Bois, Christian
2002-04-01
<p>As most of the research and practice communities, the mud building actors are developing the quality and<br>
the quantity of their exchanges of information and knowledge.<br>
The development of the Semantic Web has attracted the attention as a mean for making knowledge widely<br>
available after a phase of knowledge base creation that can be run by actors spread over a continent or<br>
more.</p>
<p>Challenges for the domain include its inscription in time back to the origins of man –large amount of de-<br>
veloped practices- and the new interest for a technique fitting well within sustainability, comfort and</p>
<p>health concern –wide extension of the related concepts.<br>
The text is aimed at having mud builders understand a little more ontologies and ontology specialists to<br>
understand a little more the specificities of mud building. Other stake holders may be interested by the<br>
dimensions of complexity coming from the fact that mud (cob, rammed earth, adobe) is a continuously<br>
“living” material.<br>
Challenges are both technical –new tools, articulation with existing systems- and social –ability of very<br>
different actors (engineers, architects, masons, etc.) to collaborate for building a common knowledge tool.</p>
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3252210
oai:zenodo.org:3252210
eng
Zenodo
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3252209
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode
EDEN, The European Conference on Information and Communication Technology Advances and Innovation in the Knowledge Society, Salford University, 2002
Internet
knowledge
community of practice
semantic web
commons
collaboration
ontology
mud building
Sharing concepts and experience through a knowledge base : the benefits that actors of the mud building European community are getting from developing the domain ontology
info:eu-repo/semantics/conferencePaper