Cartoon: "The Guy Who Took a Wrong Turn Off the Electronic Superhighway and Wound up in A Microwave Oven in Davenport Iowa": Defrost Wingettes, 4:15. [New Yorker]Previous chapter - Next chapter
To get into remote towns we get on the highway with some idea of the destination, and turn onto an *off-ramp when we get near to where we want to be. If we live in a large city, we may not need the highway, because many services will be local. We can meet friends, known ones or new ones by looking at *bulletin boards (BBs). We can look at local guides and directories, advertisements, and newspapers to learn what is going on.
In the meeting places one can meet potential friends, but also crooks. While one will not be physically hurt when interacting solely on the network, one should be careful when giving out addresses, keys, credit card numbers, and the like. In Chap\F we will present the possibilities of making contacts for electronic commerce, and the need for security. Today's electronic highways are still in the middle ages, and one can encounter knights, bandits, Robin Hoods, good samaritans, peasants, and artisans trudging warily to markets, and many individuals just seeking adventure in other countries.
Off-ramps from the highways also provide access to fantasy worlds, with castles, labyrinths, etc., populated by mythical beasts, to slay or befriend. A visitor can assume a playful role in this fantasy world: a meek person can be a fearless hero, and anyone can issue sage advice. Playing games with others in such fantasy worlds is enabled by accessing *Multi-User Dungeons (MUD). Players can deal with mythical beasts or other players, who they have never met as real persons. Players preserve anonymity by giving themselves imaginative names (*handles?) as "Moonshadow" [ref Washington Post Legislate #1193184, 28Nov93].
At other Off-ramps one finds opportunities to meet people, to shop, and a wide variety of
information. The table in this chapter lists some of the
resources, but the scene varies so rapidly that it is best explored on-line; although many
guides are published [Braun:94, Dern:94, Krol:92]. <
But as travel became affordable, people strarted hawking their wares along the roads. And
since goods are not consumed, only copied along the highways, many people set up stalls
showing and sharing their wares, without expecting any reimbursement, other than some
`thank you's, some recognition, and the hope to be able to change the world a bit. Many
government institutions starting making their data available, often with similar
motivation.
Some institutions have delivered information to remote users for a long time, for instance
the National Library of Medicine (NLM) with its Medline service. The papers that are
made available are carefully selected and indexed. Such library operations will be
presented in Chap\L. The number of such *value-added services is increasing, but the
services discussed in this chapter focus on broad and free access, with little guarantee that
the contents is accurate, complete, and unbiased. The reader must judge the value of what
has been stored and retrieved. Knowing the source can help, for instance, one would not
expect !example of an obviously biased BB.
There are many documents that people want to make available at a much more informal
level. By providing *anonymous *ftp access to colleagues on the *Internet, the formal
library system can be bypassed, avoiding both delays and scientific scrutiny. Since such
ftp-sites are widely dispersed, and may use somewhat different access conventions, a tool
to braden access is helpful. The most popular tool today is `Archie'. An ftp-site can
become an Archie-server, which makes an index of ftp-accessible documents and
programs available to Archie clients. <
<
Veronica[Un.Nevada]=Gopher index server, updated monthly, replicated
<
but inadequate means of making them available,
WAIS needs 1. incremtenal delivery, 2. Measures `of relevance (now 1/0) , 3. then
ranking
client server model. Objective was simply to reduce lead time for physics preprint
Define HTML, concets based on TeX, in use by physcis community.s.
Thinking machines
Figure \arpanet. The nodes and connections of the ARPA-net in 19
Mosaic is a brwsing tool provided by the Supercomputer Center in Champaign Illinois,
supported through NASA. Browses through World-wide web. Berners.Lee:] arrt Cern
Mouse diven. Image access. Sound. 100ds of DBs configuted with Mosaic.
Nasa`weather, Clinton's speeches @ Un.of Missouri, music vidoes @ MTV , Library of
Congres catalogue, UC Berkeley paleontology
Novell for its documents. Next on-line magazines, supported by advertising [O'Reilly and
assocaites, Sebastopol CA]
need direct Internet hookup
Mitch Kapoor, ex Lotus, head Electronic Frontier Foundation.
Today an enormous volume of information is available.
It distinguishes itself from formal *querying (Chap.\L\F\Query?) by serving casual
visitors wandering along the information highway.
