should be freely available, that endeavour is surely publicly financed science. Morally, taxpayers who wish to should be able to read about it without further expense. And science advances through cross-fertilisation between projects. Barriers to that exchange slow it down. There is a widespread feeling that the journal publishers who have mediated this exchange for the past century or more are becoming an impediment to it. One of the latest converts is the British government. On July 16th it announced that, from 2013, the results of taxpayer-financed research would be available, free and online, for anyone to read and redistrib...
Published by Ricardo Alonso Maturana
30/07/2012
Tom Johnson has written an article sharing Seth Earley’s insights regarding taxonomy, metadata, and search. At a recent workshop, “Seth outlined a three-prong approach to information management: (1) Develop a taxonomy. (2) Apply the taxonomy to your content. (3) Leverage the taxonomy to view your content in different ways.” According to Johnson, “Taxonomy is one of those vague words whose meaning seems a bit slippery, but Seth was adamant that taxonomy is not navigation, though it affects navigation. By taxonomy, we’re referring to ‘a system for organizing concepts and categorizing content.’ A taxonomy is your metadata, ‘arranged in a tree-like structure, with top level categories that branch out to reveal subcategories and terms ...
Published by Ricardo Alonso Maturana
03/01/2012
Joe McKendrick recently reported on Wal-Mart’s growing influence, not as a retailer, but as a data business. McKendrick writes, “Already, the lines have blurred between traditionally non-information technology companies and IT companies to the point where you can’t tell the two apart. But what’s really of value is not the software that’s being produced and shared, it’s the data that’s being generated and analyzed. This represents the future of many businesses — again, traditionally non-IT businesses — as they seek competitive advantage in a hyper-competitive global marketplace.” continued…New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media. Publicado en semanticweb.com el: 1/3/2012 12:40:01 PMPuedes ver los comentarios originales
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Published by Ricardo Alonso Maturana
03/01/2012
Stephan Zednik has been working on the problem of accurately characterizing quality for science data products. He writes, “Science product quality is hard to define, characterize, and act upon. Product quality reflects a comparison against standard products of a similar kind, but it is also reflective of the fitness-for-use of the product for the end-user. Users weigh quality characteristics (e.g. accuracy, completeness, coverage, consistency, representativeness) based on their intended use for the data, and therefore quality of a product can be different based on different users’ needs and interests. Despite the subjective nature of quality assertions, and their sensitivity to users fitness-for-use, most quality information is provided by the product producer and the subjective criteria ...
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