The Semantic Web reference article from the English Wikipedia on 24-Apr-2004
(provided by Fixed Reference: snapshots of Wikipedia from wikipedia.org)

Semantic Web

Helping orphans the way you would do it

The Semantic Web is a current project under the direction of Tim Berners-Lee of the World Wide Web Consortium to extend the ability of the World Wide Web by developing standards and tools that allow meaning to be added to the content of webpages. The goal of the semantic web is to create a universal medium for the exchange of data by allowing meaning to be given, using tools and tags, to the content within webpages.

Currently the world wide web contains HTML, which is a language that is useful for displaying graphics and text but does not lend any meaning to the content it describes. The semantic web will address this issue by allowing content to be described in XML documents using tools like RDF and OWL which are types of tags. These description tags that lend meaning to the content facilitates automated information gathering and research by computers.

The semantic web comprises the standards and tools of XML, XML Schema, RDF, RDF Schema and OWL. The OWL Web Ontology Language Overview [1] describes the function and relationship of each of these components of the semantic web:


The usability and usefulness of the Web and its interconnected resources will be enhanced through:
The primary facilitators of this technology are:
URIs (which identify resources) along with XML and Namespaces. These, together with a bit of logic form RDF, which can be used to say anything about anything. As well as RDF, many other technologies such as Topic Maps and pre-web AI technologies are likely to contribute to the Semantic Web. 

All current web technologies are likely to have a role in the semantic web (in the sense of semantic world wide web), for instance :


You can create a piece of RDF code (FOAF) to describe yourself to the Semantic Web using the Friend-of-a-Friend-o-matic

Table of contents
1 See also
2 References
3 External links

See also

References

External links