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[XML-DEV Mailing List Archive Home] [By Thread] [By Date] [Recent Entries] [Reply To This Message] RE: Meta-somethingorother (was the semantic web mega-permathre
Then it comes down to what one can believe about the power of market forces to achieve optimum results (it's nonlinear so no guarantees). Which is why there will always be some suspicion of the results of what the agents tell us. The semantic web will be just as 'superstitious' as the humans, but possibly able to detect that better or at least, more willingly (needs vetting systems). If the agent is constrained as to which other agents it can play with, it has the same bias problems as human supply chains. By the way, it has nothing at all to do with the ontology being *proprietary* and everything to do with how many and who agree that it is *right* given some question, e.g,; a) Was Reagan a great President? b) Who invented XML? c) Was the Trojan Horse real? d) What is the fate of Harry Potter? What will it do with those? Of course, the ontology is just the beginning for getting answers to these. Agents are more than happy faces on ontologies. Applications to answer those questions go beyond the power of ontologies. Yet I can: a) There is no right answer. Only opinion. b) There is an accurate answer and there is the market answer. c) It hasn't been proven. Insufficient evidence. d) It isn't known. It will be interesting to see how aggregation of semantic metadata by harvesting WinFS metadatabases works out. I guess it returns something like what Google returns now. Then it will be interesting to enable agents to simulate situations and see if we get the same results we do for human games for situational analysis. We've discussed this here before: situational games are way better predictors than statistics. len From: Mark Baker [mailto:distobj@a...] d) you want to develop a completely proprietary ontology and provide no mapping The Semantic Web - vision or technologies - doesn't depend on these mappings existing since it has to (and does) support case d). Of course, the more instances of case d) out there, the fewer cases of open, ad-hoc integration we'll see, but that has little to do with the technology, and everything to do with market forces.
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