| L. A. Carr, D. C. De Roure, W. Hall, and G. J. Hill. The Distributed Link Service: A tool for Publishers, Authors and Readers. World Wide Web Journal, 1, 1, 1995, 647656. |
....there to the client. Proxies are usually used for network infrastructure reasons (such as caching and controlled access to the Internet) and pass content verbatim, although it is possible for them to alter content as it passes through[5] 7] Systems based on this principle already exist, e.g. DLS[4][8] and Webvise[3] although they differ from Goate in that they aim to use the browser as one viewer in a larger hypertext system, the proxy being one method of adding links to documents. Goate is a purely proxy only solution, focused on being high level linking to the browser. 3.4 Presentation ....
Carr, L.A., DeRoure, D., Hall, W. and Hill, G. The distributed link service: A tool for publishers, authors and readers. Proceedings of the 4 th International World Wide Web Conference. 1995.
....generally however, this paper aims at paving the path for the adoption of XLink and its full support by browsers. We believe that in order to be successful for the Web, open hypermedia must be really open. Existing systems supporting third party links such as the Distributed Link Service (DLS) [9], or Webvise [23,24] implement OHS, but make it hard for independent software developers to create components which could be used in conjunction with the prototypes, because they are based on their own proprietary data and link models. While the applications scenarios of these systems were very ....
Leslie A. Carr, David C. De Roure, Wendy Hall, and Gary J. Hill. The Distributed Link Service: A Tool for Publishers, Authors and Readers. In Proceedings of the Fourth International World Wide Web Conference, pages 647--656, Boston, Massachusetts, December 1995.
.... adapted to provide a link service to the WWW [2] before becoming a commercial product called Hyperwave [56] The Distributed Link Service The Distributed Link Service (DLS) takes the Microcosm philosophy a stage further by providing a link service for the WWW [17] implemented as a proxy server [16]. Moving a WWW link service to the client side The implementation of a WWW link service as a proxy ensures platform and browser independence, and integrates seamlessly with the user s browsing expe rience. However, the use of a proxy raises other issues. The user has to manually configure their ....
L. A. Carr, D. DeRoure, W. Hall, and G. J. Hill. The Distributed Link Service: A Tool for Publishers, Authors and Readers. Proceedings of the Fourth Interna- tional World Wide Web Conference, Boston, Massachusetts, USA, 1:647-656, 1995.
....have been developed. Some of these, such as the Amsterdam hypermedia model [Hardman94] specifically consider audio. One which is relevant to content based navigation, and so considered here, is the open hypermedia philosophy [Hall94] as used by Microcosm [Davis92] Fountain90] and the DLS [Carr95] DeRoure96] 2.10.1 Key aspects of the model There are two key aspects to the open hypermedia model. Firstly, information about links between documents is stored separately from the documents themselves (in contrast to common practice with HTML documents) This information is maintained in ....
Carr, L., De Roure, D., Hall, W. and Hill, G., The Distributed Link Service: A Tool for Publishers, Authors and Readers, in Proc. Fourth International World Wide Web Conference: The Web Revolution, Boston, Massachusetts, USA, December 1995, pp. 647-656.
....markers were hidden so well that they were only highlighted when the mouse passed over them. This forces a hunt and peck search for active regions. In Microcosm and DLS the user can query the system for invisible links by marking a word or some text and then issue a search for matching links [11]. Though anchors are not marked, this model is well applicable to generic links, given that most words can be selected as anchors. Ignoring previous experiences, Mosaic returned to colored (blue) and underlined text to indicate link markers. This solution has the disadvantage to emphasize the ....
....interfaces of these programs to the linking features that are made available with the introduction of XLink. We can thus discuss what is needed by the user to profit from the extended functionality. Separation of Structure and Content Several former Open Hypermedia Systems like Microcosm DLS [11] or the Devise Hypermedia System [22] permitted to store links separately from documents in dedicated linkbases. Likewise, XLink will allow the separation of structure and content for the Web. The external storage of links permits multiple linkbases to be used for single Web pages. These links ....
Carr, L. , De Roure, D. , Hall, W. and Hill, G.: The Distributed Link Service: A Tool For Publishers, Authors And Readers, Proc. 4th WWW Conference, Boston, Massachusetts, USA, 1995
....the Web will be much, much worse. 4.7.3 Collaboration on the Web Due to its pliable architecture, the Web forms the infrastructure for many kinds of applications, not least the support for collaboration. Collaboration on the Web takes many forms from classical CSCW applications such as BSCW [12] to link recommendation and discussion forums such as Slashdot . The former is a system to support http: slashdot.org document sharing and authoring, as well as discussions. The latter has become quite successful and has spawned many similar sites, as the software driving the site is open ....
