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BlueSalamander writes
"Tim O'Reilly just did an interview with Devin Wenig, the CEO-designate of Reuters. With no great enthusiasm I started to read yet another interview on how the semantic web was going to make everything great for everybody. Wenig made some good points about the end of the latency wars in news and the beginning of the battle for automatically detecting linkages and connections in the news. Smart news, not just fast news. Great stuff — but just more words? Nope — a little searching revealed that Reuters just opened access to their corporate semantic technology crown jewels. For free. For anyone. Their Calais API lets you turn unstructured text into a formal RDF graph in about one second. I ran about 5,000 documents through it and played with a subset of them in RDF-Gravity. The results were impressive overall. Is this the start of the semantic web getting real? When big names and big money start to act, not just talk, it may be time to pay attention. Semantic applications anyone? The foundation appears to be here."
514132
submission
BlueSalamander writes:
Tim O'Reilly just did an interview
with the CEO-designate of Reuters at the Money:Tech
conference. With no great enthusiasm I started to read yet another
interview on how the semantic web was going to make everything great
for everybody. As you'd expect Wenig was lucid and talked a very
good game about semantic technologies empowering the world and Reuters
as well. Wenig made some great points about the end of the latency wars
in news and the beginning of the battle for automatically detecting
linkages and connections in the news. Smart news — not just fast news.
Great stuff — but another talking head? Nope — a little searching
revealed that Reuters just opened
access to their corporate
semantic technology jewels.
For free. For anyone. Their Calais
API lets you turn unstructured text into a formal RDF graph in about
one second. I ran about 5,000 documents through it and played with a
subset of them in RDF-Gravity.
The results were impressive overall — though there is a clear
performance advantage for business news. Is this the start of the semantic
web getting real? When big names and big money start to act, not just
talk, it may be time to pay attention. Semantic applications
anyone? The foundation appears to be here.