| D. Ingham, S. Caughey, and M. Little. Fixing the Broken-Link' Problem: The W3Objects Approach. In Computer Networks and ISDN System, pages 1255 1268. 5th International World Wide Web Conference, May 1996. |
....research papers. However, these efforts require considerable start up and maintenance costs, and so may not be feasible for every domain. Several initiatives address the problem of broken links by proposing mechanisms for assigning location independent names to documents in addition to URLs [3, 6, 7, 17, 18]. None of these approaches have been widely adopted because they require users either to acquire new software or to explicitly maintain the validity of name dereferencing. Other different approaches are addressed in [1, 2, 4, 5, 13] Phelps and Wilensky [14] propose a less burdensome solution: ....
D. Ingham, S. Caughey, and M. Little. Fixing the Broken-Link' Problem: The W3Objects Approach. In Computer Networks and ISDN System, pages 1255 1268. 5th International World Wide Web Conference, May 1996.
....must be gathered and manually added to the index. 6.3 New Link Schemes There are some other research groups aims to avoid the broken link problem by inventing new link schemes. In W3Object Model, web resource are represented as W3Object which encapsulate internal state and well de ned behavior [9]. Accessing W3Object is through the interface. W3Reference, a rst class referencing object, is used for addressing. W3Reference contains the location of an object. Referential integrity is guaranteed by forward referencing. An object is replaced with a forward reference at migration ....
D. B. Ingham, S. J. Caughey, and M. C. Little. Fixing the broken-link problem: The W3Objects approach. In Proceedings of the Fifth International World Wide Web Conference, pages 1255{ 1268, Paris, France, May 1996.
....computes the source anchor of a link at navigation time. Our agent architecture computes the destination anchor of a document at retrieval time: both the user agent and the server agent use the navigation context to determine the version of documents pointed by links. Ingham, Caughey and Little [19] present a solution to solve the broken link problem. They mention distributed garbage collection technique but no implementation detail is provided. They use an algorithm [32] to short cut forwarding pointers, but they do not describe the garbage collection algorithm. They call bind and unbind ....
D.B. Ingham, S.J. Caughey, and M.C. Little. Fixing the Broken-Link Problem: The W3Objects Approach. In Proceedings of the Fifth International World Wide Web Conference, volume 28 of Computing Networks & ISDN System, pages 1255--1268, Paris, France, May 1996.
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