| Caglyan, Harrison. The Agent Sourcebook. Wiley & Sons. 1997. |
....mobile agents, navigation, architecture, mobility. 1. Introduction During the past decade the widespread growth of the World Wide Web shifted the focus of research to agent based distributed computing models because they offer important advantages against the traditional client server approach [2]. The reduction of excessive network traffic (congestion) and processing of data close to the data source are the most important benefits[3] The primary identifying characteristic of mobile agents is their ability to migrate autonomously from host to host [7] Thus, support for agent mobility is ....
A.Caglayan, C. Harrison, Agent Sourcebook, John Wiley & Sons, Inc. 1997.
....The communication between the client and the relational database is enabled with a JDBC interface (see figure 2) A special feature is shown in figure 2a where an agent is implemented in an application server. A software agent is a computing entity that performs user delegated tasks autonomously [2]. With the login of the user the agent loads the user preferences stored in the database and will be configured accordingly. This personalized agent is now able to generate requests for the JDBC interface with individual user preferences. Furthermore, the agent is able to process the results ....
....agents serve as information brokers between information suppliers (e.g. Websites, online databases, etc. and Web users or other agents. Internet agents match the information needs of web users against the attributes of information suppliers, type of information and information content. [2]. An agent represents the user and finds and extracts information sources, filters and presents information according to the users needs. The benefit for the user is to save time by not having to make a time consuming uncomfortable retrieval. User benefits are more efficiency, lower costs and ....
Caglayan A., Harrison C., Agent sourcebook, John Wiley & Sons, Inc. USA, 1997
.... [3] Declarative approaches, such as KQML [22] and CORBA (OMG, 1998) are commonly used to implement platform independent information agents whereas procedural approaches, such as Java, Tcl, Safe Tcl, Smalltalk, Perl, Python, Telescript, and ActiveX, are usually used for mobile agents [1]. 4. GENERATING SITE MAPS The Local Characterizing Agent (LCA) creates a site map that consists of a hierarchy of subjects and associated weights where the weights indicate the amount of the information relevant to that subject at the local site. Since the other agents are primarily based on the ....
Caglayan, A. K. & Harrison, C. G. 1997. Agent Sourcebook. Wiley Computer Publishing.
.... Declarative approaches, such as KQML (Neches et al. 1991) and CORBA (OMG, 1998) are commonly used to implement platform independent information agents whereas procedural approaches, such as Java, Tcl, Safe Tcl, Smalltalk, Perl, Python, Telescript, and ActiveX, are usually used for mobile agents (Caglayan Harrison, 1997). 4 Generating Site Maps The Local Characterizing Agent (LCA) creates a site map that consists of a hierarchy of subjects and associated weights where the weights indicate the amount of the information relevant to that subject at the local site. Since the other agents are primarily based on the ....
Caglayan, A. K. & Harrison, C. G. 1997. Agent Sourcebook. Wiley Computer Publishing.
....intelligent assistance systems in the domain of software project management. In addition to the properties outlined above, an agentorientated architecture is a natural choice to address the issue of heterogeneous client server systems development. Recent research in Java based agents [14] [2] and mobile Java based agents [9] have concluded that they are a viable technology on which to establish a platform independent agent orientated architecture. To address the distributed client server issue, research conducted at San Jose State University [10] successfully used CORBA (Common Object ....
A.Caglayan and C.Harrison, "Agent Sourcebook", Wiley, 1997.
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Caglyan, Harrison. The Agent Sourcebook. Wiley & Sons. 1997.
No context found.
Caglyan, Harrison. The Agent Sourcebook. Wiley & Sons. 1997.
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