From Web to workplace : designing open hypermedia systems / Kaj Gr©ınb©Œk and Randall H. Trigg.

In this book Kaj Gronbaek and Randall H. Trigg present a set of principles for the design of open hypermedia systems and provide concrete implications of these principles for issues ranging from data structures to architectures and system integration and for settings as diverse as the World Wide Web...

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Bibliographic Details
Online Access: Full Text (via Internet Archive)
Main Author: Gr©ınb©Œk, Kaj
Other Authors: Trigg, Randall H.
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Cambridge, Mass. : MIT Press, ℗♭1999.
Series:Digital communication.
Subjects:
Table of Contents:
  • Hypermedia in Support of Integration
  • Open Hypermedia in a Historical Context
  • Hypertext and hypermedia
  • The evolution of open hypermedia
  • Open hypermedia research issues
  • Methods of open hypermedia design
  • An open hypermedia design pattern
  • Hypermedia at Work
  • Heterogeneous materials, applications, and platforms
  • Linking and grouping materials
  • The need for cooperation support
  • Envisioning an open hypermedia service architecture
  • Impending challenges for hypermedia design
  • The Dexter Model and Beyond
  • The goals of the Dexter group
  • The participants and their systems
  • Dexter's recommendations
  • Dexter and open systems: Problems and issues
  • Hypermedia Fundamentals
  • Locations, Placements, and Interconnections
  • Links as embedded locators
  • Separating links from placements
  • Anchoring
  • Problems with the Dexter approach
  • New forms of specification: refSpecs and locSpecs
  • RefSpecs and the Hytime standard
  • RefSpecs and the World Wide Web
  • Patterns for locators, placements, and interconnections
  • Components: Structuring Primitives
  • Nodes, cards, and documents: Unpacking the metaphors
  • The Dexter approach: Atomic components as wrappers
  • Problems with the Dexter component
  • Designing flexible components
  • Patterns for components and anchors
  • Links: Traversable Components
  • Link metaphors
  • Link directionality
  • Computed links
  • The Dexter group's "no dangling links" rule
  • Issues in link traversal
  • A pattern for link structuring
  • Composites: Structured Components.