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Keyimage Ontologization & Folksonomy in Web 2.0 Social SpaceThe Age of Image predates and is currently contemporaneous with the Information Age. In our times the explosive expansion of Web 2.0 Social Space, typified by the phenomena of De.licio.us, Flickr, MySpace, YouTube…, and the concomitant emergence of folksonomy, present interesting challenges in the management of this information. One key process by which to accomplish this in Social Space, is the wedding of folksonomy (of the people) with ontology (of the machine). Such a wedding must necessarily be conducted in the shared physicality of the word, of language. In this respect, WordNet together with OWL, play the role of matchmaker. But the same Social Space also provides an opportunity for natural folksonomical tagging by digiFoto (key)image.
The research harness for experimental keyimage tagging consists of Flickr as the main (digiFoto image) Social Space testbed and De.licio.us as the auxillary outreach secondary Social Space. Protégé Editor with OWL-DL provides the support for the bridge from keyimage to the formal ontology. The primary end user application domain is the keyimage tagging of paintings in an online art gallery.
BackStory
The research work reported on here is firmly situated within the emerging field of the Digital re-Discovery of Culture (DrDC) (Sotirova, 2005). Taking image (painting, photograph, publicity image (Berger, 1972, p. 129), television, film…) as typical focal point for (post)modern culture, we explore to what extent one can be lead to an experience of personal «physicality of soul» (FoS) in a playful way, an entertaining way, perhaps through a purposeful designed game (DrDCg) on theWEB 2.0 TRENDSWeb 2.0 is no longer just for techies and teenagers. Adults of all ages are beginning to appreciate the networking opportunities and social nature of Web 2.0. Business owners and executives from around the globe are using this group of technologies with increasing frequency, and they are planning on expanding their Web 2.0 capabilities into the future.
Just What Is Web 2.0?
Web 2.0 refers to the second generation of the World Wide Web that offers a higher level of user interaction and collaboration. Web 2.0 encompasses online communities, social networking sites and wikis. Web 2.0 includes several different platforms and technologies, with new applications being created at an impressive rate.
Here is a description of some of the more common Web 2.0 technologies:
Blogs (short for Web logs) are online journals or diaries maintained by individuals with periodic commentaries, often on a particular subject. Blogs often include narrative text, images and links to other blogs and Web sites.
Collective intelligence is the concept that several individuals working together and combining their ideas and expertise will have better ideas and find better answers. With regard to Web 2.0, collective intelligence refers to any type of system that collects the expertise of a group rather than an individual to make decisions, including wikis and shared databases.
Podcasts are audio or video recordings posted on the Internet that may be downloaded and played on iPods, MP3 players or on the media players found on computers. According to 2007 survey, nearly 25% of the respondents age 25 – 34Microsoft Word Printing IssuesThere have been several reports of “printing problems” in MS Word reported over the last couple of months. After much research and testing, I believe that I have been able to determine the probable cause of these problems and a potential fix.
Microsoft Word is highly customizable program. The problem arises when changes are made to the default printer settings without the user knowing this has happened. This could be interpreted as a “corruption”, but if used as designed, it really is a feature. To better understand how to avoid this problem, users need to better understand one of the basic processes of the MS Word program. Word maintains a file called normal.dot. This is a template file – the basic pattern that Word uses every time that it starts a new blank document. This file can be customized if, for example, users always print to non-standard size paper or wanted specific margins or tabs.
The “problem” appears to be caused by changes being made to this normal.dot template. My guess is that there are one or more documents “floating around” where the template has been changed and the current user inadvertently updates their own normal.dot to match.
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Download PDFOracle Security Alert 66Vulnerabilities in Oracle Application Server Web Cache. Description. Security vulnerabilities have been discovered in Oracle Application Server Web Cache
Oracle Security Alert 66 Dated: 12 March 2004 Updated: 2 April 2004 Severity: 1 Vulnerabilities in Oracle Application Server Web Cache Description Security vulnerabilities have been discovered in Oracle Application Server Web Cache 10 g (9.0.4.0.0) and Oracle9 i Application Server Web Cache. Supported Products Affected • Oracle Application Server Web Cache 10 g (9.0.4.0.0) • Oracle9 i AS Web Cache 9.0.3.1.0 • Oracle9 i AS Web Cache 9.0.2.3.0 • Oracle9 i AS Web Cache 2.0.0.4.0 E-Business Suite 11 i Custome E-Business Suite 11 i custome using Oracle iStore 11 i (11 i .IBE.O and later) with Oracle Web Cache 9.0.2.2 (as described in Certify Issue 382345) must apply corresponding patch(es) specified in the Patch Availability Matrix. E-Business Suite 11 i Early Adopter custome implementing MetaLink note 233436.1 Italling Oracle Application Server 10 g with Oracle E-Business Suite Release 11 i must apply corresponding patch(es) specified in the Patch Availability Matrix for Oracle Application Server 10 g (9.0.4.0.0). Platforms Affected All Oracle supported platforms - Sun Solaris, HP/UX, HP Tru64, IBM AIX, Linux and Windows. The only exception is Oracle Application Server Web Cache 10 g (9.0.4.0.0) on Windows, Tru64 and AIX
Download ZT 8907 Single Board Computer with IntelDX4? Microprocessor Hardware User ManualThis manual describes the operation and use of the ZT 8907 Single Board Computer with IntelDX4? Microprocessor. The following summarizes the focus of each major section in this manual. Chapter 1, “Introduction,” introduces the key features of the ZT 8907. It includes a product definition, a list of product features, a functional block diagram, and a description of each block. Chapter 2, “Getting Started,” provides a summary of the information needed to install and configure your ZT 8907. Chapter 3, “STD Bus Interface,” presents a detailed description of the ZT 8907 interface to the STD-80 and STD 32 bus architectures. The topics discussed include compatibility, interrupt structure, and multiple master operation.
