Dear Amgine,
I am interpreting your mail like this: more structered data in wiktionary would benefit
several application. This is why we should use the wiktionary-l mailing to mediate between
providers of structured data and consumers such as your project .
I am rephrasing your answer because it was not directly targeting my question.
Should we tell people who are interested in structured data from wiktionary to sign up and
post to the wiktionary-I mailing list, which currently has quite a low traffic ?
Sebastian
--
Sent with my mobile phone, please excuse my brevity, Sebastian
Amgine <amgine.saewyc(a)gmail.com> wrote:
Please be aware I am supporting a student team who are building a
wiktionary app for Android (and eventually iOS) which is intended to do
some article parsing as a WMF-supported student project. Obviously
more-structured data would be preferable for this project, such as
microformats within Wiktionary articles.
Amgine
On 12-01-20 08:00 AM, Sebastian Hellmann wrote:
(I'm cross posting to
dbpedia-wiktionary(a)lists.sourceforge.net)
Hi Thomas,
interesting, that you posted on this list. It is the discussion list
list for Wiktionary in general.
I did a mail count for this list for 2011 and this is the result:
29 mails total
11 were general announcements such as the Wikimania
10 were about Wiktionary issues
8 were about information extraction of Wiktionary (Mostly caused by us
and the Wiktionary RDF Extraction announcement).
2010 looks similar.
I was wondering, if the extraction of data from Wiktionary could become
a main topic on this list.
Shall we merge communities into this list?
1. There is a DBpedia Wiktionary to RDF list with 18 members here:
https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/dbpedia-wiktionary
2. Then some people might join from
http://linguistics.okfn.org/
http://lists.okfn.org/mailman/listinfo/open-linguistics
This is a Working Group for Open Data in Linguistics and there are maybe
5-10 people there that are interested in extraction of structured data
from Wiktionary.
3. People from many approaches such as
http://code.google.com/p/wikokit/ (does not seem to have a mailing list)
could be redirected here.
In the end all want to get structured data out of Wiktionary. If this
would be possible, the number of Wiki editors would also increase.
What do you think? I am not sure about all ramification, but focusing
all efforts on Wiktionary-l would be nice and would benefit Wiktionary.
Sebastian
On 01/11/2012 03:50 PM, Thomas Schandl wrote:
> Hello!
>
> I recently found your very interesting projects as I was looking for
> semantically rich dumps of Wiktionary, and I wanted to tell you about my
> use cases.
>
> I work for the Semantic Web Company (we are also partners in the LOD2
> project) and we have a term and phrase extractor, which we want to
> improve by enriching the extraction model with their various grammatical
> forms of the model's terms.
>
> So additions we are most interested in are declinations, tenses and
> synonyms for German and English.
> Another use case would be to use Wiktionary data to suggest translations
> of controlled terms in a thesaurus. So the available translations would
> be great to have in RDF, too.
>
> Best regards,
> Thomas