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Table 1: Repository Operations

in Tagfs - tag semantics for hierarchical file systems
by Stephan Bloehdorn, Olaf Görlitz, Simon Schenk, Max Völkel, Forschungszentrum Informatik Karlsruhe 2006
"... In PAGE 5: ... Possible query reflnements are provided as subdirectory names. Metadata Modiflcations The set of possible modiflcation operations on the metadata repository is described in Table1 with ctxt being a context and infoobject being the identifyer of the involved information object, in the case of... ..."
Cited by 4

Table 8: Heterogeneous data in ETANA-DL - an overview

in Prototyping Digital Libraries Handling Heterogeneous Data Sources - An ETANA-DL Case Study
by Unnikrishnan Ravindranathan, Unnikrishnan Ravindranathan, Committee Chairman, Dr. Edward, A. Fox 2004
"... In PAGE 63: ... We have only partially converted these sites into Open Archives, but have harvested records of different kinds of digital objects from these sites to prove the extensibility and scalability of our approach to handling heterogeneous archaeological data. Table8 provides an overview of the data contained in the ETANA-DL Union Catalog. Table 8: Heterogeneous data in ETANA-DL - an overview ... In PAGE 63: ... We have harvested bone records from two sites (Nimrin and Umayri) to show the heterogeneity of our approach (being able to handle data from disparate sources). As shown in Table8 , more than ... ..."
Cited by 6

Table 1. An Overview of the ICE Repository

in New l'orli Uiliversitj-
by Rajiv D. Banker, Robert J. Kauffman, Dani Zweig, Rajiv D. Banker, Robert J. Kauffillan, Daiii Zweig
"... In PAGE 6: ... A11 interactions among objects are mediated by Views. An overview of the contents of the Repository is given in Table1 below. INSERT TABLE 1 ABOUT HERE All the objects of the application environment are stored in a single Repository.... ..."

Table 3. raytracer: Scalability

in Supporting High-Level Grid Parallel Programming: the Design and Implementation of Grid-GUM2
by A. D. Al Zain, P. W. Trinder, G. J. Michaelson, H-w. Loidl
"... In PAGE 6: ... More significantly, the last two cases show that when the size of the local cluster limits the GUM speedups, Grid-GUM1 can scale further using PEs in a remote cluster. Table3 compares the scalability and parallel effi- ciency of the raytracer program under Grid-GUM1 and Grid-GUM2 on a high latency heterogeneous com- putational Grid. The efficiency comparison of the two cluster results relies on the similarity of the architec- tures, i.... ..."

Table 29: Repository service definition

in A Distributed Software Architecture for Semiconductor Process Design
by Michael B. Mcilrath, Donald E. Troxel, Matthew D. Verminski, Matthew D. Verminski
"... In PAGE 7: ...able 28: Example service type ........................................................................................ 55 Table29 : Repository service definition .... In PAGE 56: ... It contains interfaces for creating and accessing SPR object instances. A service type is defined for a SPR repository to advertise services that support the generic factory interface (see Table29 ). The service type contains basic properties for defining a name, host, and version.... ..."

Table 1: Categories of Object Services. There is also a brokering service which is the key mechanism for the integration of other services and platforms, regardless the heterogeneities introduced by open distributed system architectures. The brokering server, known as Object Request Broker (ORB), is the main component of the OMG proposed architecture [16], and provides behavior invocation through a registration mechanism for location and naming. The properties service is considered to be part of the lifecycle service, so for this discussion it is omitted. The implementation repository service is considered to be a component of the brokering 6

in Multiware Database: A Distributed Object Database System for Multimedia Support
by Carlos M. Tobar, Ivan L. M. Ricarte 1995
Cited by 4

Table 2: Details of data repositories underlying ontologies

in Managing Multiple Information Sources through Ontologies: Relationship between Vocabulary Heterogeneity and Loss of Information
by Eduardo Mena, Facultad De Inform'atica, Vipul Kashyap, Arantza Illarramendi, Amit Sheth 1996
"... In PAGE 3: ...Table 2: Details of data repositories underlying ontologies It is important to notice (see Table2 ) the heterogeneity among the ontologies (semantic heterogeneity) as well as in the data repositories (structural3 and operational4 hetero- geneity because they have been developed by di erent or- ganizations. In this way we want to capture a real case and deal with problems that never arise when ontologies and data repositories are designed under the same point of view.... ..."
Cited by 17

Table 2: Selected UK learning object repositories and services

in unknown title
by unknown authors

Table 3.4. Implicit object repository and status fields

in 3 Dynamic Logic by
by Bernhard Beckert, Vladimir Klebanov, Steffen Schlager

Table 1: Results for heterogeneous machine;;

in unknown title
by unknown authors
"... In PAGE 4: ... An object of n points is represented bya(3n;; 3n) matrix, thus increasing consider- ably the problem size as compared to the 2D analysis. Table1 presents results for a machine com- posed by f244, 244, 161, 161, 60, 50, 49g Mflops processors, connected by a 100 Mbit... ..."
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