喉咙疼吃什么药| 吃什么促进卵泡发育| 定坤丹适合什么人吃| 藠头是什么菜| 摆架子是什么意思| 熬夜吃什么| 枣红色配什么颜色好看| pks是什么意思| 口加女念什么| 物色是什么意思| 家里消毒杀菌用什么好| 看望病人买什么水果| 金牛属于什么象星座| 名落孙山是什么意思| 食用香精是什么| 蛇的眼睛是什么颜色| 低血压是什么原因| 公租房是什么| exp是什么日期| 秋葵吃多了有什么坏处| 坐骨神经痛用什么药| bs是什么意思| 虾滑是什么| 胃主什么| 舒俱来是什么宝石| 蛇遇猪就得哭什么意思| 满月回娘家有什么讲究| 为什么喝绞股蓝会死亡| 上夜班吃什么对身体好| 李白有什么诗| 县长属于什么级别| obsidian什么意思| 吃什么立马排便| 拉绿粑粑是什么原因| 情面是什么意思| 魂牵梦绕的意思是什么| 侍妾是什么意思| d cup是什么意思| 凌晨12点是什么时辰| 他克莫司软膏治疗什么| 牙出血什么原因| lirs 是什么意思| 女人吃维生素b有什么好处| proof是什么意思| 什么是贫血| 胃胀打嗝吃什么药| 什么是电汇| 不自觉摇头是什么病| 什么是冤亲债主| 来月经拉肚子是什么原因| 病毒性扁桃体发炎吃什么药| 技压群雄的意思是什么| qeelin是什么牌子| 体寒湿气重喝什么茶好| 相濡以沫什么意思| 安享晚年是什么意思| 金童玉女指什么生肖| 发烧吃什么| 大便出血吃什么药好得快| 刺青是什么意思| 料酒是什么| 尿液红细胞高是什么原因| 香蕉像什么比喻句| 北京友谊医院擅长什么| 为什么脸上会长痘痘| 扦脚是什么意思| 针对是什么意思| 喝咖啡困倦是什么原因| 腰椎间盘突出吃什么药好| 令是什么生肖| 肋骨突出是什么原因| 女人吃牛蛙有什么好处| 白虎什么意思| 孩子第一次来月经要注意什么| 尿不出来吃什么药| 农历五月二十八是什么日子| 脚趾长痣代表什么意思| imf是什么意思| 喷砂是什么意思| 舒筋健腰丸为什么这么贵| 4月15日是什么日子| 芝士可以做什么美食| 晕车喝什么| 省委委员是什么级别| 北京是什么省| 博物馆里有什么| 李连杰什么病| 结局be是什么意思| 关爱是什么意思| 7月一日是什么节日| 外阴病变有什么症状| 韬的意思是什么| 淋病是什么病| 做喉镜能检查出什么病| 口腔溃疡吃什么菜| 人乳头瘤病毒感染是什么意思| 猪八戒的老婆叫什么| 腿毛有什么用| 11月10号是什么星座| 公积金基数是什么意思| 休闲裤配什么鞋子好看| 氧化锆是什么材料| 常喝柠檬水有什么好处和坏处| 梦到高考是什么意思| 来月经头疼是什么原因| 什么菜不能放醋| 吃奇亚籽有什么好处| 3月什么星座| 可乐是什么做的| 省检察长什么级别| 脉弦是什么意思和症状| 三点水加亘念什么| 痛风什么蔬菜不能吃| 白水晶五行属什么| 梦到扫地是什么意思| 梦到鳄鱼是什么意思| 什么什么不生| 三伏天是什么| 寸头适合什么脸型| 什么是抗氧化| 海菜是什么| 马中赤兔人中吕布什么意思| 91是什么意思| 塑料是什么材质| 姚明什么时候退役的| 什么样的你| 前列腺肥大吃什么药效果最好| 儿童头晕挂什么科| 什么是碧玺| 亚米是什么意思| 猫的尾巴有什么用处| 马桶堵了用什么疏通| 商纣王叫什么名字| 四大天王叫什么名字| 低血糖中医叫什么病| 