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5.0 out of 5 stars
Take a look at the book's website:, Jun 24 2004
This review is from: A Semantic Web Primer (Hardcover)
Take a look at the book's website: http://www.semanticwebprimer.org
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5.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent introduction, Jun 21 2004
This review is from: A Semantic Web Primer (Hardcover)
Readers will need a basic understanding of formal logic in order to get the most from this book. Also realize that some material, such as the discussion and presentation of monotonic and non-monotonic rules are still hotly contested in the semantic web community. This book starts out with an excellent introduction in Chapter 1, titled "The Semantic Web Vision". It next begins building towards the basic elements of a semantic web by starting in familiar territory - structured web documents in XML. Many readers will be intimately familiar with this material, but I recommend reading it because the authors lay a solid foundation for subsequent chapters here. The components and concepts of the topic are then covered in chapters devoted to: - Describing Web Resources in RDF, which includes basic ideas, XML-based syntax, schema, and querying. - Web Ontology Language (OWL), which introduces the OWL language, examples and future extensions. Appendix A contains Abstract OWL syntax, which augments this chapter. - Logic and Inference, covers monotonic and non-monotonic rules, syntax, rule mark-up in XML and examples. This chapter will require an understanding of formal logic, and I also recommend additional research on the web regarding the debate about using non-monotonic rules, which has highly vocal proponents and detractors. - Applications, a chapter of case studies from real companies, including Audi, and material on how semantic web concepts can be applied to E-learning, web services and other scenarios. - Ontology Engineering (ontology is synonymous with taxonomy) using manual and semi-automatic methods. There is also an excellent discussion about reuse. The web site that supports this book is rich in content that will not only augment the book, but greatly expand it. Each chapter has an associated page on the site containing PowerPoint presentations, PDF documents, and other material. The site also has a section for errata, problems and quizs if you are basing a course on this book, and additional links to resources related to the material in the book.
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33 of 34 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent introduction, Jun 21 2004
By Mike Tarrani "Jazz Drummer" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: A Semantic Web Primer (Hardcover)
Readers will need a basic understanding of formal logic in order to get the most from this book. Also realize that some material, such as the discussion and presentation of monotonic and non-monotonic rules are still hotly contested in the semantic web community. This book starts out with an excellent introduction in Chapter 1, titled "The Semantic Web Vision". It next begins building towards the basic elements of a semantic web by starting in familiar territory - structured web documents in XML. Many readers will be intimately familiar with this material, but I recommend reading it because the authors lay a solid foundation for subsequent chapters here. The components and concepts of the topic are then covered in chapters devoted to: - Describing Web Resources in RDF, which includes basic ideas, XML-based syntax, schema, and querying. - Web Ontology Language (OWL), which introduces the OWL language, examples and future extensions. Appendix A contains Abstract OWL syntax, which augments this chapter. - Logic and Inference, covers monotonic and non-monotonic rules, syntax, rule mark-up in XML and examples. This chapter will require an understanding of formal logic, and I also recommend additional research on the web regarding the debate about using non-monotonic rules, which has highly vocal proponents and detractors. - Applications, a chapter of case studies from real companies, including Audi, and material on how semantic web concepts can be applied to E-learning, web services and other scenarios. - Ontology Engineering (ontology is synonymous with taxonomy) using manual and semi-automatic methods. There is also an excellent discussion about reuse. The web site that supports this book is rich in content that will not only augment the book, but greatly expand it. Each chapter has an associated page on the site containing PowerPoint presentations, PDF documents, and other material. The site also has a section for errata, problems and quizs if you are basing a course on this book, and additional links to resources related to the material in the book.
23 of 23 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
Take a look at the book's website:, Jun 24 2004
By Frank van Harmelen - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: A Semantic Web Primer (Hardcover)
Take a look at the book's website: http://www.semanticwebprimer.org
14 of 15 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
Making sense of the Semantic Web, Sep 4 2004
By Dave Mccomb - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: A Semantic Web Primer (Hardcover)
When I was writing my book "Semantics in Business Systems" ( a more general treatment of how Semantics pertains to building application systems) I wanted to include a chapter on the Semantic Web. At the time, most of the books and web sites were either impenetrable, with their focus on formal proofs of assertions, or superficial, with grand promises of the semantic future with little "how do we get there." "A Semantic Web Primer" finally fills in the gap. It is very clearly written, and proceeds nicely from structured documents through to RDF/RDFS and OWL. Each topic is carefully layered on top of the previous.
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