Folksonomies are powerful tools for the Web 2.0 to provide classifications “emerging from the bottom”, performed by users who collaboratively assign tags and annotate shared resources. In this paper, we adapt the notion of folksonomy to the collaborative tagging of Web APIs, that is, software components made available by third parties through web interfaces in order to aggregate them and compose web mashups. In this context, we will motivate the use of this tool and we will discuss the differences to model the mashup space as a folksonomy with respect to the traditional use of folksonomies in the Web 2.0. The folksonomy of Web APIs we will describe is modeled to be fully compliant with existing and commonly used public Web API repositories...
International audienceFolksonomy expands the collaborative process by allowing contributors to index...
Social tagging to annotate resources represents one of the innovative aspects introduced with Web 2....
We can observe that the amount of non-toy domain ontologies is still very limited for many areas of ...
Web APIs, that is, software components made available by third parties through web interfaces, can b...
Given the huge number of available Web APIs, a web designer might take advantage of the ???wisdom???...
Nowadays web designers are able to perform fast development of web applications by aggregating Web A...
In this paper we propose the use of multiple interconnected perspectives in searching for Web APIs t...
Collaboration inside and among enterprises often relies on mashup as a new development style for non...
Nowadays, Web applications can be quickly developed by combining existing APIs, independently provid...
International audienceRecently, the approaches that combine semantic web ontologies and web 2.0 tech...
Ontologies and tagging systems are two different ways to organize the knowledge present in Web. The ...
Web application hybrids, popularly known as mashups, are created by integrating services on the Web ...
Effective support to web designers for fast development of web applications starting from third-part...
Despite increasing interest in folksonomy in practice as well as in research, little has been done t...
In recent years major web services have opened their systems to outside use through the imple-mentat...
International audienceFolksonomy expands the collaborative process by allowing contributors to index...
Social tagging to annotate resources represents one of the innovative aspects introduced with Web 2....
We can observe that the amount of non-toy domain ontologies is still very limited for many areas of ...
Web APIs, that is, software components made available by third parties through web interfaces, can b...
Given the huge number of available Web APIs, a web designer might take advantage of the ???wisdom???...
Nowadays web designers are able to perform fast development of web applications by aggregating Web A...
In this paper we propose the use of multiple interconnected perspectives in searching for Web APIs t...
Collaboration inside and among enterprises often relies on mashup as a new development style for non...
Nowadays, Web applications can be quickly developed by combining existing APIs, independently provid...
International audienceRecently, the approaches that combine semantic web ontologies and web 2.0 tech...
Ontologies and tagging systems are two different ways to organize the knowledge present in Web. The ...
Web application hybrids, popularly known as mashups, are created by integrating services on the Web ...
Effective support to web designers for fast development of web applications starting from third-part...
Despite increasing interest in folksonomy in practice as well as in research, little has been done t...
In recent years major web services have opened their systems to outside use through the imple-mentat...
International audienceFolksonomy expands the collaborative process by allowing contributors to index...
Social tagging to annotate resources represents one of the innovative aspects introduced with Web 2....
We can observe that the amount of non-toy domain ontologies is still very limited for many areas of ...