何妨是什么意思| 尿素肌酐高是什么原因| 尊字五行属什么| 日行千里是什么生肖| 什么是登革热病| 地贫有什么症状| 备孕吃什么好| 满面红光是什么意思| 镁高有什么症状和危害| 送女朋友什么礼物好| 什么什么不平| 吃什么能快速减肥| 茄子炒什么好吃| 发烧吃什么药退烧快| 什么感冒药效果最好| 油麦菜不能和什么一起吃| 公立医院和私立医院有什么区别| 蹲久了站起来头晕是什么原因| 医院门特是什么意思| 夫妻宫是什么意思| 网球肘用什么药最有效| 2029是什么年| 山茶花什么时候开| 孙策是孙权的什么人| 便秘喝什么茶最快排便| 什么牌子的床垫好| 高温中暑吃什么药| 不耐受和过敏有什么区别| 性生活后尿路感染是什么原因| 晚上睡不着是什么原因引起的| 蟑螂喜欢什么环境| 莳花弄草是什么意思| 肛裂出血和痔疮出血有什么区别| 低钾会出现什么症状| 女人尿多是什么原因| 什么时候吃苹果最好| 北豆腐是什么| 肺部真菌感染用什么药最好| 超敏c反应蛋白高说明什么| 血小板聚集是什么意思| 郁闷什么意思| 为什么耳鸣一直不停| loc是什么意思| 做梦梦到蜈蚣是什么意思| 包皮溃烂是什么原因| 生物制剂对人体有什么副作用| 3f是什么意思| 脚麻吃什么药| 隐忍是什么意思| 小壁虎的尾巴有什么作用| 小乌龟死了有什么预兆| 虾皮有什么营养价值| 6.26是什么星座| 特发性震颤吃什么药| bmd是什么意思| 水火既济是什么意思| 月黑风高什么意思| falcon是什么牌子| 什么是意境| 水土不服是什么意思| 小儿电解质补给液有什么作用| 暇步士属于什么档次| 不时之需是什么意思| 碱吃多了有什么危害| 幼儿贫血吃什么补血最快| 抗氧化是什么意思| 车工是做什么的| 什么是主动脉夹层| 怀孕血糖高有什么症状| 马六甲板材是什么木材| 猫肉什么味道| 为什么拉黑色的屎| iga肾病是什么病| 肺胃热盛吃什么中成药| 姜粉什么时候喝最好| 尿肌酐低说明什么原因| 白头翁是什么生肖| 女朋友生日送什么礼物| 血压低压高是什么原因造成的| 锑对人体有什么危害| 冬虫夏草长什么样| 什么情况下做心脏造影| 小三阳有什么症状表现| 奶粉水解什么意思| 长期干咳无痰是什么原因引起的| 手足口病疫苗什么时候打| 撸管是什么意思| 南瓜子有什么功效| 虎的偏旁是什么| 什么时期最容易怀孕| 敬谢不敏是什么意思| 方言是什么意思| 奡是什么意思| 滑石是什么| 猫五行属什么| 沙棘对肝脏有什么好处| 浑身无力是什么原因| 黑松露是什么| 白蚂蚁长什么样子图片| 梦见亲嘴是什么意思| 巨峰葡萄为什么叫巨峰| 浩特是什么意思| 九个口是什么字| 电导率低是什么意思| 什么什么来迟| 81岁属什么| 龙涎香什么味道| 神话是什么意思| 伟哥是什么药| 铁剂不能和什么一起吃| 乙亥日五行属什么| 肺动脉流什么血| 不到长城非好汉的下一句是什么| 榴莲壳有什么作用| 植物园有什么植物| 绿豆汤不能和什么一起吃| 高血压适合吃什么水果| 丝瓜烧什么好吃| 尿里有潜血是什么原因| 1986年属什么生肖| 性功能障碍挂什么科| 虾与什么食物相克| 白头发挂什么科| 社会很单纯复杂的是人是什么歌| 八月五号是什么星座| 水瓶座是什么性格| 八月初六是什么星座| nt检查是什么| 左眼皮肿是什么原因引起的| 百度

