In my last article (Why Prompts Are The Future of Knowledge Graphs), I explored why a prompt-based approach to knowledge…
Kurt Cagle Explores the Cognitive Web
Pertaining to autonomous systems capable of working with data sensory feeds to learn behaviors, rather than having those behaviors be custom defined.
In my last article (Why Prompts Are The Future of Knowledge Graphs), I explored why a prompt-based approach to knowledge…
I thought, briefly, of doing another big animated piece for this issue of The Cagle Report. Still, I suspect I’m…
Way back in 1991, Tim Berners-Lee, then a young English software developer working at CERN in Geneva, Switzerland, came up with an intriguing way of combining a communication protocol for retrieving content (HTTP) with a descriptive language for embedding such links into documents (HTML). Shortly thereafter, as more and more people began to create content on these new HTTP servers, it became necessary to be able to provide some kind of mechanism to find this content.
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