"Data In Your Face": Push Technology in Perspective.
Michael J. Franklin, Stanley B. Zdonik:
"Data In Your Face": Push Technology in Perspective.
SIGMOD Conference 1998: 516-519@inproceedings{DBLP:conf/sigmod/FranklinZ98,
author = {Michael J. Franklin and
Stanley B. Zdonik},
editor = {Laura M. Haas and
Ashutosh Tiwary},
title = {"Data In Your Face": Push Technology in Perspective},
booktitle = {SIGMOD 1998, Proceedings ACM SIGMOD International Conference
on Management of Data, June 2-4, 1998, Seattle, Washington, USA},
publisher = {ACM Press},
year = {1998},
isbn = {0-89791-995-5},
pages = {516-519},
ee = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/276304.276360, db/conf/sigmod/FranklinZ98.html},
crossref = {DBLP:conf/sigmod/98},
bibsource = {DBLP, http://dblp.uni-trier.de}
}
Abstract
Push technology has recently generated a tremendous amount of media attention,
commercial activity, and controversy. The wide range of opinions on
push technology is understandable given that it represents a major
departure from the way distributed information systems have traditionally
been built. Adding to the noise, however, is confusion about the basic
principles of push and where it fits in to the world of data delivery.
We argue that this confusion stems from two fundamental
causes: First, push is just one dimension of a larger design space of data
delivery mechanisms. Second, networked information systems can
employ different data delivery options between different sets of information
producers and consumers. In this short paper we characterize the design space
for dissemination-based information systems and applications, and show how
current ``push'' solutions fit into this space. Additional information can be
found at the Broadcast Disks/DBIS
home page
Copyright © 1998 by the ACM,
Inc., used by permission. Permission to make
digital or hard copies is granted provided that
copies are not made or distributed for profit or
direct commercial advantage, and that copies show
this notice on the first page or initial screen of
a display along with the full citation.
CDROM Version: Load the CDROM "DiSC, Volume 1 Number 1" and ...
Online Version (ACM WWW Account required): Full Text in PDF Format
DVD Version: Load ACM SIGMOD Anthology DVD 1" and ...
Printed Edition
Laura M. Haas, Ashutosh Tiwary (Eds.):
SIGMOD 1998, Proceedings ACM SIGMOD International Conference on Management of Data, June 2-4, 1998, Seattle, Washington, USA.
ACM Press 1998, ISBN 0-89791-995-5 ,
SIGMOD Record 27(2),
June 1998
Contents
[Abstract]
[Full Text (Postscript)]
References
- [Acha95a]
- Swarup Acharya, Rafael Alonso, Michael J. Franklin, Stanley B. Zdonik:
Broadcast Disks: Data Management for Asymmetric Communications Environments.
SIGMOD Conference 1995: 199-210
- [Acha95b]
- ...
- [Acha97]
- Swarup Acharya, Michael J. Franklin, Stanley B. Zdonik:
Balancing Push and Pull for Data Broadcast.
SIGMOD Conference 1997: 183-194
- [Asko98]
- ...
- [Amma85]
- Mostafa H. Ammar, J. W. Wong:
The Design of Teletext Broadcast Cycles.
Perform. Eval. 5(4): 235-242(1985)
- [Fran97]
- Michael J. Franklin, Stanley B. Zdonik:
A Framework for Scalbale Dissemination-Based Systems.
OOPSLA 1997: 94-105
- [Giff90]
- David K. Gifford:
Polychannel Systems for Mass Digital Communications.
Commun. ACM 33(2): 141-151(1990)
- [Glan96]
- David Glance:
Multicast Support for Data Dissemination in OrbixTalk.
IEEE Data Eng. Bull. 19(3): 31-39(1996)
- [Herm87]
- Gary E. Herman, Gita Gopal, K. C. Lee, Abel Weinrib:
The Datacycle Architecture for Very High Throughput Database Systems.
SIGMOD Conference 1987: 97-103
- [Imie94]
- Tomasz Imielinski, S. Viswanathan, B. R. Badrinath:
Energy Efficient Indexing on Air.
SIGMOD Conference 1994: 25-36
- [Oki93]
- Brian M. Oki, Manfred Pflügl, Alex Siegel, Dale Skeen:
The Information Bus - An Architecture for Extensible Distributed Systems.
SOSP 1993: 58-68
- [Wong88]
- ...
- [Yan95]
- Tak W. Yan, Hector Garcia-Molina:
SIFT - a Tool for Wide-Area Information Dissemination.
USENIX Winter 1995: 177-186
Copyright © Fri Mar 12 17:21:35 2010
by Michael Ley (ley@uni-trier.de)