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http://worldcat.org/entity/work/id/34938022

Mediating among diverse data formats

Abstract: "The growth of the Internet and other global networks has made large quantities of data available in a wide variety of formats. Unfortunately, most programs are only able to interpret a small number of formats, and cannot take advantage of data in unfamiliar formats. As the Internet grows, new applications arise, and legacy data persists, the diversity of formats will continue to increase, worsening the problem. Current approaches to data diversity fail to scale up gracefully, or fail to handle the full heterogeneity of data and data sources found on the Internet. I have developed a data model and a system of mediator agents that support the widespread use of diverse data formats much more effectively than current approaches do. In this thesis, I describe and evaluate the design and implementation of this data model, known as the Typed Object Model (or TOM), and the system of mediators that supports it. TOM is a read-only object-oriented data model that describes the abstract structure of data formats, their concrete representations, and relations between formats. TOM is supported by a distributed network of mediator agents (known as type brokers) that maintain information about data formats, and provide uniform access to conversions and other operations on those formats. Type brokers plan complex conversion strategies that can involve multiple servers, and ensure that conversions preserve information needed by clients. Data providers can also register new formats, operations, and conversions with type brokers in a decentralized manner, and make them usable anywhere on the Internet. TOM type brokers now work with hundreds of data formats, often through integration of off-the-shelf programs. TOM also supports a wide variety of applications and interfaces, such as the Web-based TOM Conversion Service, that have users worldwide."

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  • "Abstract: "The growth of the Internet and other global networks has made large quantities of data available in a wide variety of formats. Unfortunately, most programs are only able to interpret a small number of formats, and cannot take advantage of data in unfamiliar formats. As the Internet grows, new applications arise, and legacy data persists, the diversity of formats will continue to increase, worsening the problem. Current approaches to data diversity fail to scale up gracefully, or fail to handle the full heterogeneity of data and data sources found on the Internet. I have developed a data model and a system of mediator agents that support the widespread use of diverse data formats much more effectively than current approaches do. In this thesis, I describe and evaluate the design and implementation of this data model, known as the Typed Object Model (or TOM), and the system of mediators that supports it. TOM is a read-only object-oriented data model that describes the abstract structure of data formats, their concrete representations, and relations between formats. TOM is supported by a distributed network of mediator agents (known as type brokers) that maintain information about data formats, and provide uniform access to conversions and other operations on those formats. Type brokers plan complex conversion strategies that can involve multiple servers, and ensure that conversions preserve information needed by clients. Data providers can also register new formats, operations, and conversions with type brokers in a decentralized manner, and make them usable anywhere on the Internet. TOM type brokers now work with hundreds of data formats, often through integration of off-the-shelf programs. TOM also supports a wide variety of applications and interfaces, such as the Web-based TOM Conversion Service, that have users worldwide.""@en
  • "The growth of the Internet and other global networks has made large quantities of data available in a wide variety of formats. Unfortunately, most programs are only able to interpret a small number of formats, and cannot take advantage of data in unfamiliar formats. As the Internet grows, new applications arise, and legacy data persists, the diversity of formats will continue to increase, worsening the problem. Current approaches to data diversity fail to scale up gracefully, or fail to handle the full heterogeneity of data and data sources found on the Internet. I have developed a data model and a system of mediator agents that support the widespread use of diverse data formats much more effectively than current approaches do. In this thesis, I describe and evaluate the design and implementation of this data model, known as the Typed Object Model (or TOM), and the system of mediators that supports it. TOM is a read-only object-oriented data model that describes the abstract structure of data formats, their concrete representations, and relations between formats. TOM is supported by a distributed network of mediator agents (known as type brokers) that maintain information about data formats, and provide uniform access to conversions and other operations on those formats. Type brokers plan complex conversion strategies that can involve multiple servers, and ensure that conversions preserve information needed by clients. Data providers can also register new formats, operations, and conversions with type brokers in a decentralized manner, and make them usable anywhere on the Internet. TOM type brokers now work with hundreds of data formats, often through integration of off-the-shelf programs. TOM also supports a wide variety of applications and interfaces, such as the Web-based TOM Conversion Service, that have users worldwide."@en

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  • "Mediating among diverse data formats"
  • "Mediating among diverse data formats"@en
  • "Mediating Among Diverse Data Formats"@en