loading...
Content Access Characterization in Digital Libraries
Houston, Texas USA May 27-May 31
DOI Bookmark: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/JCDL.2003.1204874Third ACM/IEEE-CS Joint Conference on ...
 This Article 
 
PURCHASE ARTICLE: $0
HTML
 
 Share 
   
 Bibliographic References 
   
 Add to: 
 
Digg
Furl
Spurl
Blink
Simpy
Google
Del.icio.us
Y!MyWeb
 
 Search 
   
Greg Jan?, University of Calififornia at Santa Barbara
James Frew, University of Calififornia at Santa Barbara
David Valentine, University of Calififornia at Santa Barbara
To support non-trivial clients, such as data exploration and analysis environments, digital libraries must be able to describe the access modes that their contents support. We present a simple scheme that distinguishes four content accessibility classes: download (byte-stream retrieval), service (API), web interface (interactive), and offline. These access modes may recursively nest in alternative (semantically equivalent) or multipart (component) hierarchies. This scheme is simple enough to be easily supported by DL content providers, yet rich enough to allow programmatic clients to automatically identify appropriate access point(s).
Citation:
Greg Jan?, James Frew, David Valentine, "Content Access Characterization in Digital Libraries," jcdl, pp.261, Third ACM/IEEE-CS Joint Conference on Digital Libraries (JCDL'03), 2003
Usage of this product signifies your acceptance of the Terms of Use.


Suggestions