Thursday, June 29, 2006

Almost six weeks at Microsoft

I'm finishing up my sixth week as a full-time employee at Microsoft this week as a Software Design Engineer in Test (or SDE/T or SDET) and still having a lot of fun at it. The work is interesting and challenging and gives me access to a lot of interesting people, technology, and toys, not to mention an interesting amount of money. It's not the same as working on your own or at a startup, but the energy level is still definitely "there".

-- Jack Krupansky

Tuesday, June 27, 2006

Finally moved into my new apartment in Bellevue, Washington

Sunday I finally took possesion of my new apartment in a brand new high-rise apartment building in Bellevue, Washington, which is the next town southwest of Redmond. Actually, it's more of a city. My building is 23 stories tall and isn't even close to being the tallest building in downtown Bellevue. The Westin hotel occupies the first 19 floors of a 42-story building and there are a bunch more tall building as well.

I'm only on the fourth floor, but the building is on a slight hill and gives me a nice view of Mt. Rainier. There are plenty of restaurants and lots of shopping here in downtown Bellevue. It definitely has more of an urban feel, which I miss since I moved out of New York City. Downtown Redmond has more of a "sleepier", suburban feel.

My apartment is so new that there are half a dozen unfinished work items including shelves and installation of a microwave oven.

The rent isn't too bad. I only have a studio, but it is a decent size. It has built-in washer and dryer and air conditioning. There weren't many places that had studios when I was looking around, so I would have had to get a one-bedroom apartment and pay more than the brand new studio I got.

I'm going to stick with dial-up Internet access until I pay off a big chunk of my back taxes. That may be another year, but I'm not into all the video and music stuff that forces many people to be dependent on broadband.

-- Jack Krupansky

Thursday, June 22, 2006

W3C RDF/OWL Representation of Princeton WordNet

The W3C now hosts the RDF/OWL Representation of WordNet which is a standard conversion the Princeton WordNet to RDF/OWL:

WordNet [Fellbaum, 1998] is a heavily-used lexical resource in natural-language processing and information retrieval. More recently, it has also been adopted in Semantic Web research community. It is used mainly for annotation and retrieval in different domains such as cultural heritage [Hollink et al., 2003], product catalogs [Guarino et al., 1999] and photo metadata [Brickley, 2002]. It is also used to ground other vocabularies such as the FOAF schema [Brickley and Miller, 2005], as background knowledge in ontology alignment tools and other applications (see http://esw.w3.org/mt/esw/archives/cat_applications_and_demos.html for a list). Currently there exist several conversions of WordNet to RDF(S) or OWL.

I haven't looked at it myself, but this could be a major milestone in providing a starting point for shared vocabularies.

-- Jack Krupansky

W3C RDF/OWL Representation of Princeton WordNet

The W3C now hosts the RDF/OWL Representation of WordNet which is a standard conversion the Princeton WordNet to RDF/OWL:

WordNet [Fellbaum, 1998] is a heavily-used lexical resource in natural-language processing and information retrieval. More recently, it has also been adopted in Semantic Web research community. It is used mainly for annotation and retrieval in different domains such as cultural heritage [Hollink et al., 2003], product catalogs [Guarino et al., 1999] and photo metadata [Brickley, 2002]. It is also used to ground other vocabularies such as the FOAF schema [Brickley and Miller, 2005], as background knowledge in ontology alignment tools and other applications (see http://esw.w3.org/mt/esw/archives/cat_applications_and_demos.html for a list). Currently there exist several conversions of WordNet to RDF(S) or OWL.

I haven't looked at it myself, but this could be a major milestone in providing a starting point for shared vocabularies.

-- Jack Krupansky

W3C RDF/OWL Representation of Princeton WordNet

The W3C now hosts the RDF/OWL Representation of WordNet which is a standard conversion the Princeton WordNet to RDF/OWL:

WordNet [Fellbaum, 1998] is a heavily-used lexical resource in natural-language processing and information retrieval. More recently, it has also been adopted in Semantic Web research community. It is used mainly for annotation and retrieval in different domains such as cultural heritage [Hollink et al., 2003], product catalogs [Guarino et al., 1999] and photo metadata [Brickley, 2002]. It is also used to ground other vocabularies such as the FOAF schema [Brickley and Miller, 2005], as background knowledge in ontology alignment tools and other applications (see http://esw.w3.org/mt/esw/archives/cat_applications_and_demos.html for a list). Currently there exist several conversions of WordNet to RDF(S) or OWL.

I haven't looked at it myself, but this could be a major milestone in providing a starting point for shared vocabularies.

-- Jack Krupansky