Perhaps I’m a bit crazy to name this creation a synaptic autocomplete, in reality it’s more of a real-time reinforcement learning autocomplete, but that just doesn’t quite have the same zing to it if you catch my drift. So let’s stick with synaptic because it fulfills the most basic of requirements – implicit real-time connections. [...]
This entry was written by , posted on January 19, 2010 at 10:20 am, filed under Cool Tools, Synaptic web and tagged Add new tag, Application programming interface, Business, Delicious, googlewave, Operating Systems, Real-time computing, Realtime, Tools, Twitter.
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Image via Wikipedia Yesterday someone asked me a surprising question: How do you define real-time? Perhaps more surprising is that I had no idea how to answer it! Uhm, ah, eeeh, hmmm … fuck, what IS real-time? And it got me thinking. Well, ok, in real life we define real-time as the instant reaction from [...]
This entry was written by , posted on January 13, 2010 at 9:33 am, filed under Real-Time web and tagged Business, Data, Hypertext Transfer Protocol, Peer-to-peer, Real-time computing, Technology, Web Browser, Website.
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Our earlier post about the Semantic vs. Synaptic Web has raised some questions about the users of this new web trend. Why do we think it will be about the users and no more about the computers talking between each other. We can reference a bit with Ghost in The Shell. There is a network [...]
This entry was written by , posted on January 7, 2010 at 9:18 am, filed under synaptic web and tagged Application programming interface, Brain, Data, Knowledge Management, Knowledge Representation, Machine learning, Metadata, Semantic Web, synaptic web.
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Image by *iFatma via Flickr Word on the street has it that semantic has become a curseword and people should avoid using it at all cost, especially in relation to any sort of internet business or technology. Hearing about this led me to wondering about why and how it was that the semantic web failed [...]
This entry was written by , posted on January 4, 2010 at 9:27 am, filed under synaptic web and tagged Google, History, Search Engines, Searching, Semantic Web, Tim Berners-Lee, World Wide Web, Zemanta.
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