Objects and Databases [electronic resource] : Third International Conference, ICOODB 2010, Frankfurt/Main, Germany, September 28-30, 2010. Proceedings / edited by Alan Dearle, Roberto V. Zicari.

Contributor(s): Dearle, Alan [editor.] | Zicari, Roberto V [editor.] | SpringerLink (Online service)Material type: TextTextSeries: Lecture Notes in Computer Science ; 6348Publisher: Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2010Description: XIV, 161p. 58 illus. online resourceContent type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9783642160929Subject(s): Computer science | Software engineering | Data structures (Computer science) | Database management | Data mining | Information storage and retrieval systems | Information systems | Computer Science | Database Management | Information Systems Applications (incl.Internet) | Software Engineering | Information Storage and Retrieval | Data Mining and Knowledge Discovery | Data StructuresAdditional physical formats: Printed edition:: No titleDDC classification: 005.74 LOC classification: QA76.9.D3Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Keynotes -- Search Computing Challenges and Directions -- Searching the Web of Objects -- Unifying Remote Data, Remote Procedures, and Web Services -- Keynote Panel “New and Old Data Stores” -- Regular Papers -- Revisiting Schema Evolution in Object Databases in Support of Agile Development -- The Case for Object Databases in Cloud Data Management -- Query Optimization by Result Caching in the Stack-Based Approach -- A Flexible Object Model and Algebra for Uniform Access to Object Databases -- Data Model Driven Implementation of Web Cooperation Systems with Tricia -- iBLOB: Complex Object Management in Databases through Intelligent Binary Large Objects -- Object-Oriented Constraints for XML Schema -- Solving ORM by MAGIC:MApping GeneratIon and Composition -- Closing Schemas in Object-Relational Databases -- A Comparative Study of the Features and Performance of ORM Tools in a .NET Environment.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: AccordingtoFrancoisBancillonandWonKim[SIGMODRECORD,Vol.19,No. 4, December 1990], object-oriented databases started in around 1983. Twen- seven years later this publication contains the proceedings of the Third Inter- tional Conference on Object-Oriented Databases (ICOODB 2010). Two questions arise from this – why only the third, and what is of interest in the ?eld of object-oriented databases in 2010? The ?rst question is easy – in the 1980s and 1990s there were a number of conferences supporting the c- munity – the International Workshops on Persistent Object Systems started by Malcolm Atkinson and Ron Morrison, the EDBT series, and the International Workshop on Database Programming Languages. These database-oriented c- ferences complimented other OO conferences including OOPSLA and ECOOP, but towards the end of the last century they dwindled in popularity and ev- tually died out. In 2008 the First International Conference on Object Databases was held in Berlin. In 2009 the second ICOODB conference was held at the ETH in Zurich as a scienti?c peer-reviewed conference. What is particular about ICOODB is that the conference series was est- lished to address the needs of both industry and researcherswho had an interest in object databases, in innovative ways to bring objects and databases together and in alternatives/extensions to relational databases. The ?rst conference set the mould for those to follow – a combination of theory and practice with one day focusing on the theory of object databases and the second focusing on their practical use and implementation.
Item type: E-BOOKS
Tags from this library: No tags from this library for this title. Log in to add tags.
    Average rating: 0.0 (0 votes)
Current library Home library Call number Materials specified URL Status Date due Barcode
IMSc Library
IMSc Library
Link to resource Available EBK9337

Keynotes -- Search Computing Challenges and Directions -- Searching the Web of Objects -- Unifying Remote Data, Remote Procedures, and Web Services -- Keynote Panel “New and Old Data Stores” -- Regular Papers -- Revisiting Schema Evolution in Object Databases in Support of Agile Development -- The Case for Object Databases in Cloud Data Management -- Query Optimization by Result Caching in the Stack-Based Approach -- A Flexible Object Model and Algebra for Uniform Access to Object Databases -- Data Model Driven Implementation of Web Cooperation Systems with Tricia -- iBLOB: Complex Object Management in Databases through Intelligent Binary Large Objects -- Object-Oriented Constraints for XML Schema -- Solving ORM by MAGIC:MApping GeneratIon and Composition -- Closing Schemas in Object-Relational Databases -- A Comparative Study of the Features and Performance of ORM Tools in a .NET Environment.

AccordingtoFrancoisBancillonandWonKim[SIGMODRECORD,Vol.19,No. 4, December 1990], object-oriented databases started in around 1983. Twen- seven years later this publication contains the proceedings of the Third Inter- tional Conference on Object-Oriented Databases (ICOODB 2010). Two questions arise from this – why only the third, and what is of interest in the ?eld of object-oriented databases in 2010? The ?rst question is easy – in the 1980s and 1990s there were a number of conferences supporting the c- munity – the International Workshops on Persistent Object Systems started by Malcolm Atkinson and Ron Morrison, the EDBT series, and the International Workshop on Database Programming Languages. These database-oriented c- ferences complimented other OO conferences including OOPSLA and ECOOP, but towards the end of the last century they dwindled in popularity and ev- tually died out. In 2008 the First International Conference on Object Databases was held in Berlin. In 2009 the second ICOODB conference was held at the ETH in Zurich as a scienti?c peer-reviewed conference. What is particular about ICOODB is that the conference series was est- lished to address the needs of both industry and researcherswho had an interest in object databases, in innovative ways to bring objects and databases together and in alternatives/extensions to relational databases. The ?rst conference set the mould for those to follow – a combination of theory and practice with one day focusing on the theory of object databases and the second focusing on their practical use and implementation.

There are no comments on this title.

to post a comment.
The Institute of Mathematical Sciences, Chennai, India

Powered by Koha