Aug 2010 Semantic Mediawiki intro: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
|||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
<blockquote>Wikis are commonly used for group content development. Semantic Mediawiki adds easier to use forms and the ability to annotate distinct content such as places, people and dates for reuse in interactive views and queries. In this session, we'll look at how semantic wikis can be used to develop content for indigenous and linguistic communities, with a practical, hands on focus including how to create pages, categories and simple ontologies. We will focus on processes to make sites inclusive, and examine fair terms of re-use. | <blockquote>Wikis are commonly used for group content development. Semantic Mediawiki adds easier to use forms and the ability to annotate distinct content such as places, people and dates for reuse in interactive views and queries. In this session, we'll look at how semantic wikis can be used to develop content for indigenous and linguistic communities, with a practical, hands on focus including how to create pages, categories and simple ontologies. We will focus on processes to make sites inclusive, and examine fair terms of re-use. | ||
</blockquote> | </blockquote> | ||
See the follow-up [[Nov 2010 Practical Semantic Mediawiki]]. | |||
= Web = | = Web = |
Revision as of 14:09, 25 November 2010
Wikis are commonly used for group content development. Semantic Mediawiki adds easier to use forms and the ability to annotate distinct content such as places, people and dates for reuse in interactive views and queries. In this session, we'll look at how semantic wikis can be used to develop content for indigenous and linguistic communities, with a practical, hands on focus including how to create pages, categories and simple ontologies. We will focus on processes to make sites inclusive, and examine fair terms of re-use.
See the follow-up Nov 2010 Practical Semantic Mediawiki.
Web
- International
- Focused on presentation
- Anyone can create a site
- Network effect
- Hyperlinks
Wikis
- Portland Pattern Repository - 1995
Allows easy, quick editing of any page, usually by anyone.
- Types of wikis
- Personal wiki
- Group
- Organization
- Topical
- ...
Wikipedia
- 2001
- Anything "notable" accepted, neutral point of view
- Careful controls on legal issues so content can be re-used
- Anyone who uses the Internet knows, uses, respects, understands it
- Cultural translations
- Few understand how it's edited
- Designed to be open, but adding controls
- More upcoming focus on media
Mediawiki
- Free Software (GPL)
- Hundreds of thousands of sites
- Hundreds of extensions
- Page, not content manager
- Designed for open editing, can be closed
Wiki use and editing
On any wiki with critical mass:
- Readers
- Drive by editor
- Topic editor
- Nerd core
- Typical process
- Messes
- Gardening
How to use a wiki
- Categories
- Many categories, ways of looking at things
- Anyone can manage them
- Recent changes
- wp vs small site
- Page history
- Page discussion - tags and backstory
- User pages
- Importance of transparency, inclusion
- Editing - start with an outline
Editing wikis
- Wikis typically use their own markup (syntax)
- Rich/wysiwyg editors create messes
- Typical word processors adding junk, can't re-use for headings, can't compare versions
- No re-usable meaning added
Progressive learning
- text - just enter it, with a blank line between paragraphs
- = Heading 1 =
- * Bullet point
- [[Wiki link]]
- View source to learn from others
- Edit sections to compartmentalize changes
Brackets must be matched!!!!
Elements of markup
- Headings, bullets, tables, dividers
- HTML code - http://www.asiancanadianwiki.org/wiki/Main_Page
- Links - onsite and off
- Templates
Semantic
- Computers are not very good at understanding human language
- Adding re-usable meaning through relationships.
- Triples - expressing relationships
- Subject, predicate, object
- David lives in Montreal.
- David: subject
- Lives in: predicate
- Montreal: object
- Subject, predicate, object have their own relationships.
- Montreal is a city.
- A city is a place.
- Montreal is the English word for Montréal.
- What are the names for the place where the St Lawrence and Ottawa rivers meet ?
Web of data
- The text is the database.
- Making statements across web sites.
- Creating views based on multiple web sites.
- Across wikipedia: Places with populations between 100 and 10,000 with a
- Technical ontologies
- Classes (categories) - person, place, date
- Properties - birth date, birth place, current location, height
- Inference
- If a person (class) was born in Canada, they speak English or French
- Guessiness
- If a person (class) was born in Canada, they speak English or French
- Usefully and easily combine different data sources - data network effects
- Recipe from one site, ingredients from another
- Web searches that only include precise content
- Aggregate reviews from different sites
On Social Learning, Sensemaking Capacity, and Collective Intelligence
Semantic Mediawiki
- Practical way of adding semantic data to wikis (mediawiki)
- Anyone can add semantic content
- Inline properties (annotations) [[about::Semantic web]]
- Ontologies - classes (categories and templates)
- Queries
- {{ #ask: [[about::Semantic web]] }}
- {{ #ask: [[Category:Person]] | [[Location::Montreal]] }}
- Forms
- Make SMW much easier to use when entering field data
- Inputs for different text types, date, file upload, geo location
- Views
- Map
- Facet view
- Timeline
- Graph
Hands on
- Go to http://subvention.zooid.org
- Create an account
- Create page using search
- Add property [[knows::Douglas Jack]]
- Add property [[birth date::June 1, 1970]]
- Add link [[People]]
- Add [[Category:Person]]
- View resulting collective People page.
- Add a new class (category with properties, form)
Sites
Licensing
- Creative commons designed to make content clearly reusable
- CC-BY
- No derivatives, no commercial