This document is written for readers who want a first impression of the capabilities of OWL. It provides an introduction to OWL by informally describing the features of each of the sublanguages of OWL.
We believe that the enterprise ontology will become a cornerstone in many information systems in the future. In general terms, an ontology is an organization of a body of knowledge or, at least, an organization of a set of terms related to a body of know
Global *S*emantic *C*ategory, *O*ntology, *T*ag and *T*axonomy S*y*stem, adding OWL based services as well as simple categories, tags and tagclouds. Relations are made using real SQL relations, that can be exported later on to OWL and other standards. This will enable exchange of semantic information between different systems.
P. Kathiria, and S. Ahluwalia. International Journal on Soft Computing, Artificial Intelligence and Applications (IJSCAI), 5 (1):
53 - 62(February 2016)
A. P, V. Hariharan, R. Lavanya, and R. Prianka. International Journal of Innovative Science and Modern Engineering (IJISME), 3 (1):
16-18(December 2014)
A. Weichselbraun, G. Wohlgenannt, and A. Scharl. 9th International Workshop on Web Semantics, 21st International Conference
on Database and Expert Systems Applications (DEXA 2010), page 193--197. Bilbao, Spain, IEEE Computer Society Press, (August 2010)
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)
S. Staab, T. Walter, G. Gröner, and F. Parreiras. Reasoning Web. Semantic Technologies for Software Engineering, volume 6325 of Lecture Notes in Computer Science, Springer Berlin / Heidelberg, 10.1007/978-3-642-15543-7_3.(2010)