archive

A hand conversion to HTML of the original MacWord (or Word for Mac?) document written in March 1989 and later redistributed unchanged apart from the date added in May 1990. Provided for historical interest only. The diagrams are a bit dotty, but available in versioins linked below. The text has not been changed, even to correct errors such as misnumbered figures or unfinished references.

This document was an attempt to persuade CERN management that a global hypertext system was in CERN's interests. Note that the only name I had for it at this time was "Mesh" -- I decided on "World Wide Web" when writing the code in 1990.

Other versions which are available are:

㏕im Berners-Lee 1989, 1990, 1996, 1998. All rights reserved.


组图:北工大校花助阵2015ChinaJoy 萌动依旧

Tim Berners-Lee, CERN
March 1989, May 1990
百度 据悉,早在2011年脸书就已承诺保持极高的数据保护标准,对数据外传有非常严格的规定,每个违反规定的个案可处以最高4万美元的罚款。

This proposal concerns the management of general information about accelerators and experiments at CERN. It discusses the problems of loss of information about complex evolving systems and derives a solution based on a distributed hypertext system.

A circles and arrows diagram relating concepts discussed in the paper

Overview

Many of the discussions of the future at CERN and the LHC era end with the question - 猋es, but how will we ever keep track of such a large project??This proposal provides an answer to such questions. Firstly, it discusses the problem of information access at CERN. Then, it introduces the idea of linked information systems, and compares them with less flexible ways of finding information.

It then summarises my short experience with non-linear text systems known as 猦ypertext? describes what CERN needs from such a system, and what industry may provide. Finally, it suggests steps we should take to involve ourselves with hypertext now, so that individually and collectively we may understand what we are creating.

Losing Information at CERN

CERN is a wonderful organisation. It involves several thousand people, many of them very creative, all working toward common goals. Although they are nominally organised into a hierarchical management structure,this does not constrain the way people will communicate, and share information, equipment and software across groups.

The actual observed working structure of the organisation is a multiply connected "web" whose interconnections evolve with time. In this environment, a new person arriving, or someone taking on a new task, is normally given a few hints as to who would be useful people to talk to. Information about what facilities exist and how to find out about them travels in the corridor gossip and occasional newsletters, and the details about what is required to be done spread in a similar way. All things considered, the result is remarkably successful, despite occasional misunderstandings and duplicated effort.

A problem, however, is the high turnover of people. When two years is a typical length of stay, information is constantly being lost. The introduction of the new people demands a fair amount of their time and that of others before they have any idea of what goes on. The technical details of past projects are sometimes lost forever, or only recovered after a detective investigation in an emergency. Often, the information has been recorded, it just cannot be found.

If a CERN experiment were a static once-only development, all the information could be written in a big book. As it is, CERN is constantly changing as new ideas are produced, as new technology becomes available, and in order to get around unforeseen technical problems. When a change is necessary, it normally affects only a small part of the organisation. A local reason arises for changing a part of the experiment or detector. At this point, one has to dig around to find out what other parts and people will be affected. Keeping a book up to date becomes impractical, and the structure of the book needs to be constantly revised.

The sort of information we are discussing answers, for example, questions like

The problems of information loss may be particularly acute at CERN, but in this case (as in certain others), CERN is a model in miniature of the rest of world in a few years time. CERN meets now some problems which the rest of the world will have to face soon. In 10 years, there may be many commercial solutions to the problems above, while today we need something to allow us to continue.

Linked information systems

In providing a system for manipulating this sort of information, the hope would be to allow a pool of information to develop which could grow and evolve with the organisation and the projects it describes. For this to be possible, the method of storage must not place its own restraints on the information. This is why a "web" of notes with links (like references) between them is far more useful than a fixed hierarchical system. When describing a complex system, many people resort to diagrams with circles and arrows. Circles and arrows leave one free to describe the interrelationships between things in a way that tables, for example, do not. The system we need is like a diagram of circles and arrows, where circles and arrows can stand for anything.

We can call the circles nodes, and the arrows links. Suppose each node is like a small note, summary article, or comment. I'm not over concerned here with whether it has text or graphics or both. Ideally, it represents or describes one particular person or object. Examples of nodes can be

The arrows which links circle A to circle B can mean, for example, that A...