Chapter 4, “Interrupt Controller,” describes the two Intel-compatible 8259 cascaded interrupt controllers. This chapter summarizes the interrupt sources and the interrupt controllers’ register addressing. Chapter 5, “Counter/Timers,” discusses the six programmable counter/timers. It includes a diagram of the counter/timer architecture, and a summary of the operating modes and the programmable registers. Chapter 6, “DMA Controller,” provides an overview of ZT 8907 DMA architecture and briefly describes the DMA controller programmable registers. Chapter 7, “Real-Time Clock,” lists the major features of the real-time clock and briefly describes the real-time clock programmable registers. Chapter 8, “Serial Controller,” discusses operation of the two serial ports and briefly describes the programmable registers. Chapter 9, “Parallel Printer Port Interface,” describes the different modes for the Centronics-compatible printer interface. Address mapping, interrupt selection, and programmable registers are also discussed. Chapter 10, “Parallel I/O,” discusses the generalResolving Tag AmbiguityTagging is an important way for users to succinctly describe the content they upload to the Internet. However, most tag-suggestion systems recommend words that are highly correlated with the existing tag set, and thus add little information to a user’s contribution. This paper describes a means to determine the ambiguity of a set of (user-contributed) tags and suggests new tags that disambiguate the original tags. We introduce a probabilistic framework that allows us to find two tags that appear in different contexts but are both likely to co-occur with the original tag set. If such tags can be found, the current description is considered “ambiguous” and the two tags are recommended to the user for further clarification. In contrast to previous work, we only query the user when information is most needed and good suggestions are available. We verify the efficacy of our approach using geographical, temporal and semantic metadata, and a user study. We built our system using statistics from a large (100M) database of images and their tags.
Tags are an important part of today’s multimedia databases. They are often contributed by users when they submit an image or video and form a key part of the search experience. Content-based multimedia search remains out of reach, and a simple tag like “Tokyo” provides more information than we can possibly glean from content-based algorithms. Thus, making it as easy as possible for users to enter tags alongside multimedia content is important. This work addresses the problem of eliciting high-quality tagsVirtools Tutorial: Let’s Get PhysicalVirtools provides the amazing ability to endow your worlds with a reasonably good simulation of real world physics with the addition of a few building blocks. As we will see, this system becomes a bit of a black box, but I hope you’ll find that it works reasonably well in many circumstances. The Physicalize BB Let’s begin with the Virtools Getting Started Physics demo. C:Program FilesVirtoolsVirtools Dev 3.5DocumentationPhysicsPhysics DatabaseGettingStarted.cmo.
To begin experimenting with physics, all you need to do is add the Physics -> Creation -> Physicalize BB to the two main elements in the scene. In this case the floor and the box. Be sure to set IC on anything you physicalize before playing the scene. Gravity One thing that happens automatically in with the Physics system is that you get Gravity. If you play the scene at this point, you’ll notice that everything that you physicalized falls out of the frame. This introduces us to the first major parameter in the Physics BB: “Fixed”
Download Virtools Tutorial: Let’s Get PhysicalProgramming in Ruby TutorialIn Ruby, super is not a reference to a parent class; instread it is an executable statemtn that reinvokes the current method, skipping any definition in the class of the current object. Attributes, Instance Variables, and Bertrand Meyer The initialize method in class Song contains the line @title = title Names that start with single “at” signs @ are instance variables - variables that are specific to a particular instance or object of a class. In our case, each Song object has its own title, so it makes sense to have that title be an instance variable.
Download Programming in RubyWebMessenger for Skype User Guide ManualWebMessenger for Skype supports messaging, presence and phone calls from / to Skype users, available to the WebMessenger mobile IM clients. The diagram above shows the call control and audio streams handling. WebMessenger for Skype connects the WMP client with the Skype network. You can exchange messages, presence and make phone calls to Skype buddies from your mobile telephone. The information from Skype is passing through the WMP server and the WMP client can see the Skype buddies as one of the public instant messaging networks.
II. Prerequisites 1. Skype client application installed on your PC. 2. Skype group named Webmessenger, which consists of Skype names you intend to import with the WebMessenger mobile client. 3. SkypeOut account for phone calls. 4. WebMessenger for Skype. 5. WebMessenger mobile client with Skype support. 6. A valid WMP user account with Skype proxy account. WebMessenger for Skype Settings Start WebMessenger for Skype. Your settings may look like this: In the field My Skype password you should put your Skype account password. My mobile phone # is your cell phone with the plus sign ( + ) and the country / area code, which will be called when speaking with Skype users. Control online Status for Mobile Client allow you to change the Skype online status using the WMP client. Connect Automatically on Start connect the plug-in automatically after it is ready to use. IV. Proper startup procedure 1. Start Skype. Make sure you have sufficient