427 research outputs found

    A Guide to Institutional Repository Software

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    StrainInfo : from microbial information to microbiological knowledge

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    Integration of Heterogeneous Digital Libraries with Semi-automatic Mapping and Browsing: From Formalization to Specification to Visualization

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    In this paper, we formalize the digital library (DL) integration problem and propose an overall approach based on the 5S framework. We apply 5S to domain-specific (archaeological) DLs, illustrating our solutions for key problems in DL integration. We use ETANA-DL as a case study to describe the process of semi-automatically generating a union catalog and a unified browsing service in an archaeological DL. A visual schema mapping tool is developed for union catalog creation. A pilot user study aids tool evaluation. Our approach is further validated through application of a general browsing component to two integrated DLs

    Whitepaper on Reusable Hybrid and Multi-Cloud Analytics Service Framework

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    Over the last several years, the computation landscape for conducting data analytics has completely changed. While in the past, a lot of the activities have been undertaken in isolation by companies, and research institutions, today's infrastructure constitutes a wealth of services offered by a variety of providers that offer opportunities for reuse, and interactions while leveraging service collaboration, and service cooperation. This document focuses on expanding analytics services to develop a framework for reusable hybrid multi-service data analytics. It includes (a) a short technology review that explicitly targets the intersection of hybrid multi-provider analytics services, (b) a small motivation based on use cases we looked at, (c) enhancing the concepts of services to showcase how hybrid, as well as multi-provider services can be integrated and reused via the proposed framework, (d) address analytics service composition, and (e) integrate container technologies to achieve state-of-the-art analytics service deploymen

    Automated Discovery, Binding, and Integration Of GIS Web Services

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    The last decade has demonstrated steady growth and utilization of Web Service technology. While Web Services have become significant in a number of IT domains such as eCommerce, digital libraries, data feeds, and geographical information systems, common portals or registries of Web Services require manual publishing for indexing. Manually compiled registries of Web Services have proven useful but often fail to include a considerable amount of Web Services published and available on the Web. We propose a system capable of finding, binding, and integrating Web Services into an index in an automated manner. By using a combination of guided search and web crawling techniques, the system finds a large number of Web Service providers that are further bound and aggregated into a single portal available for public use. Results show that this approach is successful in discovering a considerable number of Web Services in the GIS(Geographical Information Systems) domain, and demonstrate improvements over existing methods of Web Service Discovery

    Automated Discovery, Binding, and Integration Of GIS Web Services

    Get PDF
    The last decade has demonstrated steady growth and utilization of Web Service technology. While Web Services have become significant in a number of IT domains such as eCommerce, digital libraries, data feeds, and geographical information systems, common portals or registries of Web Services require manual publishing for indexing. Manually compiled registries of Web Services have proven useful but often fail to include a considerable amount of Web Services published and available on the Web. We propose a system capable of finding, binding, and integrating Web Services into an index in an automated manner. By using a combination of guided search and web crawling techniques, the system finds a large number of Web Service providers that are further bound and aggregated into a single portal available for public use. Results show that this approach is successful in discovering a considerable number of Web Services in the GIS(Geographical Information Systems) domain, and demonstrate improvements over existing methods of Web Service Discovery

    Grammar-oriented object design : towards dynamically reconfigurable business and software architecture for on-demand computing

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    Grammar-oriented Object Design was shown to be a potent combination of extending methods, incorporating DSLs from a given business domain (BDSLs) and Variation-oriented Design in order to provide a seamless transition from business models to component-based software architectures. GOOD starts by extending current object modeling techniques to include the discovery and explicit modeling of higher levels of reuse, starting from subsystems, defining their manners using a domain-specific business language, i.e., using use-case gramars, that describe the rules governing the creation, dynamic configuration and collaboration of large-grained, business-process-scale, adaptive software components with pluggable behavior, through the application of architectural patterns and representation of component manners in the BDSL. 1his presents immense potential for applications in the domains of grid services, services on demand and a utility-based model of computing where a business need initiates the convergence of application components based on/from the manners of services they provide and require

    Aplicación de la Inteligencia Competitiva y el Benchmarking de nuevas teorías para el desarrollo de un Plan Estratégico y Sostenible para la Industria Naval

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    Since their beginning, companies establish procedures to observe their competitors. Methods for obtaining this kind of information have evolved with the internet era; a plethora of tools is nowadays available for this job. As a consequence, a new problem has emerged: documentary noise, keeping companies from being able to process and benefit from the huge amount of information gathered. Strategic planning mainly relies on obtaining environmental knowledge, so companies need help on dealing with this documentary noise; technological surveillance and benchmarking are preferred methodologies to achieve this objective, coping with data produced by automatic internet tools like search engines and others. Qualified results of better nature are produced by bringing new theories on information gathering and processing intoboth tools. This article exposes empirical results on the application of a demonstrative technological surveillance system based on different R&D management structures, relying on benchmarking indicators for the naval and aeronautics industries.Desde su inicio, las empresas establecen procedimientos para observar a sus competidores. Los métodos para obtener este tipo de información han evolucionado con la era del internet; una gran cantidad de herramientas está disponible en la actualidad para esta tarea. En consecuencia, ha surgido un nuevo problema: ruido documental, que evita que las empresas procesen y se beneficien de la gran cantidad de información recolectada. La planeación estratégica principalmente se apoya en el conocimiento ambiental obtenido, así que las empresas necesitan ayuda para tratar con este ruido documental; la vigilancia tecnológica y el benchmarking son metodologías preferidas para lograr este objetivo, y hacerfrente a los datos producidos por herramientas automáticas del internet como motores de búsqueda y otras. Este artículo expone resultados empíricos acerca de la aplicación de un sistema demostrativo de vigilancia tecnológica basado en diferentes estructuras de gestión de I&D, confiando en indicadores de benchmarking para las industrias navales y aeronáuticas
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