These circles and arrows, nodes and links, have different significance in various sorts of conventional diagrams:

Diagram Nodes are Arrows mean
Family tree People "Is parent of"
Dataflow diagram Software modules" Passes data to"
Dependency Module "Depends on"
PERT chart Tasks "Must be done before"
Organisational chart People "Reports to"

The system must allow any sort of information to be entered. Another person must be able to find the information, sometimes without knowing what he is looking for.

In practice, it is useful for the system to be aware of the generic types of the links between items (dependences, for example), and the types of nodes (people, things, documents..) without imposing any limitations.

The problem with trees

Many systems are organised hierarchically. The CERNDOC documentation system is an example, as is the Unix file system, and the VMS/HELP system. A tree has the practical advantage of giving every node a unique name. However, it does not allow the system to model the real world. For example, in a hierarchical HELP system such as VMS/HELP, one often gets to a leaf on a tree such as

        HELP COMPILER SOURCE_FORMAT PRAGMAS DEFAULTS

only to find a reference to another leaf: "Please see

        HELP COMPILER COMMAND OPTIONS DEFAULTS PRAGMAS"

and it is necessary to leave the system and re-enter it. What was needed was a link from one node to another, because in this case the information was not naturally organised into a tree.

Another example of a tree-structured system is the uucp News system (try 'rn' under Unix). This is a hierarchical system of discussions ("newsgroups") each containing articles contributed by many people. It is a very useful method of pooling expertise, but suffers from the inflexibility of a tree. Typically, a discussion under one newsgroup will develop into a different topic, at which point it ought to be in a different part of the tree. (See Fig 1).

From mcvax!uunet!pyrdc!pyrnj!rutgers!bellcore!geppetto!duncan Thu Mar...
Article 93 of alt.hypertext:
Path: cernvax!mcvax!uunet!pyrdc!pyrnj!rutgers!bellcore!geppetto!duncan
>From: duncan@geppetto.ctt.bellcore.com (Scott Duncan)
Newsgroups: alt.hypertext
Subject: Re: Threat to free information networks
Message-ID: <14646@bellcore.bellcore.com>
Date: 10 Mar 89 21:00:44 GMT
References: <1784.2416BB47@isishq.FIDONET.ORG> <3437@uhccux.uhcc...
Sender: news@bellcore.bellcore.com
Reply-To: duncan@ctt.bellcore.com (Scott Duncan)
Organization: Computer Technology Transfer, Bellcore
Lines: 18

Doug Thompson has written what I felt was a thoughtful article on
censorship -- my acceptance or rejection of its points is not
particularly germane to this posting, however.

In reply Greg Lee has somewhat tersely objected.

My question (and reason for this posting) is to ask where we might
logically take this subject for more discussion.  Somehow alt.hypertext
does not seem to be the proper place.

Would people feel it appropriate to move to alt.individualism or even
one of the soc groups.  I am not so much concerned with the specific
issue of censorship of rec.humor.funny, but the views presented in
Greg's article.

Speaking only for myself, of course, I am...
Scott P. Duncan (duncan@ctt.bellcore.com OR ...!bellcore!ctt!duncan)
                (Bellcore, 444 Hoes Lane  RRC 1H-210, Piscataway, NJ...)
                (201-699-3910 (w)   201-463-3683 (h))
Fig 1. An article in the UUCP News scheme.

The Subject field allows notes on the same topic to be linked together within a "newsgroup". The name of the newsgroup (alt.hypertext) is a hierarchical name. This particular note is expresses a problem with the strict tree structure of the scheme: this discussion is related to several areas. Note that the "References", "From" and "Subject" fields can all be used to generate links.

The problem with keywords

Keywords are a common method of accessing data for which one does not have the exact coordinates. The usual problem with keywords, however, is that two people never chose the same keywords. The keywords then become useful only to people who already know the application well.