....Four characters in search of a context. In J. M. Bowers and S. D. Benford, editors, Studies in Computer Supported Cooperative Work. Elsevier Science Publishers B. V. North Holland) 1991. 11] L. Bannon and K. Schmidt. Taking CSCW seriously. CSCW Journal, 1(1 2) 1992. 87 88 BIBLIOGRAPHY [12] R. Bentley, W. Appelt, U. Busbach, E. Hinrichs, D. Kerr, K. Sikkel, J. Trevor, and G. Wtzel. Basic support for co operative work on the World Wide Web. International Journal of Human Computer Studies, 1997. 13] T. Berners Lee. The World Wide Web past, present and future. Journal of Digital ....
[Article contains additional citation context not shown here]
L. A. Carr, D. D. Roure, W. Hall, and G. Hill. The distributed link service: A tool for publishers, authors and readers. In Proceedings of the 4 th International World Wide Web Conference, Boston, USA, 1995. W3C.
....HTML to create a link anchor with a destination defined by the linkbase. The interface implementation became infeasible to maintain as the code had to be altered for every release of the Netscape browser. It was also platform and browser specific. The DLS was then implemented as a Web proxy [16]. The difference in the implementations is an important change. The DLS as a proxy is more effective for users of the Web because it integrates relatively seamlessly with the browser. Documents are just altered for them and require no user effort to activate the system once the proxy is in use. ....
L. A. Carr, D. DeRoure, W. Hall, and G. J. Hill. The Distributed Link Service: A Tool for Publishers, Authors and Readers. Proceedings of the Fourth International World Wide Web Conference, Boston, Massachusetts, USA, 1:647--656, 1995.
....create their own ways of organizing bodies of materials to be communicated to others or re used at later stages. Much research and development has already been made to add external structures to the WWW, such as links and collections. Examples are Hyper G HyperWave [14] DHM WWW [7] Microcosm DLS [4], and Webvise [8,9] The Webvise system is a full blown open hypermedia system, which has been extended with an integrated guided tour editor and viewer as well as a generator to export guided tours in plain HTML and PNG formats for access through a browser only. The Webvise Guided Tour System ....
L. Carr, D. De Roure, W. Hall and G. Hill, The distributed link service: a tool for publishers, authors and readers, in: Proc. 4th International World Wide Web Conference: The Web Revolution, Boston, Massachusetts, USA, 1995.
No context found.
Carr L., de Roure D., Hall W., Hill G. (1995) The Distributed Link Service: a tool for publishers, au-thors and readers. World Wide Web Journal, 1(1): 647-656 18
No context found.
Carr, L., De Roure, D., Hall, W. and Hill, G. The Distributed Link Service: A Tool for Publishers, Authors and Readers. World Wide Web Journal 1.1(1995): 647-656.
No context found.
L. A. Carr, D. DeRoure, W. Hall, and G. J. Hill. The Distributed Link Service: A Tool for Publishers, Authors and Readers. Proceedings of the Fourth International World Wide Web Conference, Boston, Massachusetts, USA, 1:647--656, 1995.
No context found.
Carr, L., De Roure, D., Hall, W., and Hill, G., The Distributed Link Service: A Tool for Publishers, Authors and Readers. World Wide Web Journal, 1995. 1(1): p. 647-656.
No context found.
Carr, L., De Roure, D., Hall, W. and Hill, G. (1995). The Distributed Link Service: A Tool for Publishers, Authors and Readers. The Web Journal 1, 1, 647-656, OReilly and Associates.
....included virtual structures as one of his famous 7 issues concerning the design of hypertext systems [9] The ability to create virtual structures over hard wired structures is a type of trailblazing. Open hypermedia systems such as Microcosm are designed to support dynamic link node binding [2]: the same set of information may be accessed in different ways based on different configurations of links. This approach may draw trailblazers attention to how they should construct various link structures in order to adapt existing information resources for a given task. A good example of how ....
Carr, L., DeRoure, D., Hall, W., and Hill, G. The distributed link service: A tool for publishers, authors and readers. World Wide Web Journal, 1, 1 (1995), 647-656.
....from the documents, and that di#erent sets of links can be applied to a set of documents as appropriate. The development of the first Open Hypermedia System ( Microcosm [12] predates the Web. The first implementation of the Microcosm philosophy on the Web was the Distributed Link Service (DLS) [5] [11] This was extended so that link resolution was also distributed around the Web [10] and the service paradigm now extends to recent developments such as ontology services [7] COHSE [7] provides tools for the Semantic Web that builds upon the concept of the DLS and ontologies. The Semantic ....
