|
|
- Association of Science and Engineering Education
- Loyola Marymount University, Los Angeles
- April 7, 2005
- Presentation: "Createing Systems that Know"
- Dr. Richard L. Ballard, Chief Scientist, Knowledge Foundations
-
- Based on Dr. Ballard's Knowledge Engineering Methodologies course textbook: Fundamental Definitions in Knowledge Science & Engineering - Creating Systems that Know. The presentation covers the definition of knowledge as theory and information and how knowledge engineering methodologies and Knowledge Foundations semantic technology can capture every form of human knowledge and reason with that knowledge the way people do.
-
- SEYBOLD, September 12, 2003, San Francisco.
- Moscone Center West
- Mills Davis, Managing Director, Project10X
Dr. Richard L. Ballard , Chief Scientist, Knowledge Foundations
The Future of Publishing Technology- Part 1
Despite the economic slowdown, technology continues to evolve, often with dramatic consequences. Publishing-centric technologies--PDF, print-on-demand, and content management--are spreading throughout the enterprise, intermingling with advances in other IT domains, including wireless communications, operating systems, and network and security infrastructures, to name just a few. Which technologies and standards are noise, and which are crucial to grasp? Our opening plenary features previews of future innovations and a thought-provoking debate about which technologies will have the most impact on our business, in both the short and long term.
KNOWLEDGE TECHNOLOGIES CONFERENCE 2002
- March 10-13 Seattle, Washington
- Dr. Richard L. Ballard, Chief Scientist, Knowledge Foundations
- Once & Future Knowledge
- Dr. Ballard looks back at the past 20 years of knowledge science and engineering achievements to sketch an outline of Knowledge Industry Formation and Emergence over the next 20 years. He employs a succession of nationally important space, miliatary and high level government decision tools and knowledgebases from his past to define the barriers to knowledge tool and product development. He highlights the approaches that overcome these barriers, and promise, of revolutionary products and services that the public has yet to understand or even imagine. He sees these next few years as the birth of an industry. He sketches major markets, then the production processes and economics that will shape its early evolution. Ballard opens the door to a compelling new vision of knowledge based computing and a revolutionary world where knowledge is gained, but never lost.
© Knowledge Foundations 2005
|
|