Practical keyword systems (such as that of VAX/NOTES for example) require keywords to be registered. This is already a step in the right direction. A linked system takes this to the next logical step. Keywords can be nodes which stand for a concept. A keyword node is then no different from any other node. One can link documents, etc., to keywords. One can then find keywords by finding any node to which they are related. In this way, documents on similar topics are indirectly linked, through their key concepts. A keyword search then becomes a search starting from a small number of named nodes, and finding nodes which are close to all of them.

It was for these reasons that I first made a small linked information system, not realising that a term had already been coined for the idea: "hypertext".

A solution: Hypertext

Personal Experience with Hypertext

In 1980, I wrote a program for keeping track of software with which I was involved in the PS control system. Called Enquire, it allowed one to store snippets of information, and to link related pieces together in any way. To find information, one progressed via the links from one sheet to another, rather like in the old computer game "adventure". I used this for my personal record of people and modules. It was similar to the application Hypercard produced more recently by Apple for the Macintosh. A difference was that Enquire, although lacking the fancy graphics, ran on a multiuser system, and allowed many people to access the same data.

Documentation of the RPC project                       (concept)


   Most of the documentation is available on VMS, with the two
   principle manuals being stored in the CERNDOC system.

    1) includes: The VAX/NOTES conference VXCERN::RPC
    2) includes: Test and Example suite
    3) includes: RPC BUG LISTS
    4) includes: RPC System: Implementation Guide
       Information for maintenance, porting, etc.
    5) includes: Suggested Development Strategy for RPC Applications
    6) includes: "Notes on RPC", Draft 1, 20 feb 86
    7) includes: "Notes on Proposed RPC Development" 18 Feb 86
    8) includes: RPC User Manual
       How to build and run a distributed system.
    9) includes: Draft Specifications and Implementation Notes
   10) includes: The RPC HELP facility
   11) describes: THE REMOTE PROCEDURE CALL PROJECT in DD/OC





 Help  Display  Select  Back  Quit Mark  Goto_mark  Link  Add  Edit
Fig 2. A screen in an Enquire scheme.

This example is basically a list, so the list of links is more important than the text on the node itself. Note that each link has a type ("includes" for example) and may also have comment associated with it. (The bottom line is a menu bar.)

Soon after my re-arrival at CERN in the DD division, I found that the environment was similar to that in PS, and I missed Enquire. I therefore produced a version for the VMS, and have used it to keep track of projects, people, groups, experiments, software modules and hardware devices with which I have worked. I have found it personally very useful. I have made no effort to make it suitable for general consumption, but have found that a few people have successfully used it to browse through the projects and find out all sorts of things of their own accord.

Hot spots

Meanwhile, several programs have been made exploring these ideas, both commercially and academically. Most of them use "hot spots" in documents, like icons, or highlighted phrases, as sensitive areas. touching a hot spot with a mouse brings up the relevant information, or expands the text on the screen to include it. Imagine, then, the references in this document, all being associated with the network address of the thing to which they referred, so that while reading this document you could skip to them with a click of the mouse.

"Hypertext" is a term coined in the 1950s by Ted Nelson [...], which has become popular for these systems, although it is used to embrace two different ideas. One idea (which is relevant to this problem) is the concept: "Hypertext": Human-readable information linked together in an unconstrained way.

The other idea, which is independent and largely a question of technology and time, is of multimedia documents which include graphics, speech and video. I will not discuss this latter aspect further here, although I will use the word "Hypermedia" to indicate that one is not bound to text.

It has been difficult to assess the effect of a large hypermedia system on an organisation, often because these systems never had seriously large-scale use. For this reason, we require large amounts of existing information should be accessible using any new information management system.

CERN Requirements

To be a practical system in the CERN environment, there are a number of clear practical requirements.

Remote access across networks.

CERN is distributed, and access from remote machines is essential.

Heterogeneity

Access is required to the same data from different types of system (VM/CMS, Macintosh, VAX/VMS, Unix)

Non-Centralisation

Information systems start small and grow. They also start isolated and then merge. A new system must allow existing systems to be linked together without requiring any central control or coordination.

Access to existing data

If we provide access to existing databases as though they were in hypertext form, the system will get off the ground quicker. This is discussed further below.

