Hey all,
Just wanted to say that even though I'm not able to contribute at this
time, it's great to see all the activity! Gann Bierner also saw the recent
release and was super happy to see it.
BTW, for a tutorial I did last year, I tried out SpaCy and was really
impressed with the thought that
Anastasija,
There might be a few appropriate sentiment datasets listed in my homework
on Twitter sentiment analysis:
https://github.com/utcompling/applied-nlp/wiki/Homework5
There may also be some useful data sets in the Crowdflower Open Data
collection:
his information and checked in many places,
> >> >> including obviously google scholar, and I haven't found any serious
> >> studies
> >> >> or reliable results. Most of the existing ones report the
> performances
> >> of
> >>
It would be fantastic to have these numbers. This is an example of
something that would be a great contribution by someone trying to
contribute to open source and who is maybe just getting into machine
learning and natural language processing.
For Twitter-ish text, it'd be great to look at models
As one of the people who got OpenNLP started in the late 1990's (for
research, but hoping it could be used by industry), it makes me smile to
know that lots of people use it happily to this day. :)
There are lots of new kids in town, but the licensing is often conflicted,
and the biggest benefits
this release:
[ ] +1 Approve the release
[ ] -1 Veto the release (please provide specific comments)
[ ] 0 Don't care
Please report any problems you may find.
--
Jason Baldridge
Associate Professor, Department of Linguistics
The University of Texas at Austin
http://www.jasonbaldridge.com
http
pluggable and then offer a few addons for
existing libraries.
Good to know that liblinear works well, as far as I know its written in
C/C++,
did you use the Java port of it, or did you wrote a JNI interface?
Jörn
On 03/22/2013 03:08 PM, Jason Baldridge wrote:
BTW, I've just recently
to have overlooked this there.
I don't seem to have access to do this
Thanks,
James
--
Jason Baldridge
Associate Professor, Department of Linguistics
The University of Texas at Austin
http://www.jasonbaldridge.com
http://twitter.com/jasonbaldridge
its time for 1.5.3. I usually work now with the trunk version
because it just contain too many fixes I need for my day job.
I will volunteer to be release manager if nobody else wants to
take this role.
Any opinions?
Jörn
--
Jason Baldridge
Associate Professor, Department
decide to do it I suggest
to
wait until the
1.5.3 release is done so we have a bit time to also migrate our build
process.
Do have all committers experience with git?
Jörn
--
Jason Baldridge
Associate Professor, Department of Linguistics
The University of Texas
.
Now all we need is a way to get label corrections from the community :-)
Jörn
--
Jason Baldridge
Associate Professor, Department of Linguistics
The University of Texas at Austin
http://www.jasonbaldridge.com
http://twitter.com/jasonbaldridge
.
Jörn
--
Jason Baldridge
Associate Professor, Department of Linguistics
The University of Texas at Austin
http://www.jasonbaldridge.com
http://twitter.com/jasonbaldridge
coming
up with either a patch or a build for the critical issues and bugs that
seem to produce undesirable results. Maybe calling it 1.5.2.1 or
something
--
Jason Baldridge
Associate Professor, Department of Linguistics
The University of Texas at Austin
http://www.jasonbaldridge.com
, please
let me know if there are any other steps I need to take for this.
- Lee Hinman
[1]:
https://github.com/dakrone/**clojure-opennlphttps://github.com/dakrone/clojure-opennlp
--
Jason Baldridge
Associate Professor, Department of Linguistics
The University of Texas at Austin
http
14 matches
Mail list logo