The Semantic Web: Identity searching for existence: an analytical study
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.70000/cj.2011.27.326Abstract
“The World Wide Web in its current form is now understandable to us human beings, but for the computer it is pages represented by zeros and ones that do not mean anything. What we want from the Web with its semantic structure is to make the computer also understand what the contents of the page it is viewing mean in an effort toward integration.” “For content in the web.” These were the words that made the hall of the Massachusetts Institute of Science and Applications resound with applause, as Tim Berners-Lee touched upon the bottom line of what ails the web, and more specifically its search engines.
At the same time, he announces the birth of a new generation of the World Wide Web, which is the Semantic Web. Tim Lee did not throw these words into the air and go on his way. Rather, since 2004, he has been working on changing the reality of the current network and introducing the world to a new generation of semantic networks, and here we are. We pick the first seeds from their work efforts in all fields in general and in the field of libraries and information in particular. In this, the researcher addresses the structural and functional structure of the new generation of the World Wide Web.
In this study, the researcher monitors the concept of the Semantic World Wide Web under light, analysis, and evaluation, with a strong focus on the status of research in the current World Wide Web and what the Semantic Web offers in a way that is as close as possible to an anatomical study, hoping to God that it will benefit our Arab information civilization and avoid sublimation in the information age. .
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Copyright (c) 2011 Mo'men El Nasharti
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.