This section addresses:
:USDA #1:
¶User-friendly design for rapid deposition, manipulation, and retrieval of data with capability of specific queries.
Ontomatica’s Navigator architecture is similar to other modern navigation systems. The Volkswagen “Find a Match” application is one example.
The Volkswagen application navigates this ontology. See also: :cite:`5043` :cite:`5044` :cite:`5045`.
Ontomatica’s Navigator, traversing the graphs implemented in the homeopathic application, operates in the same way as the Volkswagen navigator, but use different data.
Volkswagen and Ontomatica use the same underlying technology for specifying and storing data. Both specify data using ontologies and store ontology representations in the following formats:
Ontomatica Nobel Prize application illustrates application services navigating data services that manage content familiar to many. For example, here are U.S. Nobel Laureates in Chemistry.
Complete System will look and operate like the Nobel Prize applications and the Volkswagen “Find a Match” application.
In place of the Nobel Laureate’s picture will be the branded food label image registered by a supplier during the web deposit process.
All queries are represented as a Universal Resource Identifier (URI). This means that an end user, investigator and supplier can easily link to and re-use a reference to a food.
Ontomatica’s Navigator, as of 2015, is unique in the technology marketplace.
Some modern tools enable a user to compose a query by selecting two or more single-level facets. An example is NCCOR.
Only Navigator enables a user to compose queries by selecting terms from multiple hierarchies of terms.