What company would that be? You don't see what I do because you're not a
visionary like me. People didn't see the iphone being a "big" deal either.
Every decade or so, we see a major new tech wave from the PC Revolution to
social networking. The next wave is Intelligence at the Interface
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intelligent_agent (Think Siri, Google Now,
etc) . However, before that all that can really happen, data will have to
be structured in a way that not only humans can understand, but machines as
well.

That's where I came in with my semantic repositories. My flagship platform;
code named TS is the only Semantic company that is working on digitizing
towns and cities. By bringing the functionality of Wikipedia, Craigslist,
Yelp, Groupon, etc we establish the authoritative repository of real-world
data of people, businesses, and the interactions among them in a structured
way that can be used to interact with all of the other data on the Web just
like it to form a true search of relevant information from local, national
or global sources, as opposed to a popularity algorithm (Google) that just
spits out something.  Seriously, half the websites on the internet will be
gone in two years, replaced by data stores for Intelligent agents. That's
the future the market will demand.  Imagine if you could ask your phone for
anything, to search for anything, and to do anything, then who needs Google
anymore? I don’t need to search for places to go. I can ask my phone to
find them or do them, or make reservations and I don’t need to have ten
blue links to waive through.

I remember back in the summer of 2004 building a social network for
colleges called Student Annex  (
http://web.archive.org/web/20041027115741/http://www.studentannex.com/) and
people saying it was a dumb idea or was going nowhere because MySpace was
so huge, etc etc lol. In the words of George Bernard Shaw: The longer I
live the more I see that I am never wrong about anything, and that all the
pains that I have so humbly taken to verify my notions have only wasted my
time.

On Tue, Nov 20, 2012 at 12:37 AM, Mark Nuzzolilo II <[email protected]>wrote:

> Impressive salary for a company with a website that consists of a free
> domain parking placeholder.  My buddy made 1/10 that with 200 employees
> working for him and that was still enough to afford him four houses.  But
> the point here is that RDF and semantic databases have some specific uses
> which can be interesting, but I don't see it as a silver bullet for the
> next information age.  Everything that I have seen so far tells me that
> while it does have its uses, the hype is a bit exaggerated for marketing
> purposes.  There are good systems out there but they are prohibitively
> expensive, and the people who need them the most are the ones who don't
> already have the kind of money required.  This type of technology doesn't
> become useful unless it is cheap and available to those who have the ideas
> to run with it.  And it must be simple and easy to use, none of which is
> true currently.  That can change at some point, of course.
>
>
> On Mon, Nov 19, 2012 at 11:37 PM, Azn A <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> Interesting, that's a little less than I make in a day...
>>
>> Fine, download Drupal 7.0 then http://drupal.org/project/opencalais it's
>> totally free.
>>
>> On Mon, Nov 19, 2012 at 11:26 PM, Mark Nuzzolilo II <[email protected]>wrote:
>>
>>> Software cost is inversely proportional to its maturity.  See
>>> http://poolparty.biz/pricing/
>>>
>>>
>>> On Mon, Nov 19, 2012 at 11:10 PM, Azn A <[email protected]>wrote:
>>>
>>>> 1. My conclusion was that the software is still too immature to be
>>>> useful.
>>>>
>>>> Maybe 4 years ago. See: http://poolparty.biz/
>>>>
>>>> 2. "the power of semantic web has less to do with the type of database
>>>> used and more to do with the algorithms and schema"
>>>>
>>>> Yeah, I don't know what they thought years ago...But that is
>>>> common knowledge now.
>>>>
>>>> On Mon, Nov 19, 2012 at 11:00 PM, Mark Nuzzolilo II 
>>>> <[email protected]>wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> I worked with graph databases and RDF stores for some time, and even
>>>>> took a shot at writing a book for it.  But my conclusion was that the
>>>>> software is still too immature to be useful.  The software is either
>>>>> extremely expensive, very buggy, or incomplete.  All the studying I did 
>>>>> led
>>>>> me to believe that the power of semantic web has less to do with the type
>>>>> of database used and more to do with the algorithms and schema, which can
>>>>> be ultimately represented in any type of database.  Graph databases can be
>>>>> more intuitive for certain types of data, but I'd rather stick with
>>>>> well-established mature databases.  A graph database can be simply no more
>>>>> than a document database with some additional schema and functions layered
>>>>> over it, as is the case with OrientDB.
>>>>>
>>>>> So I don't think that these new databases are a silver bullet for
>>>>> anything.  It's the schema that matters.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> On Mon, Nov 19, 2012 at 10:48 PM, Azn A <[email protected]>wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> Sir, you're talking to a creative genius here. I already know about
>>>>>> collective knowledge systems. In fact I plan to harness that power with a
>>>>>> family of semantic repositories, or RDF database management systems that
>>>>>> make up the backbone of the next generation Web of Data, known as 
>>>>>> Semantic
>>>>>> Web or Web 3.0.  I have already developed software that is basically an
>>>>>> easy-to-use wiki that is powered by a metadata engine that tags
>>>>>> user-contributed data with semantical annotations that computers can
>>>>>> understand.
>>>>>>   back-end. In other words, a services architecture that allows for
>>>>>> all of our apps to connect together and share one common data store.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>  <http://www.listbox.com>
>>>>>>
>>>>>
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