Since the casual browser will not know the prcise designation of what is wanted,
assistance is needed. A number of methods can be employed be helpful assistant.
\item{1} A menu can be provided. Since there is too much stuff to fit on one menu page,
the menu will be hierarchically organized. Figure\friendly showed the top entry of such a
menu. At each level of a hierarchy a choice among $7\pm2$ categories seems optimal
for human perception [TMN<<>>]. Creating natural icons for all entries can be difficult.
When there no natural hierarchy which can serve as a layer then initial letters or digits can
be used, but user-friendliness is soon lost.
\item{2} Multiple menus are often needed. A single hierarchy imposes one organization
principle. Even if it can be shown that one taxonomy is best, say arranging auomobiles by
brand, type, and serial number, some searchers will prefer to search for the same cars by
color, size, and age, and yet others by state, town, and license numbers. Zooming in a
map may be the best way to pinpoint a location. Sometimes one may want to use
characterstics from multiple hierarchies. There might have to be a menu of menus.
\item{3} Generalizing from examples. A browser may want to bring an example, perhaps
by reference, and look for similar items. [CBR]. One may want a car that is similar to
one
owned earlier, or find suspects that match a sketch or a video clip. To locate a piece of
music one may hum a view bars, and to locate a house one may sketch its outline.
\enditem In all cases browsing is characterized by successive refinement and interaction.
In Chap.\U\H we reviewed which types of computers are effective in supporting such
interaction. <
problem WWWeb requires modification of source documents, unaccepatble, confusion.
[Engelbart]
Technology is making rapid progress in managing data in all these media. The cost of
transmission is high for some of them, as discussed in Chap\U\T\?
not everyone along the digital highways has the same capability to receive or enter
information in all those media, and there are situations where some media are not
appropriate. For example, receiving driving directions in image form while driving is
dangerous. In a noisy environment speech may not be audible and receiving data in voice
form will create a distraction in a library or classroom.
An important category of requirements for media conversion is to provide fair access to
*disabled persons. Participation in activities along the digital highways can can make a
crucial difference her. Access to the information highwas should empower, rather than
hinder disabled people. Today the U.S. alone is spending \dol200Billion per year on
services to disabled and elderly.persons. Bringing the digital highways into their homes is
the first step. Assuring access for *visually, speech, or motion impaired individuals is the
next step.
App;ies asso to noisy emvironmements, or to situations as within a kibrary, where bleeps
disturb the sdesitred silemce, or to be people working underwater.
>>>
Initially hypertext linkages may be created by the author. Authors who structure their
writing in a top-down fashion, from layout to chapters to sections etc. create a natural
linkage hierarchy, which is easily captured by these hyperlinks. Such an author may also
be aware when the hierarchy breaks down and references across the hierarchical tree are
needed.
Tools to convert existing texts to hypertext are available. They will seek out all terms and
cross-link them, omitting words that are common (* stopwords, as considered when
indexing in Chapter\L\T\INDEXING) or appear in every section. Terms that appear only
once cannot be linked, of course. Some human assistance is typically required. It makes
no sense to cross-link all citations, only links that provide useful explanatory material
need to become hyperlinks. Just as in indexing, a problem for automatic creation of
hypertext is that concepts are expressed by multiple terms, and the terms themselves are
spelled inconsistently, so that it is easy to miss useful linkages. Having a good * thesaurus
will generate many more links, but the result will require yet more editing to remove
irrelevant linkages.
Ongoing interactions with users is one way to maintain hypertext documents. Now a
responsive maintainer is needed throughout a document's useful life-time. Such a
maintainer, should be reimbursed, and that requires charging mechanisms, which have
been an anathema to the community developing browsing.
Linkages among documents add further value, but should probably be limited to major
topics, so that the browsing user is not induced to open an excessive number of mariginal
documents, The technology for inter-document and inter-node browsing is also more
complex, since the references will be much more indirect. A remote document is also
subject to editing, requiring updating of cross-references to it. Since up-to-date
documents are more valuable than static ones, their maintenance is of great value.
Currently, remote hyperlinks are rarely available. No standards exists for links and link
interpretation. If standards were available, remote access would be readily enabled, since
most suppliers of hypertext documents are committed to * open systems. Having an open
system does not imply that a hypertext service needs to be free, so that the ability to
handle * e-money remains an issue.