Private links

One must be able to add one's own private links to and from public information. One must also be able to annotate links, as well as nodes, privately.

Bells and Whistles

Storage of ASCII text, and display on 24x80 screens, is in the short term sufficient, and essential. Addition of graphics would be an optional extra with very much less penetration for the moment.

Data analysis

An intriguing possibility, given a large hypertext database with typed links, is that it allows some degree of automatic analysis. It is possible to search, for example, for anomalies such as undocumented software or divisions which contain no people. It is possible to generate lists of people or devices for other purposes, such as mailing lists of people to be informed of changes. It is also possible to look at the topology of an organisation or a project, and draw conclusions about how it should be managed, and how it could evolve. This is particularly useful when the database becomes very large, and groups of projects, for example, so interwoven as to make it difficult to see the wood for the trees.

In a complex place like CERN, it's not always obvious how to divide people into groups. Imagine making a large three-dimensional model, with people represented by little spheres, and strings between people who have something in common at work.

Now imagine picking up the structure and shaking it, until you make some sense of the tangle: perhaps, you see tightly knit groups in some places, and in some places weak areas of communication spanned by only a few people. Perhaps a linked information system will allow us to see the real structure of the organisation in which we work.

Live links

The data to which a link (or a hot spot) refers may be very static, or it may be temporary. In many cases at CERN information about the state of systems is changing all the time. Hypertext allows documents to be linked into "live" data so that every time the link is followed, the information is retrieved. If one sacrifices portability, it is possible so make following a link fire up a special application, so that diagnostic programs, for example, could be linked directly into the maintenance guide.

Non requirements

Discussions on Hypertext have sometimes tackled the problem of copyright enforcement and data security. These are of secondary importance at CERN, where information exchange is still more important than secrecy. Authorisation and accounting systems for hypertext could conceivably be designed which are very sophisticated, but they are not proposed here.

In cases where reference must be made to data which is in fact protected, existing file protection systems should be sufficient.

Specific Applications

The following are three examples of specific places in which the proposed system would be immediately useful. There are many others.

Development Project Documentation.

The Remote procedure Call project has a skeleton description using Enquire. Although limited, it is very useful for recording who did what, where they are, what documents exist, etc. Also, one can keep track of users, and can easily append any extra little bits of information which come to hand and have nowhere else to be put. Cross-links to other projects, and to databases which contain information on people and documents would be very useful, and save duplication of information.

Document retrieval.

The CERNDOC system provides the mechanics of storing and printing documents. A linked system would allow one to browse through concepts, documents, systems and authors, also allowing references between documents to be stored. (Once a document had been found, the existing machinery could be invoked to print it or display it).

The "Personal Skills Inventory".

Personal skills and experience are just the sort of thing which need hypertext flexibility. People can be linked to projects they have worked on, which in turn can be linked to particular machines, programming languages, etc.

The State of the Art in Hypermedia

An increasing amount of work is being done into hypermedia research at universities and commercial research labs, and some commercial systems have resulted. There have been two conferences, Hypertext '87 and '88, and in Washington DC, the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NST) hosted a workshop on standardisation in hypertext, a followup of which will occur during 1990.

The Communications of the ACM special issue on Hypertext contains many references to hypertext papers. A bibliography on hypertext is given in [NIST90], and a uucp newsgroup alt.hypertext exists. I do not, therefore, give a list here.

Browsing techniques

Much of the academic research is into the human interface side of browsing through a complex information space. Problems addressed are those of making navigation easy, and avoiding a feeling of being "lost in hyperspace". Whilst the results of the research are interesting, many users at CERN will be accessing the system using primitive terminals, and so advanced window styles are not so important for us now.

Interconnection or publication?

Most systems available today use a single database. This is accessed by many users by using a distributed file system. There are few products which take Ted Nelson's idea of a wide "docuverse" literally by allowing links between nodes in different databases. In order to do this, some standardisation would be necessary. However, at the standardisation workshop, the emphasis was on standardisation of the format for exchangeable media, nor for networking. This is prompted by the strong push toward publishing of hypermedia information, for example on optical disk. There seems to be a general consensus about the abstract data model which a hypertext system should use.

