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WP5. Adam Funk a.funk@dcs.shef.ac.uk University of Sheffield 23rd May 2006. Acknowledgements. Niraj Aswani Gil Francopolou Marc Kemps-Snijders Julien Nioche Peter Wittenburg. Service-oriented architecture. Operations are carried out by exchanging messages
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WP5 Adam Funk a.funk@dcs.shef.ac.uk University of Sheffield 23rd May 2006
Acknowledgements • Niraj Aswani • Gil Francopolou • Marc Kemps-Snijders • Julien Nioche • Peter Wittenburg
Service-oriented architecture • Operations are carried out • by exchanging messages • according to web service standards (XML, SOAP) • Benefits: • interoperability between domains, applications, users • composability • encapsulation and abstraction (users don’t worry about the details)
Selling points • Standardizing concepts through the Data Category Registry allows • easy cross-resource comparisons of annotations and lexical entries • interaction between them, e.g. using annotated content as examples for lexical entries • tools to annotate semi-automatically using information from various lexica
T5.1: Architecture • D5.1.A: API for DCRegistry v2, due M12, done • D5.1.B: API for LMF v1, due M12, done • D5.1.C: API for MAF v1, due M12, done • APIs: • XML-based • language-independent • for web services
T5.2: Ref. implementations • D5.2.A: DCR ref. imp. v1, due M12, done • D5.2.C: MAF ref. imp. V1, due M24, available now for English and French
T5.3: Integration platform • D5.3.A & B: platform software and documentation v1, due M18 • MAF client available now
T5.4: Data Category Usage Platform • D5.4.A & B: software and documentation v1, due M18
Demonstration • An example MAF client connecting to reference implementations of MAF services for English and Bulgarian