We have entried in the last year of CINeSPACE project.
Mans Shapshak has written an excellent article in Directions Magazine about the project entitled Combining GIS and Semantic Technology to Create a Cultural Visualizer, which has been indexed by the ACM TechNews. Our work has also been reviewed by Roland Piquepaille in his Emerging Tech blog, with the article Discovering Venice with a CINeSPACE device.
Who doesn’t want to experience a CINeSPACE device???
Tags: CINeSPACE, Geospatial Semantic Web
Posted October 8th, 2008 in CINeSPACE, Geospatial Semantic Web | No Comments »
I wrote a post about an INTEL initiative for innovative ideas to help poor nations. Now Google has released the 10100 project. They offer $10 million to implement the best 100 ideas that can help the most number of people posible.
Some of the categories of evaluation are Energy, Enviroment, health, Education, Shelter and Communitiy. I think it is worth a look, and submit your idea in a total maximum of 1050 words. You will be evaluated with these criteria:
- Reach: How many people would this idea affect?
- Depth: How deeply are people impacted? How urgent is the need?
- Attainability: Can this idea be implemented within a year or two?
- Efficiency: How simple and cost-effective is your idea?
- Longevity: How long will the idea’s impact last?
A video explaining Google initiative:
Tags: Google, Third World
Posted September 26th, 2008 in General | No Comments »

Unknown Face
Your face will be indexed. Be sure. Does it make you shudder? Ah-ah-ah. It is not sci-fi. Something so extended as Picasa is already capable to search and sort photos on face value. Yes, it is a great chance to populate ontologies
but it gives the machines more power to know everything about you.
Face-finding has made huge improvements recent years. Researchers at Carnegie Mellon University have developed a system that can recognize faces in low resolution videos.
Freedom, privacy, information access… just think that when you upload something to the web you are providing more information than you thought.
Tags: Image recognition, Picasa
Posted September 24th, 2008 in Image recognition, Research | No Comments »

Brueghel, Tower Of Babel
The UNL, Universal Networking Language, is an ambitious initiative from United Nations that began in 1996. The UNL is an artificial computer language that replicates the functions of natural languages. It is one of the attempts to build a pivot computer language for machine translation.
Researchers from the group of Validation and Business Applications , based at Universidad PolitĂ©cnica de Madrid’s School of Computing (FIUPM) have take advantage of UNL and its idea of Universal Word (UW) stems to build multilingual ontologies.
The use of universal words can reduce the ambiguity and diversity of ontologies, which are failing at providing universal representations of concepts within a domain because of its English centered nature.
They have presented a case study using the contents of the current catalogue of Spanish monuments as part of the Patrilex project.
Tags: Multilingual, Ontology engineering, Patrilex, Universal Networking Language, Universal Word, UNL
Posted September 22nd, 2008 in Research, Semantic Web | No Comments »
Geospatial Semantic Web is gradually establishing as a Research proper field. Terra Cognita, a specialized Workshop in conjuntion with the 7th International Semantic Web Conference is going to be held in Karlsruhe, Germany.
A great chance to share experiences and ideas with geospatial and semantic web experts.
See you there.
Tags: Conference, Geospatial Semantic Web
Posted September 5th, 2008 in General | No Comments »