Many systems have been put together with little or no regard for portability, unfortunately. Some others, although published, are proprietary software which is not for external release. However, there are several interesting projects and more are appearing all the time. Digital's "Compound Document Architecture" (CDA) , for example, is a data model which may be extendible into a hypermedia model, and there are rumours that this is a way Digital would like to go.

Incentives and CALS

The US Department of Defence has given a big incentive to hypermedia research by, in effect, specifying hypermedia documentation for future procurement. This means that all manuals for parts for defence equipment must be provided in hypermedia form. The acronym CALS stands for 狢omputer-aided Acquisition and Logistic Support).

There is also much support from the publishing industry, and from librarians whose job it is to organise information.

What will the system look like?

Let us see what components a hypertext system at CERN must have. The only way in which sufficient flexibility can be incorporated is to separate the information storage software from the information display software, with a well defined interface between them. Given the requirement for network access, it is natural to let this clean interface coincide with the physical division between the user and the remote database machine.

This division also is important in order to allow the heterogeneity which is required at CERN (and would be a boon for the world in general).

browser runs on many platforms

Fig 2. A client/server model for a distributed hypertext system.

Therefore, an important phase in the design of the system is to define this interface. After that, the development of various forms of display program and of database server can proceed in parallel. This will have been done well if many different information sources, past, present and future, can be mapped onto the definition, and if many different human interface programs can be written over the years to take advantage of new technology and standards.

Accessing Existing Data

The system must achieve a critical usefulness early on. Existing hypertext systems have had to justify themselves solely on new data. If, however, there was an existing base of data of personnel, for example, to which new data could be linked, the value of each new piece of data would be greater.

What is required is a gateway program which will map an existing structure onto the hypertext model, and allow limited (perhaps read-only) access to it. This takes the form of a hypertext server written to provide existing information in a form matching the standard interface. One would not imagine the server actually generating a hypertext database from and existing one: rather, it would generate a hypertext view of an existing database.

path between the database, the server and the browser
Fig 3. A hypertext gateway allows existing data to be seen in hypertext form by a hypertext browser.

Some examples of systems which could be connected in this way are

uucp News
This is a Unix electronic conferencing system. A server for uucp news could makes links between notes on the same subject, as well as showing the structure of the conferences.
VAX/Notes
This is Digital's electronic conferencing system. It has a fairly wide following in FermiLab, but much less in CERN. The topology of a conference is quite restricting.
CERNDOC
This is a document registration and distribution system running on CERN's VM machine. As well as documents, categories and projects, keywords and authors lend themselves to representation as hypertext nodes.
File systems
This would allow any file to be linked to from other hypertext documents.
The Telephone Book
Even this could even be viewed as hypertext, with links between people and sections, sections and groups, people and floors of buildings, etc.
The unix manual
This is a large body of computer-readable text, currently organised in a flat way, but which also contains link information in a standard format ("See also..").
Databases
A generic tool could perhaps be made to allow any database which uses a commercial DBMS to be displayed as a hypertext view.

In some cases, writing these servers would mean unscrambling or obtaining details of the existing protocols and/or file formats. It may not be practical to provide the full functionality of the original system through hypertext. In general, it will be more important to allow read access to the general public: it may be that there is a limited number of people who are providing the information, and that they are content to use the existing facilities.

It is sometimes possible to enhance an existing storage system by coding hypertext information in, if one knows that a server will be generating a hypertext representation. In 'news' articles, for example, one could use (in the text) a standard format for a reference to another article. This would be picked out by the hypertext gateway and used to generate a link to that note. This sort of enhancement will allow greater integration between old and new systems.

There will always be a large number of information management systems - we get a lot of added usefulness from being able to cross-link them. However, we will lose out if we try to constrain them, as we will exclude systems and hamper the evolution of hypertext in general.

Conclusion

We should work toward a universal linked information system, in which generality and portability are more important than fancy graphics techniques and complex extra facilities.

The aim would be to allow a place to be found for any information or reference which one felt was important, and a way of finding it afterwards. The result should be sufficiently attractive to use that it the information contained would grow past a critical threshold, so that the usefulness the scheme would in turn encourage its increased use.

