protégé Protégé Short Course: MARCH 23rd - 25th, 2020 at STANFORD, CA, USA protégé Products Support Community About A free, open-source ontology editor and framework for building intelligent systems Protégé is supported by a strong community of academic, government, and corporate users, who use Protégé to build knowledge-based solutions in areas as diverse as biomedicine, e-commerce, and organizational modeling. Download Now Use webProtégé Trusted by over 366,084 users iProd's aim is to improve the Product Development Process by using an ontology based approach in a backbone software framework. We use Protégé to model the underlying ontologies that connect data integration with business supporting algorithms. It helps us to coordinate the work of an international team by using the possibility to share ontologies via a server and provide diagrams of specific aspects via the Ontoviz plugin. The ontologies will be publicly available after the end of the project and provided upon request. Read More… Roberto d'Ippolito - Research and Development Manager @ Noesis Solutions Protégé-Frames provides the powerful knowledge base for the Essential Project, an open source toolset rated as one of the top Enterprise Architecture Suites in Forrester's latest Wave. Protégé enables us to dynamically extend our meta model (of over 500 classes) and manage complex relationships between all aspects of an organisations' enterprise architecture. Read More… Jonathan Carter - Principal Architect, EAS and co-founder @ The Essential Project We use WebProtégé in ROMULUS, a repository of interchangeable foundational ontologies. ROMULUS allows users to browse foundational ontologies online without the need to install software. Zubeida C. Kahn - PhD Student University of KwaZulu-Natal and UKZN/CSIR-Meraka Centre for Artificial Intelligence Research I'm using Protégé to describe and analyze the ways in which living organisms solve the problems of their existence. These are analyzed and sorted using criteria developed in a general problem-solving system, TRIZ, invented and developed in Russia. The ontology will be able to solve problems in a biomimetic way, driving technology along a route of greater sustainability. The project is in conjunction with Rupert Soar (Freeform Construction) and others. Read More… Julian Vincent - MA PhD DSc FIMechE @ Retired biologist / mechanical engineer We use WebProtégé as a collaborative tool to maintain the glossary in our domain and share knowledge models for specific domains (enterprise architecture, BPM, SOA). We use Protégé as a tool to prepare for the eventual transition from a process-driven to a knowledge-driven execution. Read More… Eddy Vanderlinden - Senior Consultant @ Directorate-General for Informatics (DIGIT) Why Protégé Protégé’s plug-in architecture can be adapted to build both simple and complex ontology-based applications. Developers can integrate the output of Protégé with rule systems or other problem solvers to construct a wide range of intelligent systems. Most important, the Stanford team and the vast Protégé community are here to help. Active Community Protégé is actively supported by a strong community of users and developers that field questions, write documentation, and contribute plug-ins. W3C Standards Support Protégé fully supports the latest OWL 2 Web Ontology Language and RDF specifications from the World Wide Web Consortium. Extensible Open Source Environment Protégé is based on Java, is extensible, and provides a plug-and-play environment that makes it a flexible base for rapid prototyping and application development. Download Now Use webProtégé Follow us on Protégé Home Products Community Support Mailing Lists Documentation Other Options About Our Team BMIR Citing Contact Look no further. The wiki is here. Everything you didn’t know you needed to know about Protégé. Visit the Wiki Copyright © 2016-2020 The Board of Trustees of the Leland Stanford Junior University Protégé is a national resource for biomedical ontologies and knowledge bases supported by the National Institute of General Medical Sciences. Stanford University