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Web Dynamics Adapting To Change In Content Size Topology And Use 1st Edition Mark Levene

  • SKU: BELL-4238328
Web Dynamics Adapting To Change In Content Size Topology And Use 1st Edition Mark Levene
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Web Dynamics Adapting To Change In Content Size Topology And Use 1st Edition Mark Levene instant download after payment.

Publisher: Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
File Extension: PDF
File size: 14.27 MB
Pages: 466
Author: Mark Levene, Alexandra Poulovassilis (auth.)
ISBN: 9783642073779, 9783662108741, 3642073778, 3662108747
Language: English
Year: 2004
Edition: 1

Product desciption

Web Dynamics Adapting To Change In Content Size Topology And Use 1st Edition Mark Levene by Mark Levene, Alexandra Poulovassilis (auth.) 9783642073779, 9783662108741, 3642073778, 3662108747 instant download after payment.

The World Wide Web has become a ubiquitous global tool, used for finding infor­ mation, communicating ideas, carrying out distributed computation and conducting business, learning and science. The Web is highly dynamic in both the content and quantity of the information that it encompasses. In order to fully exploit its enormous potential as a global repository of information, we need to understand how its size, topology and content are evolv­ ing. This then allows the development of new techniques for locating and retrieving information that are better able to adapt and scale to its change and growth. The Web's users are highly diverse and can access the Web from a variety of devices and interfaces, at different places and times, and for varying purposes. We thus also need techniques for personalising the presentation and content of Web­ based information depending on how it is being accessed and on the specific user's requirements. As well as being accessed by human users, the Web is also accessed by appli­ cations. New applications in areas such as e-business, sensor networks, and mobile and ubiquitous computing need to be able to detect and react quickly to events and changes in Web-based information. Traditional approaches using query-based 'pull' of information to find out if events or changes of interest have occurred may not be able to scale to the quantity and frequency of events and changes being generated, and new 'push' -based techniques are needed.

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