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Creating the Semantic Web with RDF [Paperback]

Johan Hjelm
2.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Product details

  • Paperback: 304 pages
  • Publisher: John Wiley & Sons; Pap/Cdr edition (25 May 2001)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0471402591
  • ISBN-13: 978-0471402596
  • Product Dimensions: 23.4 x 19.2 x 2 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 2.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 3,225,062 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
  • See Complete Table of Contents

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Johan Hjelm
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Product Description

Product Description

The first state–of–the–art guide for Web developers who need to enable totally new services using metadata
This book offers for the first time complete guidance for Web and content developers who use Resource Description Framework (RDF) to create Web services, both wired and wireless, for metadata, or data that is maintained by an application. Written by the W3C Fellow charged with making the W3C XML standard work with other open standards, the book clearly demonstrates how RDF and metadata can greatly improve a user′s Web experience through richer, better–tailored content. The author explains RDF theory and practice and how it compares to XML and HTML in layman terms and provides source code for several important tools. He includes descriptions of real services, both for the desktop computer and the handheld wireless device, and hands–on examples illustrating how metadata is used to tailor services for users. Explanations of how RDF ties in with intelligent agents are also provided.

From the Back Cover

An in–depth introduction to metadata and RDF basics for creating improved Web services

With the endless number of Web sites vying for attention, it′s more important than ever before to stand out and offer a richer, better–tailored experience. The new Resource Description Framework (RDF) standard can accomplish this by making personalization and adaptation of content easier. Johan Hjelm guides you through all the features of RDF, explaining how to take advantage of this technology and create exciting Web services for metadata. With his book, you′ll learn how to use RDF to filter content, personalize information, and develop information services and objects. He also clearly shows you how to use RDF and XML to build metadata and user profiles. These profiles can help you produce new types of services and target data to users. This means that you′ll be able to reach the right people and provide them with the exact information they want!

Covering metadata and RDF basics, this book explains how to:
∗ Annotate text and photos using RDF
∗ Utilize the RDF and XML processors
∗ Build schemas with RDF and XML
∗ Use multiple metadata vocabularies and classify site information
∗ Transport client profiles using remote referencing, bandwidth and caching, and proxy interaction

The CD–ROM provides a number of RDF resource programs, such as editors, parsers, and inference engines, that you can use to create new services described in the book. It also contains:
∗ Source code for several important tools
∗ A description of real services with hands–on examples of how to use metadata to tailor services for users

Professional Developer′s Guides

The Professional Developer′s Guide series provides the first in–depth look at recent or emerging programming technologies. Experienced programmers and developers will find comprehensive coverage of new programming standards as well as code, sample programs, developer′s tools, and applications that will make programming for a new technology much easier.

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Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
17 of 17 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
After reading this book I would like to outline some drawbacks and benefits as well: It serves as a good staring point for someone who have never heard about RDF, and is inexperienced in XML related specifications such as DTD, XML schema and namespaces. Moreover it includes several useful RDF resources such as RDF editors, parsers, APIs and invaluable references for further reading. However I found the structure of this book completely wrong as it mixes XML specifications with RDF concepts in a manner that confuses the reader. The worst is that examples are rare throughout the book as the author prefers to give long descriptions and tables instead of concrete examples. I hope that it will be improved in its second edition
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Amazon.com:  7 reviews
28 of 28 people found the following review helpful
Irritating 4 Oct 2001
By John W. Bates - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
I picked up this book, and several others, because I was interested in catching up on some of the emerging protocols. From the table of contents, it looked like it presented a broad overview on a variety of topics, as well as the in-depth discussion of RDF. Frankly, though, it is one of the worst books I've read in years.

There are two problems: the content, and the author. The writing and editing is poor and sloppy. The text is disjointed to the point that I often had to flip back after moving to the next page, to make sure that I hadn't skipped one. At some points, it refers back to examples that don't exist, and at others, it refers to figures that just don't match up. The larger structure is as sloppy and disjointed as the text. It's not even useful as a reference, because no single section contains all the information needed to understand the format.

The book reads like what it is: an attempt to fill 320 pages with the information that could have been (and should have been) written in a 20 page white paper ...

His editorial comments are full of contradictions and misstatements that read more like Usenet flames than thoughtful commentary. He liberally trashes SOAP, AI, and CORBA, while ignoring or glossing over any shortcomings in RDF. My favorite contradiction: KQML is a failure because it uses a lisp-based syntax, which is *hard for humans to read*. Meanwhile, elsewhere in the book, he states that humans shouldn't write out their own RDF, and should always use a remote syntax checker, because it's just too easy to make a mistake. Looking at his half-page examples of even the simplest schemas, filled with angle brackets, quotes, and syntactic oddities, makes me long for the simplicity of a lisp-based syntax, even if I have to put up with a prefix notation.

The book is a waste of time and money. One could get more information, in a better format, and with less irritation, just by going to the w3c web site.

13 of 15 people found the following review helpful
A bad book 24 April 2002
By rattan mann - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
In spite of the bad reviews on this site,I decided to buy this book partly because this may be the only book on the sementic web in the market,and I did not want to wait till others were published.

Unfortunately,I too cannot recommend this book to anyone.Here are
my reasons:

1)Both the title of the book as well as the title of the series(Professional Developer's Guide Series)are highly misleading.No developer will learn anything practical from this book.There are no examples or any other practical instructions whatsoever.The most "difficult" examples I could find were the analysis of statements like "Hjelm is the author of a book".

2)What this book is is a theoretical and acedemic discussion of artificial intelligence(AI),XML,RDF,and intelligent agents(IA).But here too there is a catch.You wont understand much unless you already know these fields.I have some background in these fields but I found the presentation so monotonous and boring that I too learned nothing new.

3)This book could have been a classic if properly written.Time may be ripe for artificial intelligence to enter the mainstream of computer world via the gateway of XML.Therefore,the unification of AI,XML,RDF,and IA is a highly fascinating project for the future.And a classic is desperately needed on this theme.But Hjelm's book is not that classic.

7 of 12 people found the following review helpful
;-( Mess 7 Jun 2001
By Yi Zhou - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
This is one of the worst book that I have ever read. It makes a simple thing perplexed. I really don't know what the author wants to say and why he repeats the same unrelated and simple things over and over again. It is always off the point. The examples are just toys for laymen.
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