The AtomOWL ontology is inspired from the work done by the atom working group. This ontology is working off the rfc 4287 published among othe places at http://www.atompub.org/rfc4287.html . The AtomOWL ontology uses as much as possible the same terms as the format there to make the relation easy to understand. The AtomOWL name space is slightly different from the atom namespace [see post http://www.imc.org/atom-syntax/mail-archive/msg16476.html]. But this is a good thing as it helps distinguish the ontology from the rfc 4287 serialisation. @en
This vocabulary allows the semantic description of visual analytics applications. It is based on the RDF Data Cube Vocabulary and the Semanticscience Integrated Ontology. @en
Simple and direct pricing ontology for Cloud Computing Services. This ontology allows to define model of prices used in large cloud computing providers such as Amazon, Azure, etc., including options for regions, type of instances, prices specification, etc. @en
Service Level Agreement for Cloud Computing Services. This ontology allows to define model of SLA/SLO used in large cloud computing providers such as Amazon, Azure, etc., including terms, claims, credit, compensations, etc @en
The EUropean Research Information Ontology (EURIO) conceptualises, formally encodes and makes available in an open, structured and machine-readable format data about resarch projects funded by the EU's framework programmes for research and innovation. @en
The Identifier Ontology models non-RDF based Identifiers for resources. It is used to maintain a mapping between RDF resources identifiers and their equivalent IDs in an alternate, non-RDF based domain. @en
The ontology aims at modelling the data on cultural institutes or sites such as data regarding the agents that play a specific role on cultural institutes or sites, the sites themselves, the contact points, all multimedia files which describe the cultural institute or site and any other information useful to the public in order to access the institute or site. Moreover, the ontology represents events that can take place in specific cultural institutes or sites. @en
This ontology establishes classes corresponding to stereotypes used in ISO-conformant models, as used in the rules for conversion of the ISO TC 211 Harmonized Model from the UML to OWL representations @en
An OWL representation of the Sampling Features Schema described in clauses 8-10 of ISO 19156:2011 Geographic Information - Observations and Measurements. @en
An OWL representation of (some of) the basic types described in ISO 19103:2005, required as primitives in other ontologies based on ISO 19100 series standards @en