The BABAR Web site was established in 1993 at the Stanford Linear Accelerator
Center (SLAC) to support the BABAR experiment, to report its results, and to
facilitate communication among its scientific and engineering collaborators,
currently numbering about 600 individuals from 75 collaborating institutions in
10 countries. The BABAR Web site is, therefore, a community Web site. At the
same time it is hosted at SLAC and funded by agencies that demand adherence to
policies decided under different priorities. Additionally, the BABAR Web
administrators deal with the problems that arise during the course of managing
users, content, policies, standards, and changing technologies. Desired
solutions to some of these problems may be incompatible with the overall
administration of the SLAC Web sites and/or the SLAC policies and concerns.
There are thus different perspectives of the same Web site and differing
expectations in segments of the SLAC population which act as constraints and
challenges in any review or re-engineering activities. Web Engineering, which
post-dates the BABAR Web, has aimed to provide a comprehensive understanding of
all aspects of Web development. This paper reports on the first part of a
recent review of application of Web Engineering methods to the BABAR Web site,
which has led to explicit user and information models of the BABAR community
and how SLAC and the BABAR community relate and react to each other. The paper
identifies the issues of a community Web site in a hierarchical,
semi-governmental sector and formulates a strategy for periodic reviews of
BABAR and similar sites.Comment: Talk from the 2003 Computing in High Energy and Nuclear Physics
(CHEP03), La Jolla, Ca, USA, March 2003, 8 pages, PDF, PSN MONT00