BuildASign - Yard Signs, Signs, Custom Signs Online Time Explorer Welcome to the Time Explorer, an application designed for analyzing how news changes over time. Time Explorer extends upon current time-based systems in many important ways. First, Time Explorer is designed to help users discover how entities such as people and locations associated with a query change over time. Second, by searching on time expressions extracted automatically from text, the application allows the user to explore not only how topics evolved the past, but also how they will continue to evolve in the future. Finally, Time Explorer is designed around an intuitive interface that allows users to interact with time and entities in a powerful way. The application is a showcase for the functionality of the LivingKnowledge project . Time Explorer currently works best on Firefox.
iNetu Font Generator - Make Your Own Handwriting Font With Your Fonts “for the lolz”: 4chan is hacking the attention economy (Newbie note: If you have never heard of 4chan, start with the Wikipedia entry and not the website itself. The site tends to offend many adults’ sensibilities. As one of my friends put it, loving LOLcats or rickrolling as outputs is like loving a tasty hamburger; visiting 4chan is like visiting the meat factory. At some point, it’d probably help to visit the meat factory, but that might make you go vegetarian.) Over the last year, 4chan emerged from complete obscurity to being recognized by mainstream media as something of significance. Perhaps it was moot’s appearance at the top of the TIME 100 list. Amidst all of this, 4chan has “popped.” I grew up in a community of hackers at the tale end of the security hacking days. Depending on where you sit, security hackers are vilified or adored, recognized for the havoc that they wreaked and for really challenging systems to be much more secure. As with security hackers, the attention hackers that are popping up today are a mixed bag.
Zong Inform - More Meaning. Better Results. GazoPa similar image search Prizmo for iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad on the iTunes App Store Getting data from the Semantic Web This tutorial is for programmers used to building software on top of non-Semantic-Web data sources: using screen scraping techniques, or using APIs that return XML, JSON, CSV etc. Getting data from Semantic Web sources is typically done in one of two ways: either directly getting data in an RDF serialization over HTTP or by using a SPARQL endpoint. In this tutorial, we shall get some data from DBPedia, the Semantic Web version of Wikipedia. [edit] Getting RDF data directly Some websites produce RDF data that is available in one of the many RDF serializations. When you first see RDF/XML, you may find it especially hard to understand compared to 'normal' XML: often it is machine-produced and contains some unfamiliar constructs. Fortunately, there are a variety of tools you can use to get at RDF data. If you are using a Linux or UNIX-based machine (including Mac OS X), you can install RDFLib by running: sudo easy_install -U "rdflib>=3.0.0" from rdflib import Graph, URIRef g = Graph() len(g)
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Intersect – What's your story? Intersect FAQ AKA “What happened to intersect.com?” Looking for your intersect.com stories? Confused about why you’re here instead? Click through the questions below for more information: Who are you and what have you done with Intersect?