The passing of this threshold accelerated by allowing large existing databases to be linked together and with new ones.

A Practical Project

Here I suggest the practical steps to go to in order to find a real solution at CERN. After a preliminary discussion of the requirements listed above, a survey of what is available from industry is obviously required. At this stage, we will be looking for a systems which are future-proof:

We may find that with a little adaptation, pars of the system we need can be combined from various sources: for example, a browser from one source with a database from another.

I imagine that two people for 6 to 12 months would be sufficient for this phase of the project.

A second phase would almost certainly involve some programming in order to set up a real system at CERN on many machines. An important part of this, discussed below, is the integration of a hypertext system with existing data, so as to provide a universal system, and to achieve critical usefulness at an early stage.

(... and yes, this would provide an excellent project with which to try our new object oriented programming techniques!) TBL March 1989, May 1990

References

[NEL67]
Nelson, T.H. "Getting it out of our system" in Information Retrieval: A Critical Review", G. Schechter, ed. Thomson Books, Washington D.C., 1967, 191-210
[SMISH88]
Smish, J.B and Weiss, S.F,"An Overview of Hypertext",in Communications of the ACM, July 1988 Vol 31, No. 7,and other articles in the same special "Hypertext" issue.
[CAMP88]
Campbell, B and Goodman, J,"HAM: a general purpose Hypertext Abstract Machine",in Communications of the ACM July 1988 Vol 31, No. 7
[ASKCYN88]
Akscyn, R.M, McCracken, D and Yoder E.A,"KMS: A distributed hypermedia system for managing knowledge in originations", in Communications of the ACM , July 1988 Vol 31, No. 7
[HYP88]
Hypertext on Hypertext, a hypertext version of the special Comms of the ACM edition, is avialble from the ACM for the Macintosh or PC.
[RN]
Under unix, type man rn to find out about the rn command which is used for reading uucp news.
[NOTES]
Under VMS, type HELP NOTES to find out about the VAX/NOTES system
[CERNDOC]
On CERNVM, type FIND DOCFIND for infrmation about how to access the CERNDOC programs.
[NIST90]
J. Moline et. al. (ed.) Proceedings of the Hypertext Standardisation Workshop January 16-18, 1990, National Institute of Standards and Technology, pub. U.S. Dept. of Commerce
孕妇什么不能吃 紫绀是什么症状 薄荷叶晒干后能干什么 92年出生属什么生肖 菌子不能和什么一起吃
什么是肺腺瘤 10万个为什么 血红蛋白低说明什么 薄荷叶晒干后能干什么 罗汉果泡水有什么好处
东宫是什么意思 彼岸花什么时候开花 为什么要做试管婴儿 礻字旁与什么有关 什么东西可以解酒
白细胞多是什么原因 锋芒毕露是什么意思 软化耳屎的药水叫什么 自叹不如什么意思 白雪什么什么
出冷汗是什么原因hcv8jop1ns8r.cn 版心是什么1949doufunao.com 脑门痒痒是什么预兆hcv9jop0ns7r.cn 高什么亮什么成语hcv8jop1ns1r.cn 绝膑而亡是什么意思1949doufunao.com
五常法指的是什么hcv8jop8ns9r.cn 术后吃什么营养品好hcv8jop2ns3r.cn 为国为民是什么生肖hcv8jop3ns1r.cn 鲍温病是什么病hcv9jop5ns8r.cn 内含是什么意思hcv9jop1ns2r.cn
看病人送什么hcv8jop5ns7r.cn 什么叫代谢bysq.com 什么是鸡尾酒hcv8jop5ns2r.cn 喜欢喝冰水是什么原因hcv9jop6ns0r.cn 地中海贫血是什么意思hcv8jop3ns4r.cn
空前绝后是什么生肖hcv7jop4ns8r.cn 与什么隔什么hcv9jop0ns2r.cn 踢馆什么意思hcv7jop9ns9r.cn molly英文名什么意思hcv7jop9ns3r.cn 抠脚大汉什么意思hcv8jop7ns9r.cn
百度