I think that is a great idea.  I didn't really want to blast the mailing list 
as I am not a contributor as of today.  I have been using ONLP for a couple of 
years now, when it came time to train sentence and POS models in languages not 
currently supported I was surprised to see no guidelines, suggestions or best 
practices.  Further I see that with 1.5 support for reading training sets 
became more flexible but I have no idea what the public facing plans are for 
supporting new languages and what the methodology was going to be.  I am not 
looking for an answer to these questions from you, but I certainly would of 
appreciated a better eco system on the ONLP website.  If there was such a thing 
I would certainly participate in what our findings were (albeit perhaps not the 
best ones :-} )

C
On Apr 27, 2011, at 9:37 AM, Jörn Kottmann wrote:

> Looks interesting, I wonder if we not should add a section to the
> website to link to OpenNLP related blog posts, tutorials, articles, etc.
> 
> Jörn
> 
> On 4/27/11 2:23 AM, Jason Baldridge wrote:
>> I recently posted this homework for my NLP class, which uses maxent to do
>> sentiment analysis on Twitter, using a Python front-end to create features
>> for the command line training and model use:
>> 
>> http://nlp-s11.utcompling.com/assignments/sentiment-analysis
>> 
>> Might be a useful pointer for newcomers.
>> 
>> Jason
>> 
> 

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