Is there a WADL available for the RESTful Web API?

 

Thanks,

Mike

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Pablo Mendes
Sent: Monday, February 14, 2011 1:33 PM
To: [email protected]; SW-forum; [email protected]
Subject: [ANN] DBpedia Spotlight - Text Annotation with DBpedia Resources
Importance: Low

 

Hi all,

 

we are happy to announce a first release of DBpedia Spotlight - Shedding Light 
on the Web of Documents.

 

The amount of data in the Linked Open Data cloud is steadily increasing. 
Interlinking text documents with this data enables the Web of Data to be used 
as background knowledge within document-oriented applications such as search 
and faceted browsing.

 

DBpedia Spotlight is a tool for annotating mentions of DBpedia resources in 
text, providing a solution for linking unstructured information sources to the 
Linked Open Data cloud through DBpedia. The DBpedia Spotlight Architecture is 
composed by the following modules:

    * Web application, a demonstration client (HTML/Javascript UI) that allows 
users to enter/paste text into a Web browser and visualize the resulting 
annotated text.

    * Web Service, a RESTful Web API that exposes the functionality of 
annotating and/or disambiguating entities in text. The service returns XML, 
JSON or RDF.

    * Annotation Java / Scala API, exposing the underlying logic that performs 
the annotation/disambiguation.

    * Indexing Java / Scala API, executing the data processing necessary to 
enable the annotation/disambiguation algorithms used.

 

More information about DBpedia Spotlight can be found at:

 

http://spotlight.dbpedia.org

 

DBpedia Spotlight is provided under the terms of the Apache License, Version 
2.0. Part of the code uses LingPipe under the Royalty Free License. The source 
code can be downloaded from:

 

http://sourceforge.net/projects/dbp-spotlight

 

The development of DBpedia Spotlight was supported by:

 

    * Neofonie GmbH, a Berlin-based company offering leading technologies in 
the area of Web search, social media and mobile applications 
(http://www.neofonie.de/).

    * The European Commission through the project LOD2 - Creating Knowledge out 
of Linked Data (http://lod2.eu/). 

 

Lots of thanks to:

 

    * Andreas Schultz for his help with the SPARQL endpoint.

    * Paul Kreis for his help with evaluations.

    * Robert Isele and Anja Jentzsch for their help in early stages with the 
DBpedia extraction framework.

 

Cheers,

Pablo N. Mendes, Max Jakob, Andrés García-Silva and Chris Bizer.

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