@misc{Berners-Lee1998, abstract = {The {W}eb was designed as an information space, with the goal that it should be useful not only for human-human communication, but also that machines would be able to participate and help. {O}ne of the major obstacles to this has been the fact that most information on the Web is designed for human consumption, and even if it was derived from a database with well defined meanings (in at least some terms) for its columns, that the structure of the data is not evident to a robot browsing the web. Leaving aside the artificial intelligence problem of training machines to behave like people, the {S}emantic {W}eb approach instead develops languages for expressing information in a machine processable form.}, added-at = {2009-05-14T10:25:37.000+0200}, author = {Berners-Lee, Tim}, biburl = {http://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2e13a22b51097dbafbf1ae0d0da549d22/sirakov}, howpublished = {Website}, interhash = {09302c37d13c39419487ec48ce357447}, intrahash = {e13a22b51097dbafbf1ae0d0da549d22}, keywords = {1998 Berners-Lee Roadmap Semantic Tim Web}, note = {http://www.w3.org/DesignIssues/Semantic.html}, owner = {atanas}, timestamp = {2009-05-14T10:25:37.000+0200}, title = {{S}emantic {W}eb {R}oad map}, url = {http://www.w3.org/DesignIssues/Semantic.html}, year = 1998 }