How I Cracked Chinese Wordle Using a Knowledge Graph

Wordle is going viral these days on social media. The game made by Josh Wardle allows players to try six times to guess a five-letter word, with feedback given for each guess in the form of colored tiles indicating when letters match or occupy the correct position.

We have seen many Wordle variants for languages that use the Latin script, such as the Spanish Wordle, French Wordle, and German Wordle. However, for non-alphabetic languages like Chinese, a simple adaptation of the English Wordle's rules just won't work.

Knowledge Graphs and NLP. The Year of the Graph Newsletter: July/August 2019

Pinterest gets with the knowledge graph program. Facebook releases a new dataset for conversational Reasoning over Knowledge Graphs. Connected Data London announces its own program, rich in leaders and innovators.

And as always, new knowledge graph and graph database releases, research, use cases, and definitions. A double bill summertime newsletter edition, making your knowledge graph living easy.

Graph Explosion and Consolidation. The Year of the Graph Newsletter: June 2019

With the knowledge graph space exploding on all accounts (interest, use cases, funding), centrifugal and centripetal forces are simultaneously at play. While the "wild, early days" of knowledge graph technology are gone, the 20 year anniversary of the Semantic Web is a good opportunity to reflect on what worked and what didn't and to move forward in a pragmatic way.

A testament to the fact that this space is booming: more offerings are available every day, the quality and quantity of knowledge sharing is rising to meet the demand, and at the same time we are starting to see consolidation — in vendors, models, and standards.