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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: materialTypeLabelBookSeries: Information Systems and Applications, incl. Internet/Web, and HCI: 6348Publisher: Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg : Imprint: Springer, 2010Edition: 1st ed. 2010.Description: XIV, 161 p. 58 illus. online resource.Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9783642160929.Subject(s): Database management | Software engineering | Application software | Information storage and retrieval systems | Data mining | Database Management | Software Engineering | Computer and Information Systems Applications | Information Storage and Retrieval | Data Mining and Knowledge DiscoveryAdditional physical formats: Printed edition:: No title; Printed edition:: No titleDDC classification: 005.74 Online 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 Nature eBookSummary: 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.
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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.

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