Carr, L. A., De Roure, D. C., Hall, W., Hill, G. J.: The Distributed Link Service: A Tool for Publishers, Authors and Readers. Proceedings of the Fourth International World Wide Web Conference: The Web Revolution, Boston, Massachusetts, USA (1995) 647--656
....virtual structures as one of his famous seven issues concerning the design of hypertext systems [9] The ability to create virtual structures over hard wired structures is a desirable type of trailblazing. Open hypermedia systems such as Microcosm are designed to support dynamic link node binding [2]: the same set of information may be accessed in different ways based on different configurations of links. This approach may draw trailblazers attention to how they should construct various link structures in order to adapt existing information resources for a given task. A good example of how ....
Carr, L., DeRoure, D., Hall, W., and Hill, G. The distributed link service: A tool for publishers, authors and readers. World Wide Web Journal, 1, 1 (1995), 647656.
....we focus on the underlying architecture of the link service and how we integrate it with the ontology driven service. Our basis was the Conceptual Open Hypermedia Service Environment (hereafter, COHSE[1] which itself combines ontological reasoning services with an established link service (DLS [2]) to enable documents to be linked together via metadata describing their contents. In contrast with the common usage of the Web which involves embedding links within documents in the HTML format, open hypermedia systems treat links as first class objects which can be MyPlanet service ....
L. Carr, D. DeRoure, W. Hall, and G. Hill. The Distributed Link Service: A Tool for Publishers, Authors and Readers. World Wide Web Journal, 1(1):647--656, 1995.
....Linking Providing conceptual content based information as the attributes of web pages is an important activity, enabling search engines to provide query results that are more pertinent. Currently such concepts are usually simple keywords. Hypermedia systems such as the Distributed Link Service [9, 10] may make use of this information to provide a rudimentary conceptual hypermedia by clustering documents with the same tag value keyword for retrieval purposes and linking documents with the same tag value for navigation. Keywords effectively classify documents into clusters that share the same ....
Carr, L., De Roure, D., Hall, W., Hill, G., (1995) The Distributed Link Service: A Tool for Publishers, Authors and Readers, World Wide Web Journal 1(1), 647-656, O'Reilly & Associates.
No context found.
Carr, L., De Roure, D., Hall, W. and Hill, G., The Distributed Link Service: A Tool for Publishers, Authors and Readers, In: The Web Revolution: Fourth International World Wide Web Conference.
.... by the hypermedia community [Osterbye96] and increasingly Web publishing applications adopt the open hypermedia approach [Thistlethwaite97] The University of Southampton s Distributed Link Service (DLS) implements an open hypermedia system above the infrastructure of the World Wide Web [Carr95; Carr98] This provides a powerful framework to aid navigation and authoring and solves some of the issues of distributed information management [DeRoure96] Using an intermediary model [Barrett98] the DLS adds links and annotations into documents as they are delivered through a proxy from the ....
Carr, L., De Roure, D., Hall, W., Hill, G., (1995) The Distributed Link Service: A Tool for Publishers, Authors and Readers, World Wide Web Journal 1(1), 647-656, O'Reilly & Associates.
....that have to manage diverse sources of information and that rely heavily on their research and development function. The system described in this paper is currently being trialled by users in two such organisations. The MEMOIR architecture is an evolution of the Distributed Link Service (DLS, (Carr et al. 1995)) While the DLS, like other open hypermedia systems, treats An Open Architecture for Supporting Collabora. Page 2 of 13 file:C: temp RJ MMRG wetice.html 04 08 98 hypermedia links as first class objects, MEMOIR additionally promotes another kind of object: the trail. A user s trail is the set ....
L. Carr, D. DeRoure, W. Hall, and G. Hill. The Distributed Link Service: A tool for publishers, authors and readers. In Proceedings of the Fourth International World Wide Web Conference: The Web Revolution, pages 647-656, Boston, Massachusetts, USA, Dec. 1995.
No context found.
L. A. Carr, D. C. De Roure, W. Hall, and G. J. Hill. The Distributed Link Service: A tool for Publishers, Authors and Readers. World Wide Web Journal, 1, 1, 1995, 647656.
No context found.
Leslie A. Carr, David De Roure, Wendy Hall, and Gary Hill. The distributed link service: A tool for publishers, authors and readers. In Proceedings of the 4 International World Wide Web Conference, Boston, USA, December 1995.
No context found.
Carr, L. , De Roure, D. , Hall, W. and Hill, G. (1995): The Distributed Link Service: A Tool For Publishers, Authors And Readers, Proc. 4th WWW Conference, Boston, Massachusetts, USA, 1995
No context found.
Leslie Carr, David De Roure, Wendy Hall, and Gary Hill. The Distributed Link Service: A Tool for Publishers, Authors and Readers, In Proceedings of the Fourth International World Wide Web Conference, Boston, MA, December 1995.
First 50 documents
Online articles have much greater impact More about CiteSeer.IST Add search form to your site Submit documents Feedback
CiteSeer.IST - Copyright Penn State and NEC