HTML MIME standards (no synchronized video)
Once the material has been received from a MOSAIC server it has to be displayed on
your machine
Work going on o make it extensible, work with SGML suppliers
Shared Mosaic (NCSAA Collage - whiteboard)
scrpt language to create ahypermedia tour.
Secure Mosaic.
Authoring tool for mOSAIC
Storyboard (EITsech, available on PCs also, without standards) emailable animation <-->
<
succuss in Mosaic is due to the good viewers on X-windows, MAC, MS wndows
<
adds 3_D (using Silicon Graphics 3D icons) also real-world 3D models(digitizing the
baroque library building in Vienna)
Anchors in arbitrary datatypes
Computer navgable links
Annotations of Different types
collection and guides tours overlaid over WWWeb net defned by public or private
supplier
avoids physical copies
Attributes to constrain search, with intersection capability
Spin-oofs HyperM presentation system
HM-card personal Hypermedia system
PClibrary electronic library = collection of books with langenschedit and Brockhoasu
Springer. Intially mainly dictionairies, ency, Duden, now handbookof machnen bau, ENT
, ... meduical texts
select books for one's desktop, then allows searching for hyperterms. , then personal
linkages can be made
Journal of Universal Computer Science (JUCS), annually in paper by Springer.
[C.Calude, H.maurer, A.Salomaa] Submission by email, referreing via Hyper-G.,
Publication Hypper-G at multiple server sites (at many Univ. for local fast access, 50
committees), free 1995-1996 after 1997 $100/year per line per University
net access needed for detailed in figures (local default `postagecstamp figures', for
printing acquire better quality PS copies.
CDROM, paper
Quality citable
150 leading scientist editors. { .. boman SRI,Stanford, ... , schllgeter Nievergelt (Zurich)
production
Protection trust universities, large companies, idvidula ccontrol has been lost.
[Maurer]
Keep things affordable to discourage copying.
cross check with manual reference to see if you have the manual handy ask for a color
code
for Galaxy directory services see http://galaxy.einet.net
Active learning [H.Maurer] Record voivce image of prof, presenation, etc digitally
Remote access, and grebn/red light to indicate speed up and slow down. Authoring on the
fly.
AEIOU project for Austria's 1000 anniversary, to become publically available, with
history, pictures, culture, ilm arciv, Musickgeschichte with sound Ausriaca demo films
how one lives, ets, dies` in austria, 15000 world images` collected by maurer.
Ostereich lexicon, [ontlogical unificatiob with germany]
3D input data glove, data helmet -what are you looking at
Such linkages may be created implicitly, by tracing the users path while navigating
through a document. Creating such a pathe also has the immediate byproduct of allowing
backup, by having an * undo option which reverses the travel, although retaining a record
of the path taken.
\W\Bio Brewster Kahle
\W\Z Remote browsing is here today, and has opened the eyes and minds of many people
to the benefits that can be gained by traveling the information highways. A secondary
reaction is that too much is available along those roads, and the number of hawkers is
increasing steadily. There will be a market for guides and advisors to help the traveler. If
the traveler is in search of specific items, rather than idly perusing the wares, then there is
also a rule for brokers or mediators, as introduced in Chapter\M.
As in any new enterprise, the market is quite inconsistent in form and content. As remote
access becomes broadly available the problem of inconsistent terminology will become
more troublesome. Those troubles will motivate
<
http:///www-psrg.lcs.mit.edu/ for 500 wais servers. with query completion, probability
based on headlines in contebt.
Superman as control hand direction and stretch to speed to warp speeds
(inside body?) spece and body seems real, the ffamiliar
}\endtable
\end
Free internet communication makes sattelite communication unaccetble
but neededto motivate introduction of new technologies.
CS99I home page.BROWSING.History
WAIS.History
Using the computer for
browsing is a relatively new activity. Until the internet was well established there were
few places one could get to, and even fewer that could be accessed freely. There were
libraries, but access to them was often limited to qualified experts. There were some
directories, but those were intended for scientists, for instance to locate data gathered by
NASA explorations [ref WAIS.History
\MEDLINEWAIS.History
\ARCHIEWAIS.History
\VERONICA: veronica>.
