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CS 502 Architecture of Web Information Systems Spring 2003

CS 502 Architecture of Web Information Systems Spring 2003. Who am I?. Founder of Cornell Digital Library Research Group http://www.cis.cornell.edu/infoscience/research/dl/home.html Member of Information Science Program http://www.cis.cornell.edu/infoscience/

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CS 502 Architecture of Web Information Systems Spring 2003

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  1. CS 502Architecture of Web Information SystemsSpring 2003 CS502-SPR2003-01/20/2003

  2. Who am I? • Founder of Cornell Digital Library Research Group • http://www.cis.cornell.edu/infoscience/research/dl/home.html • Member of Information Science Program • http://www.cis.cornell.edu/infoscience/ • Director of Technology, National Science Digital Library • http://www.nsdl.org • Research areas: interoperability architecture, metadata, content architecture • Publications, Personal, etc. • http://www.cs.cornell.edu/lagoze/ CS502-SPR2003-01/20/2003

  3. Libraries vs. Web Discovery Preservation Organization Trust Privacy Selection Public Serice CS502-SPR2003-01/20/2003

  4. Functions Selection Organization Support Preservation Characteristics Standardized Professionalized Service-oriented In it for the long-haul Conservative What is a library? CS502-SPR2003-01/20/2003

  5. What is the Web? • Decentralized/Anarchic/Illegal • Agreements are technical (at best) • Roles are undefined and fluid • You don’t have to be an expert (or “no one knows you are a dog”) • Immediate • Ephemeral CS502-SPR2003-01/20/2003

  6. What is a Digital Library? Evolutionary perspective: digital libraries as institutions that are the continuation of libraries (library automation and digitization as the link between libraries and digital libraries). Revolutionary perspective: digital libraries as technical/organizational/economic/legal layers on top of networked information (the Web) that render existing libraries obsolete. CS502-SPR2003-01/20/2003

  7. What is a Digital Library? Digital Libraries are organizations that provide the resources, including the specialized staff, to select, structure, offer intellectual access to, interprete, distribute, preserve the integrity of, and ensure the persistence over time of collections of digital works so that they are readily and economicallyavailable for use by a defined community or set of communities [Waters 1998] CS502-SPR2003-01/20/2003

  8. What is a Digital Library? A Digital Library is a collection of information which is both digitized and organized[Lesk 1997] • [Lesk 1997] addresses other aspects when answering the questions: “What does it take to build a Digital Library?”: • Digital content • Access to content (search and retrieval) • Preservation of content • How to pay for digitial libraries (in parallel to maintaining traditional libraries) • Social issues (access to information ~ democracy ; resistance to reading on-line) CS502-SPR2003-01/20/2003

  9. What is a Digital Library? A digital library is a managed collection of information, with associated services, where the information is stored in digital formats and is accessible over a network.[Arms CS502 sp00] CS502-SPR2003-01/20/2003

  10. economy technology sociology law Many facets of the problem/solution CS502-SPR2003-01/20/2003

  11. Cost Functionality Technical Trade-offs CS502-SPR2003-01/20/2003

  12. Course Web Resources http://www.cs.cornell.edu/Courses/cs502/2003SP/ CS502-SPR2003-01/20/2003

  13. Code of Academic Integrity http://cuinfo.cornell.edu/Academic/AIC.html CS502-SPR2003-01/20/2003

  14. Some Pet Peeves CS502-SPR2003-01/20/2003

  15. And now for some history… CS502-SPR2003-01/20/2003

  16. Library of Alexandria • Established by Ptolemy I in 290 BC • 532K papyrus rolls • Acquisition by copying mandate • Destroyed in 490 AD during burning alive of Hypatia, the last keeper of the library CS502-SPR2003-01/20/2003

  17. Melvil Dewey • “Father of modern librarianship” • Frustrated by dedicated shelving method • Invented method of classifying into 10 categories • 21st edition of Dewey Classification system now published • Started ALA CS502-SPR2003-01/20/2003

  18. S. R. Ranganathan • Colon Classification System • 42 main classes • Subject classification by appending facets within class: who, what, when, where CS502-SPR2003-01/20/2003

  19. Vannevar Bush • “As We May Think” Atlantic Monthly 1945 • Pivotal landmark in hypertext research • “This is the essential feature of the memex. The process of tying two items together is the important thing” CS502-SPR2003-01/20/2003

  20. Claude Shannon • “Father of Information Theory” • Seminal “The Mathematical Theory of Communication” • Data vs. Information CS502-SPR2003-01/20/2003

  21. Henriette Avram • “Mother of MARC”, “Melvil Dewey of the 20th Century” • Developed MAchine Readable Cataloging (MARC) • Allows standardization and sharing of bibliographic records CS502-SPR2003-01/20/2003

  22. J.C.R. Licklider • “Man-Computer Symbiosis” • Developed the idea of the “universal network” and interactive computing • Developed and led ARPANET funding initiative CS502-SPR2003-01/20/2003

  23. Inventors of Internet • Cerf, Kahn, Metcalfe, etc. • Packet rather than circuit switching • Layered protocols (TCP/IP, telnet, ftp…) CS502-SPR2003-01/20/2003

  24. Ted Nelson • Inventor of the notion of “non-sequential writing” and term “hyptertext” and “hypermedia” circa 1960 • Founder of Project Xanadu CS502-SPR2003-01/20/2003

  25. Gerard Salton • Preeminent figure in modern information retrieval • SMART information retrieval system: basis of many well-known IR concepts • Among founders of Cornell CS department CS502-SPR2003-01/20/2003

  26. Tim Berners-Lee • Inventor of the World Wide Web – CERN 1989 • First client and server 1990 • Directory of World Wide Web Consortium and faculty at MIT CS502-SPR2003-01/20/2003

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