Tim Berners-Lee must feel like he’s in a time warp. In the early 1990 s, he spent a frustrating year trying to get people to grasp the power and beauty of his idea for a scheme known as an Internet hypertext system, to which he gave the beguiling name the World Wide Web. But since the Web didn’t yet exist, most people couldn’t imagine the implications of what he was talking about. Berners-Lee persevered, and with the help of the few people who shared his vision, his invention became the fastest-growing media distribution system in history. A decade later, Berners-Lee is struggling with the same problem? only this time, he’s trying to articulate his dream of a Semantic Web.
The idea is to weave a Web that not only links documents to each other but also recognizes the meaning of the information in those documents? a task that people can ordinarily do quite well but is a tall order for computers, which can’t tell if ‘head’ means the leader of an organization or the thing on top of a body. ‘The Semantic Web is really data that is processable by machine,’ says Berners-Lee, who is director of the MIT-based World Wide Web Consortium. ‘That’s what the fuss is about.’ Today’s World Wide Web is fundamentally a publishing medium? a place to store and share images and text. Adding semantics will radically change the nature of the Web? from a place where information is merely displayed to one where it is interpreted, exchanged and processed. Semantic-enabled search agents will be able to collect machine-readable data from diverse sources, process it and infer new facts. Programs that weren’t made to be compatible with each other will share previously un mixable data.
The Essay on Tim Berners Lee World Wide
Tim Berners-Lee graduated from the Queen's College at Oxford University, England, 1976. Whilst there he built his first computer with a soldering iron, TTL gates, an M 6800 processor and an old television. He spent two years with Plessey Telecommunications Ltd (Poole, Dorset, UK) a major UK Telecom equipment manufacturer, working on distributed transaction systems, message relays, and bar code ...
In other words, the ultimate goal of the Semantic Web is to give users near omniscience over the vast resources of the Internet, turning the millions of existing database islands into a single gigantic database Pangea.