WAIS.History
\PROSPERO Prospero>WAIS.History
\WAIS In 1989 Thinking
Machines Corporation, and in particular WAIS.History
\WEB World-wide web. Tim
[Berners.Lee:] at Cern 1989 for high energy physicists hypertextBROWSING.Functions
WAIS.functions
Browsing is an informal,
unaided search through information sources. WAIS.functions
\BROWSING When
browsing the searcher has no specific idea in what exists in the information bases, and
little idea of where relevant information might be. Initial steps try to identify candidate
resources, using the equivalent of the *yellow pages to find candidate suppliers. In
subsequent steps the material on the shelves of the candidate suppliers are scanned to
look for interesting stuff. If there are many shelves, you may try to find the most likely
shelves by their label, or you may consult local inventory lists. WAIS.functions
\NEWSWAIS.functions
\GAMESWAIS.functions
\ENCYCLOPEDIASWAIS.functions
\LINKINGWAIS.functions
\ANNOTATION WAIS.functions
\FLEXIBLExMEDIA The
systems that are becoming available for browsing use an increasing variety of media.
While simple text still dominates, there are drawings, pictures, videoclips, film, sounds
and voice. The only sensory output missing along the digital highways are smells and
bumps. With the variety of information media come a variety of presentation and input
*modes. For graphics we need to display or enter lines and shadings for areas. For
pictures we need TV-like displays and digital input of photographs, x-rays, etc. For video
and film we need sequences of images, presented with precision, so that motion remains
smooth. Sounds are represented by digitized waveforms, and spoken words must be
played back precisely to be clear to the listener.BROWSING.Technology
WAIS.Technology
Technology WAIS.Technology
\REPOSITORIES WAIS.Technology
\KNOWBOTSWAIS.Technology
\STANDARDS
Z39.50WAIS.Technology
\HYPERTEXT
A hypertext is an active text, where the reader can * touch any term in document and
move to a section in the document where more information on that topic is provided. In
practice only certain terms are touchable in hypertext systems, typically indicated by
being displayed in bold-face. Invisible to the user are embedded cross-references, which
indicate the position in the document of the referenced term.WAIS.Technology
\MOSAIC WAIS.Technology
\HYPERG
[H.Maurer, IICM, Graz, austria] compatible still with gopherBROWSING.Alternatives
WAIS.Alternatives
\active objects, tell
users, NII channel with 100 most active Universal Resource Locators (URLs)WAIS.Alternatives
\Colaboration
[hpc meet] for design UCberkeleyWAIS.Alternatives
\CONTROLLED_VOC
ABULARIES WAIS.Alternatives
\ONTOLOGIES WAIS.Alternatives
\PERSONAL_LINKS In the
hypertext model described above we have assumed that the author or a subsequent
maintainer creates hyperlinks as an added value to the users. But some users are likely to
require private links. BROWSING.Bio
BROWSING.Conclusion
BROWSING.Lists
WAIS.Resources
< name / type sponsor topic access path charging
[ref] | %source AlterNex / BBoard / Brazil Ecology |
ARPA / Doc.svce HPCC documents free / http://ftp.arpa.mil |
Aurora? / finger file S.T.D., Un. .../ Canada status of the Aurora Borealis
aurora@xi.uleth.ca /Canada | Chatback / email group IBM Great Britain / Warwick 01 223 0017
contacts for / speech-handicapped children free Telecom Gold 01:CLK001 /
t.holloway@warwick.ac.uk |
Comlink / BBoard / Germany Ecology |
ConflictNet / BBoard Inst.for Global Comm. / San Francisco |
EcoNet / BBoard Inst.for Global Comm. / San Francisco Ecology
Sprint |
EcuNex / BBoard / Ecuador Ecology |
Fedworld / file service federal documents @130.11.48.107 |
GILS / Locator Office of Management\ Budget / (OMB) US
Government Information multiple / proposed IITF / echriti@usgs.gov> |
GlasNet / BBoard / Russia Ecology |
GreenNet / BBoard / Great Britain Ecology |
LaborNet / BBoard Inst.for Global Comm. / San Francisco |
PeaceNet / BBoard Inst.for Global Comm. / San Francisco |
Pegasus / BBoard / Australia Ecology | |
tr> Web / BBoard / Canada Ecology Wellington NZ museum
digitizes 1.5M objects, 100K in 3D. |
Fin
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