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README.md

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# AI Knowledge Graph Generator
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![ai-knowledge-graph-example](data/ai-knowlege-graph-example.png)
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# AI Powered Knowledge Graph Generator
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This system takes text documents, extracts knowledge in the form of Subject-Predicate-Object (SPO) triplets, and visualizes the relationships as an interactive knowledge graph.
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data/industrial-revolution.txt

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The Industrial Revolution, originating in Great Britain during the late 18th century, represented one of the most significant turning points in human history. Marked by a transition from manual labor and agrarian economies to machine-based manufacturing, this era was driven by groundbreaking inventions and socioeconomic shifts. Early innovations, particularly in textiles, such as James Hargreaves' spinning jenny and Richard Arkwright's water frame, accelerated production dramatically, enabling factories to replace cottage industries.
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A key catalyst of the First Industrial Revolution was the refinement of the steam engine by Scottish engineer James Watt, enabling widespread adoption in manufacturing, mining, and transportation. Steam-powered locomotives and ships revolutionized transport, linking previously distant markets. Railways, exemplified by Britain's Liverpool-Manchester Railway and America's Transcontinental Railroad, interconnected continents and facilitated rapid urbanization. Industrial cities such as Manchester, Birmingham, Pittsburgh, and Lowell became epicenters of production, trade, and migration, although often suffering from overcrowded and unsanitary conditions.
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Simultaneously, advances in agriculture, notably the development of Eli Whitney's cotton gin and Cyrus McCormick’s mechanical reaper, allowed more efficient food and raw material production, feeding urban expansion. Economically, capitalism matured significantly, shaped by thinkers like Adam Smith, whose seminal work, The Wealth of Nations, laid ideological foundations for free-market economies.
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However, the initial industrial boom led to harsh labor conditions, prompting social movements for reform. Activists such as Robert Owen promoted improved worker conditions, founding utopian communities like New Lanark. This activism spurred legislation like Britain's Factory Acts, which limited child labor and introduced workplace safety regulations.
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The Second Industrial Revolution, occurring roughly between the late 19th and early 20th centuries, built upon these foundations through breakthroughs in electricity, steel, chemicals, and communications. Innovations included the mass-production methods pioneered by Henry Ford, notably the assembly line, dramatically reducing costs and reshaping consumer markets. Simultaneously, the invention of the telephone by Alexander Graham Bell and the radio by Guglielmo Marconi revolutionized global communications, enhancing interconnectedness and cultural exchange.
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Technological advancements like the Bessemer Process, developed by Henry Bessemer, revolutionized steel production, driving construction and infrastructure projects such as skyscrapers and bridges. Electrification, spearheaded by inventors like Thomas Edison and Nikola Tesla, brought electric lighting, motors, and appliances into homes and factories, transforming daily life and further accelerating urban growth.
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This period also experienced the rise of significant labor movements and workers' rights organizations, responding to conditions in rapidly growing industrial enterprises. Ideological critiques of capitalism emerged prominently through philosophers and activists like Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, whose influential works, including The Communist Manifesto, profoundly impacted political systems worldwide.
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Following World War II, humanity entered the Third Industrial Revolution, often termed the Digital Revolution, beginning around the mid-20th century and extending into the late 20th century. This era was characterized by transformative developments in electronics, computing, and automation. The invention of the transistor by researchers at Bell Labs and later, the integrated circuit, paved the way for modern computing devices, drastically altering industries, from manufacturing and finance to entertainment and healthcare.
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Personal computing, popularized by pioneers like Steve Jobs, Steve Wozniak, and Bill Gates, democratized access to information technology, transforming societal interactions and business practices. The creation of the Internet, initially developed by agencies like DARPA and expanded globally with contributions from visionaries such as Tim Berners-Lee, enabled instantaneous communication and unprecedented information sharing worldwide, ushering in the Information Age.
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Advancements in automation and robotics significantly altered manufacturing industries, exemplified by companies like Toyota, which pioneered robotic assembly lines to improve efficiency and product consistency. These technologies enabled mass customization and just-in-time production, reshaping global supply chains and economic structures.
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As the Digital Revolution matured, the emergence of mobile communications, represented by the development of cellular technologies by companies such as Motorola, Nokia, and later Apple and Samsung, further reshaped global interactions. The rise of e-commerce, spearheaded by platforms like Amazon and Alibaba, transformed retail, logistics, and consumer behavior at a global scale.
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In recent decades, humanity has begun experiencing the Fourth Industrial Revolution, distinguished by the fusion of physical, digital, and biological domains. This revolution centers around groundbreaking technologies such as artificial intelligence (AI), machine learning, robotics, biotechnology, quantum computing, blockchain, and the Internet of Things (IoT). AI development, advanced by research institutions and corporations including OpenAI, Google, Microsoft, and IBM, has enabled capabilities such as natural language processing, predictive analytics, autonomous vehicles, and smart assistants like ChatGPT.
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Machine learning algorithms are now fundamental in fields like healthcare, finance, and manufacturing, enabling sophisticated predictive modeling and optimization of processes. Autonomous vehicles, championed by companies such as Tesla, Waymo, and Cruise, have begun reshaping transportation and logistics, promising significant changes in urban planning and infrastructure.
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Blockchain technology, exemplified by cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin and Ethereum, has challenged traditional financial and legal institutions by introducing decentralized financial systems and smart contracts. Biotechnology advancements, such as CRISPR-Cas9 gene editing, have introduced possibilities of addressing previously incurable diseases, significantly altering medicine and ethical considerations.
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Quantum computing, currently in early stages of development by organizations such as IBM, Google, and research institutions like MIT, promises unprecedented computational power, potentially revolutionizing fields like cryptography, materials science, and pharmaceuticals.
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As the Fourth Industrial Revolution unfolds, critical questions emerge concerning economic inequality, ethics, data privacy, and employment. Debates on how best to manage technological progress are shaped by concerns around automation’s impact on employment, privacy implications of pervasive data collection, and the ethical dimensions of artificial intelligence and biotechnology. Institutions such as the World Economic Forum, the United Nations, and governments globally are actively engaging with these topics to manage technological progress responsibly.
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Collectively, these successive industrial revolutions have profoundly transformed society, reshaped global economic systems, altered cultural norms, and significantly influenced human interactions with technology and the environment. Understanding this extensive and interconnected narrative is essential for grasping the complex interplay between technological innovation, socioeconomic shifts, global politics, and human civilization as a whole.

data/input-data.txt

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