Welcome to P K Kelkar Library, Online Public Access Catalogue (OPAC)

Normal view MARC view ISBD view

Hypermedia genes : an evolutionary perspective on concepts, models, and architectures /

By: Guimarães, Nuno M.
Contributor(s): Carriço, Luís M.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookSeries: Synthesis lectures on information concepts, retrieval, and services: # 11.Publisher: San Rafael, Calif. (1537 Fourth Street, San Rafael, CA 94901 USA) : Morgan & Claypool Publishers, c2010Description: 1 electronic text (viii, 73 p. : ill.) : digital file.ISBN: 9781608450923 (electronic bk.).Uniform titles: Synthesis digital library of engineering and computer science. Subject(s): Interactive multimedia | Multimedia systems | Web site developmentDDC classification: 006.7 Online resources: Abstract with links to resource Also available in print.
Contents:
1. Introduction -- The structure of this lecture -- Not addressed here -- How to use this lecture -- 2. Original visions and concepts -- Knowledge and association -- Non-linearity and navigation -- Augmentation and serendipity -- 3. Steps in the evolution -- Original systems -- Reference systems -- Data models -- Open hypermedia architectures -- Component-based applications -- Group and collaborative behavior -- The media evolution -- 4. Information and structured documents -- The origins -- Reference standards -- 5. Web-based environments -- 6. Some research trends -- Adaptive hypermedia -- Social linking -- 7. A framework of traits -- 8. A phylogenetic analysis -- An evolutionary analysis of hypermedia systems -- The phylogenetic trees and diagrams -- Discussion of the analysis -- 9. Conclusion -- Bibliography -- Authors' biographies.
Abstract: The design space of information services evolved from seminal works through a set of prototypical hypermedia systems and matured in open and widely accessible web-based systems. The original concepts of hypermedia systems are now expressed in different forms and shapes. The first works on hypertext invented the term itself, laid out the foundational concept of association or link, and highlighted navigation as the core paradigm for the future information systems. The first engineered systems demonstrated architectural requirements and models and fostered the emergence of the conceptual model related with the information systems and the information design. The artifacts for interaction, navigation, and search, grew from the pioneering systems. Multimedia added a new dimension to hypertext, and mutated the term into hypermedia. The adaptation of the primitive models and mechanisms to the space of continuous media led to a further conceptual level and to the reinvention of information design methods. Hypermedia systems also became an ideal space for collaboration and cooperative work. Information access and sharing, and group work were enabled and empowered by distributed hypermedia systems. As with many technologies, a winning technical paradigm, in our case the World Wide Web, concentrated the design options, the architectural choices and the interaction and navigation styles.Abstract: Since the late nineties, the Web became the standard framework for hypermedia systems, and integrated a large number of the initial concepts and techniques. Yet, other paths are still open. This lecture maps a simple "genome" of hypermedia systems, based on an initial survey of primitive systems that established architectural and functional characteristics, or traits. These are analyzed and consolidated using phylogenetic analysis tools, to infer families of systems and evolution opportunities. This method may prove to be inspiring for more systematic perspectives of technological landscapes.
    average rating: 0.0 (0 votes)
Item type Current location Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
E books E books PK Kelkar Library, IIT Kanpur
Available EBKE214
Total holds: 0

Mode of access: World Wide Web.

System requirements: Adobe Acrobat reader.

Part of: Synthesis digital library of engineering and computer science.

Series from website.

Includes bibliographical references (p. 59-71).

1. Introduction -- The structure of this lecture -- Not addressed here -- How to use this lecture -- 2. Original visions and concepts -- Knowledge and association -- Non-linearity and navigation -- Augmentation and serendipity -- 3. Steps in the evolution -- Original systems -- Reference systems -- Data models -- Open hypermedia architectures -- Component-based applications -- Group and collaborative behavior -- The media evolution -- 4. Information and structured documents -- The origins -- Reference standards -- 5. Web-based environments -- 6. Some research trends -- Adaptive hypermedia -- Social linking -- 7. A framework of traits -- 8. A phylogenetic analysis -- An evolutionary analysis of hypermedia systems -- The phylogenetic trees and diagrams -- Discussion of the analysis -- 9. Conclusion -- Bibliography -- Authors' biographies.

Abstract freely available; full-text restricted to subscribers or individual document purchasers.

Compendex

INSPEC

Google scholar

Google book search

The design space of information services evolved from seminal works through a set of prototypical hypermedia systems and matured in open and widely accessible web-based systems. The original concepts of hypermedia systems are now expressed in different forms and shapes. The first works on hypertext invented the term itself, laid out the foundational concept of association or link, and highlighted navigation as the core paradigm for the future information systems. The first engineered systems demonstrated architectural requirements and models and fostered the emergence of the conceptual model related with the information systems and the information design. The artifacts for interaction, navigation, and search, grew from the pioneering systems. Multimedia added a new dimension to hypertext, and mutated the term into hypermedia. The adaptation of the primitive models and mechanisms to the space of continuous media led to a further conceptual level and to the reinvention of information design methods. Hypermedia systems also became an ideal space for collaboration and cooperative work. Information access and sharing, and group work were enabled and empowered by distributed hypermedia systems. As with many technologies, a winning technical paradigm, in our case the World Wide Web, concentrated the design options, the architectural choices and the interaction and navigation styles.

Since the late nineties, the Web became the standard framework for hypermedia systems, and integrated a large number of the initial concepts and techniques. Yet, other paths are still open. This lecture maps a simple "genome" of hypermedia systems, based on an initial survey of primitive systems that established architectural and functional characteristics, or traits. These are analyzed and consolidated using phylogenetic analysis tools, to infer families of systems and evolution opportunities. This method may prove to be inspiring for more systematic perspectives of technological landscapes.

Also available in print.

Title from PDF t.p. (viewed on November 4, 2009).

There are no comments for this item.

Log in to your account to post a comment.

Powered by Koha