We’re proud to join a group of top notch organisations from both research and industry that are working to build and implement a full-fledged cross-media analysis platform. …
Meeting MICO: Media in Context and Cross-Media Analysis

We’re proud to join a group of top notch organisations from both research and industry that are working to build and implement a full-fledged cross-media analysis platform. …
[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text]When I left home I woke up early in the morning and brought with me the warmest clothes I have. Rome is a terrific place before sunrise, like most of the big european cities, it sleeps quietly. …
It always feels great when the testing team of A1 (Austrian’s #1 Telecom operator) completes the weekly session and we can bring in production our latest software release of the Helix Cloud platform.
This time we added support for Simulated Live Broadcasting that can now be configured using an easy-to-use Web UI or via Restful APIs.
We also started the testing of the latest release of Helix Server v. 15 that now adds support for MPEG-DASH.
Thanks to @ziodave for his amazing work on this one and to the A1 Web Streaming Team (Ludwig, Arnold and Michael in the photo)!
In this post we will present ioio.js a framework we developed for WordLift users to personalize the user-experience on semantic-aware WordPress blogs (WordLift brings the power of Apache Stanbol to WordPress).
Read more on: https://blog.iks-project.eu/wordlift-powers-enel-tv-semantic-tv-example/
[vimeo http://www.vimeo.com/45243929 w=500&h=281]
WordLift’s latest presentation for the IKS Workshop in Salzburg. Click here to join the WordLift Beta.
http://wordlift.insideout.io/wordlift-launches-in-beta/
If you’re using WordPress (stand-alone installation) and are interested in joining the private Beta program of WordLift 2 drop us an email.
Our collaboration with the IKS team and Apache Stanbol moves forward: our goal is to enable every blogger to create, share and curate named entities on a large scale; with Google moving ahead with Semantic Search everyone shall have the toolbox ready to produce structure data with his/her own content.
The Web is a blend of technical resources, functionalities and usage patterns: all of these dimensions make it the medium we all love. This article is about Interact Egypt (and its holding company IO10), WordPress and the Semantic Web.
And before I start describing our latest effort on how to make the Web smarter…
I have to admit it was my idea to add the naive slogan “we love the Internet” in our new meetup group name – and yes I really believe Egypt does have a crucial role in leading the next wave of innovations after #jan25 and the Arab Spring and…this is also the reason I’m so proud of investing in Egypt these days.
Now getting back to our scope I’d like to start with one question for all of you:
The news that just came out these days informs us that Big G purchased a patent from IBM to shape the next generations of social networks and to lead users finding “experts” or like-minded enthusiasts on specific topics using semantic technologies. Now a semantic networks is a form of knowledge representation. And this acquisition proves that we’re ready (or nearly ready) to find and access Web sites and Web resources not by keywords, as Google and the other search engines have being doing in the last 20 years, but by descriptions of their contents and capabilities. “The semantic web is an extension of the current web in which information is given well-defined meaning, better enabling computers and people to work in cooperation” (Tim Berners-Lee).
WordPress today is the largest blogging platform on the Planet, it runs 12% of the top 1 million largest websites and powers 20% of the new website launched in the States and this is why we had no choice when few months ago we decided our mission was to bring Semantic Web technologies mainstream. IO10 (Interact Egypt’s mother company) joined the pioneering team of IKS (a european founded research project), started contributing to the open-source project called Apache Stanbol (a stack of reusable software modules for semantic web content management) and developed WordLift. The idea behind it is quite simple:
WordLift reads the text of your post and pages, understands it, adds context and meaningful data using schema.org vocabulary (this is a set of tags all major search engines will recognize) and help you boost SEO on your website.
Simple and effective we went live this past August and since then we had over 693 downloads; we won the Semantic UX Contest and secured the founding to move the project further (a website of WordLift was born in the meanwhile).
Unleashing the power of semantic technologies with a bottom-up approach (starting from blogs and websites) means creating a long tail of valuable semantic networks, providing everyone with open-source tools to make web content more useful, and sharing interests and knowledge in a democratic way. A medium that is complete, democratic and democratized is a medium that lets everyone organize data as it is received. With the continuos growth of spontaneous information sharing platforms (and social networks) everyone shall be able to coordinate his/her views with various communities and to organize content efficiently. The trend toward opening up data and semantic technologies is changing the web’s core structure and the means of accessing it.
We want to embrace these changes and we want to do it with Egypt’s brightest digital revolutionaries and this is why you’re all welcome to join our first meetup this coming monday!