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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 3-page paper provides a description of Semantic Web (also known as Web 3.0) and its operations. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: AS43_MTsemanweb.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
communication and research device for academicians and scientists into a kind of cool information resource for just about everyone else. Throughout that decade and into the millennium, the Net and
its World Wide Web became less static, encouraging businesses to set up virtual store fronts and fostering the development of worldwide social networking sites. All of this was lumped under
the category of "Web 2.0." Now those connected with the World Wide Webs development are moving toward Web 3.0, also dubbed "Semantic
Web." Sir Tim Berners-Lee, who invented the World Wide Web, describes the Semantic Web as one in which data and information can be understood and "made sense of" by machines
around the world (Walmsley, 2008). Breaking this down to simpler terms, the Internet is little more than a lot of information, and todays search engines do little more than tell
of this informations existence, rather than making sense of it, then sharing it with the user (Walmsley, 2008). The concept behind the Semantic Web is that the computers and other
machines have an understanding of the information on the web, this understanding, and knowledge, could be shared, with recommendations made based on the information and its understanding (Walmsley, 2008).
Microsoft Corp. has attempted to work through this with its just-introduced search engine bing.com. Most of those watching U.S. television are aware
of bing.com; viewers are treated to the question of "what has search overload done to us?" as the ads depict various people spouting total nonsense from spam and search engines.
The concept behind bing.com is that it tries to examine what customers are doing when the search, so the information passed onto the customer is more relevant than some random
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