This document describes how a Dublin Core metadata description set can be encoded in HTML/XHTML <meta> and <link> elements. It is an HTML meta data profile, as defined by the HTML specification.
More and more websites have started to embed structured data describing products, people, organizations, places, and events into their HTML pages using markup standards such as Microdata, JSON-LD, RDFa, and Microformats. The Web Data Commons project extracts this data from several billion web pages. So far the project provides 11 different data set releases extracted from the Common Crawls 2010 to 2022. The project provides the extracted data for download and publishes statistics about the deployment of the different formats.
The Web Data Commons project extracts structured data from the Common Crawl, the largest web corpus available to the public, and provides the extracted data for public download in order to support researchers and companies in exploiting the wealth of information that is available on the Web.
SIMILE is focused on developing robust, open source tools that empower users to access, manage, visualize and reuse digital assets. Learn more about the SIMILE project.
The Dublin Core Metadata Initiative is an open organization engaged in the development of interoperable online metadata standards that support a broad range of purposes and business models. DCMI's activities include work on architecture and modeling, discussions and collaborative work in DCMI Communities and DCMI Task Groups, annual conferences and workshops, standards liaison, and educational efforts to promote widespread acceptance of metadata standards and practices.
"End User Examples" shows examples of where Calais has been integrated into end-user tools and web sites. 2) "Submitting Content to Calais" focuses on application / tools that help you get your content to the Calais service, 3) "Capability Demonstrations"
An approach focussed on resolving identity of
subjects in a photo using mobile device connectivity
and semantics is presented in this paper. Semantic
Web and mobile device sensors are combined to
provide meaningful photo annotation metadata that
can be used to recall photos from the Web. Useful
metadata can be gleaned from the environment at the
time of capture and inferred from previous metadata
tapped from existing sources.
What Topic Maps Do
When XML is introduced into an organization it is usually used for one of two purposes: either to structure the organization's documents or to make that organization's applications talk to other applications. These are both useful ways of using XML, but they will not help anyone find the information they are looking for. What changes with the introduction of XML is that the document processes become more controllable and can be automated to a greater degree than before, while applications can now communicate internally and externally. But the big picture, something that collects the key concepts in the organization's information and ties it all together, is nowhere to be found.
[Diagram]
The Dublin Core Metadata Initiative is an open organization engaged in the development of interoperable online metadata standards that support a broad range of purposes and business models.
Report from the 13th ACM Conference on Information and Knowledge Management, Washington DC, USA, 2004. Sponsors: ACM Special Interest Group on Information Retrieval, ACM Association for Computing Machinery
M. Magableh, A. Cau, H. Zedan, and M. Ward. Proceedings of the IADIS International Conferences Collaborative Technologies 2010 and Web Based Communities 2010, page 178--182. (July 2010)
K. Möller, T. Heath, S. Handschuh, and J. Domingue. Proceedings of the 6th International Semantic Web Conference and 2nd Asian Semantic Web Conference (ISWC/ASWC2007), Busan, South Korea, volume 4825 of LNCS, page 795--808. Berlin, Heidelberg, Springer Verlag, (November 2007)