Therefore we used these common terms to shape our hotel ontology and
the results of this process have been reported in Gawinecki, Gordon, Nguyen, et al.
Ut l z ng Semant c Web and Software Agents n a Travel Support System
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(2005); Gawinecki, Gordon, Paprzycki, et al. (2005); and Gordon, Kowalski, et al.
(2005). As an outcome we have two fully functional, complete ontologies (of a hotel
and of a restaurant) that are used to shape data stored in our Jena repository.
In this context, let us illustrate how we transform the VCP featured data into travel
tokens. As an example we will utilize the Web site belonging to Hilton hotels (www.
hilton.com). More precisely, let us look at some of the information that is available
at the Web site of Hilton Sao Paulo Morumbi depicted in Figure 8.
As clearly seen, from this page we can extract information such as the hotel name,
address, and phone numbers. This page would also have to be interacted with, in
case we planned to utilize our travel support system to make an actual reservation
(which is only in very long-term plans and out of scope of this chapter).
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