<p>Communities are groupings of distributed objects that are capable of com- nicating, directly or indirectly, through the medium of a shared context. To support communities on a wide scale will require developments at all levels of computing, from low-level communication protocols supporting transp
Distributed Communities on the Web: Third International Workshop, DCW 2000 Quebec City, Canada, June 19β21, 2000 Proceedings
β Scribed by John Plaice, Herwig Unger (auth.), Peter G. Kropf, Gilbert Babin, John Plaice, Herwig Unger (eds.)
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 213
- Series
- Lecture Notes in Computer Science 1830
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Communities are groupings of distributed objects that are capable of com- nicating, directly or indirectly, through the medium of a shared context. To support communities on a wide scale will require developments at all levels of computing, from low-level communication protocols supporting transparent - cess to mobile objects, through to distributed operating systems, through to high-level programming models allowing complex interaction between objects. This workshop brought together researchers interested in the technical issues of supporting communities. This workshop was the third in the DCW series. The ?rst two, entitled D- tributed Computing on the Web, took place in 1998 and 1999 at the University of Rostock, with proceedings published by the University of Rostock Press. This year, the workshop also incorporated the ISLIP (International Symposium on Languages for Intensional Programming) symposium. The ISLIP symposia have taken place every year since 1988, and have led to two volumes published by World-Scienti?c (Intensional Programming I, 1995, and Intensional Progr- ming II, 2000). While the two conferences emerged from di?erent needs, their focus merged to such an extent that it became clear that a joint conference promised to o?er great opportunities.
β¦ Table of Contents
The Web Operating System β WOS....Pages 1-1
Creating an Electronic Commerce Device Which Promotes Universal Access: The KALI Project....Pages 2-12
Intensional Markup Language....Pages 82-89
Towards a Logical Basis for Modelling and Querying Multi-dimensional Databases....Pages 90-99
Multidimensional XML....Pages 100-109
Application Programming Interface for WOSP/WOSRP....Pages 110-121
Message Chains and Disjunct Paths for Increasing Communication Performance in Large Networks....Pages 122-132
Using Corba in the Web Operating System....Pages 133-141
AntWorld: A Collaborative Web Search Tool....Pages 13-22
A Multimedia Session Manager Service for the Collaborative Browsing System....Pages 23-33
Adaptive Portals with Wireless Components....Pages 34-44
An Evaluation of Formalisms for Negotiations in E-commerce....Pages 45-54
Building Intensional Communities Using Shared Contexts....Pages 55-64
DSM-Communities in the World-Wide Web....Pages 65-73
A Resource Classification System for the WOS....Pages 74-81
Clusters, Servers, Thin Clients, and On-line Communities....Pages 142-143
The GIPSY Architecture....Pages 144-153
Multidimensional Lucid: Design, Semantics and Implementation....Pages 154-160
Intensional High Performance Computing....Pages 161-170
Java Mobile Agents Implementing On-line Algorithms to Improve the QoS of a 3D Distributed Virtual Environment....Pages 171-181
IDEAL: An Integrated Distributed Environment for Asynchronous Learning....Pages 182-191
Design and Implementation of a Distributed Agent Delivery System....Pages 192-201
β¦ Subjects
Computer Communication Networks; Information Systems Applications (incl.Internet); Artificial Intelligence (incl. Robotics); Business Information Systems; Computers and Society
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