Saturday, December 17, 2011

When schema matching hits the market

If you can imagine, I do it for a business. I imagine the subject to be standard forms in graph land, best fit schema.

Like, what is a thumb nail? How does face book grab the short format of a linked page? Table of Contents? Abstract? These are all things you find on the most common documents formats, and important stuff appears in the documents as a partial ordering. Great news for data snooping.

What we can do in ontology networks is let the short form standardize on its own. Define the fourth order short form of graphs to be the title, author and picture. Request that short form on any graph in any set anywhere. What happens in the market? Anybody trying to get eyes on their stuff, naturally selects an ordering that is a best fit to the short form. So, given the syntax: ShortForm:('Chicken Soup') // this form, so prevalent no soup company will ignore it. Huffman encode the common forms, all of the FaceBook, FootBook, Giggles, all of them, they will immediately adopt one of the forms, these forms will be anywhere there is a machine, stored in the local format table as nested triplets.

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