Foundations of Web TechnologySpringer Science & Business Media, 2002 M08 31 - 280 pages Over the last few years, Web technology has grown so rapidly that it is hard for interested readers to learn and keep up with the techniques. It would be extremely useful to have a single book that collectively describes not only the underlying areas from which internet technology derives its solutions, but also details the specific solutions to important applications on the World Wide Web. Foundations of Web Technology covers the basics of Web technology while being specialized enough to add value to experienced professionals working in this field. Most books on the Web focus on programmatic aspects of languages such as Java, JavaScript, or description of standards such as Hypertext Markup Language (HTML) or Wireless Markup Language (WML). A book that covers the concepts behind the infrastructure of the Web would be indispensable to a wide range of audiences interested in learning how the Web works, how techniques in Web technology can be applied to their own problem, and what the emergent technological trends in these areas are. Foundations of Web Technology ranges from fundamental areas such as information retrieval and data markup to applications such as web search, instant messaging, mobile access and web services. It assimilates the different technologies that make up the foundation of Web technology. After reading this book, one will be able to grasp the fundamental techniques that power the Web and be able to apply them practically towards building internet applications, in addition to gaining deep insight into the latest research in this relatively new field. Foundations of Web Technology will be useful for a number of years to come since Web technology has matured considerably, and the concepts discussed in this book will continue to be applied universally. Foundations of Web Technology is designed to meet the needs of practitioners and researchers in industry, and as a secondary text for upper undergraduate and graduate students in Computer Science and Engineering. |
From inside the book
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... ARCHITECTURE 184 5 . COMMERCE APPLICATIONS 187 6. OVERVIEW OF E - COMMERCE FRAMEWORKS 188 7. EXAMPLE ARCHITECTURE 196 8 . CONCLUSION 205 FURTHER READING 205 EXERCISES 206 8 Mobile Access 207 1 . INTRODUCTION 208 2 . MOBILE COMMUNICATION ...
... ARCHITECTURE 184 5 . COMMERCE APPLICATIONS 187 6. OVERVIEW OF E - COMMERCE FRAMEWORKS 188 7. EXAMPLE ARCHITECTURE 196 8 . CONCLUSION 205 FURTHER READING 205 EXERCISES 206 8 Mobile Access 207 1 . INTRODUCTION 208 2 . MOBILE COMMUNICATION ...
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... Architecture ... ............... .64 Figure 9. Illustration of a proxy server scenario .................. .... 65 Figure 10. Simple example of encrypted message transmission . .80 Figure 11. Overview of Information Retrieval System ...
... Architecture ... ............... .64 Figure 9. Illustration of a proxy server scenario .................. .... 65 Figure 10. Simple example of encrypted message transmission . .80 Figure 11. Overview of Information Retrieval System ...
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... architecture overview and discussions on Instant Messaging , and Kian - Tat Lin ( Yahoo! Inc. ) for useful comments on Data / Web mining . I have also benefited greatly from useful discussions with many at Yahoo! Inc. which has ...
... architecture overview and discussions on Instant Messaging , and Kian - Tat Lin ( Yahoo! Inc. ) for useful comments on Data / Web mining . I have also benefited greatly from useful discussions with many at Yahoo! Inc. which has ...
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... architecture of different applications on the Web , and how they relate to each other . The techniques are discussed both from a conceptual level as well as a practical level , so that the ideas discussed can be translated to real ...
... architecture of different applications on the Web , and how they relate to each other . The techniques are discussed both from a conceptual level as well as a practical level , so that the ideas discussed can be translated to real ...
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Contents
Introduction | 5 |
CORE TECHNOLOGY | 6 |
ORGANIZATION OF THE BOOK | 8 |
Data Markup | 13 |
INTRODUCTION | 14 |
DATA MARKUP | 15 |
EXTENSIBLE MARKUP LANGUAGE XML | 19 |
EXTENSIBLE STYLE SHEETS | 31 |
CLUSTERING | 159 |
OTHER DATA MINING PROBLEMS | 167 |
CONCLUSION | 174 |
EXERCISES | 175 |
Messaging and Commerce | 179 |
INTRODUCTION | 180 |
ELECTRONIC MAIL PROTOCOLS | 181 |
IM ARCHITECTURE | 186 |
XPATH | 43 |
Networking | 55 |
INTRODUCTION | 56 |
LOCATING ENDPOINTS | 57 |
TRANSMISSION PROTOCOLS | 61 |
CLIENTSERVER | 66 |
HYPER TEXT TRANSFER PROTOCOL HTTP | 73 |
WEB SECURITY | 80 |
PRIVACY | 86 |
FURTHER READING | 87 |
Information Retrieval | 89 |
INTRODUCTION | 90 |
COMPONENTS OF IR SYSTEM | 91 |
TEXT PROCESSING | 92 |
INDEXING AND SEARCH | 98 |
RANKING | 102 |
QUERY OPERATIONS | 106 |
LATENT SEMANTIC INDEXING | 108 |
EVALUATION METRICS | 110 |
EXERCISES | 113 |
APPLICATIONS | 115 |
Web Search and Directory | 117 |
INTRODUCTION | 118 |
VARIATIONS IN SEARCHING | 127 |
RANKING | 130 |
WEB DIRECTORIES | 134 |
CONCLUSION | 137 |
Web Mining | 141 |
INTRODUCTION | 142 |
ASSOCIATION MINING | 143 |
PREDICTIVE MODELLING | 147 |
COMMERCE APPLICATIONS | 189 |
OVERVIEW OF ECOMMERCE FRAMEWORKS | 190 |
EXAMPLE ARCHITECTURE | 198 |
CONCLUSION | 207 |
EXERCISES | 208 |
Mobile Access | 209 |
INTRODUCTION | 210 |
WIRELESS APPLICATION PROTOCOL | 213 |
WIRELESS MARKUP LANGUAGES | 216 |
GENERATING WIRELESS CONTENT | 223 |
SHORT MESSAGING SERVICE | 229 |
EMERGING TRENDS | 232 |
CONCLUSION | 235 |
EXERCISES | 236 |
Web Services | 239 |
INTRODUCTION | 240 |
UDDI | 243 |
SOAP | 244 |
PLATFORMS | 246 |
LIMITATIONS | 250 |
CONCLUSION | 251 |
FURTHER READING | 252 |
Conclusion | 253 |
SYSTEM DESIGN OVERVIEW | 256 |
LIMITATIONS | 258 |
THE FUTURE | 259 |
Appendix | 263 |
273 | |
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Common terms and phrases
algorithm allows analysis approach architecture attribute browser cache chapter classifier cluster collaborative filtering communication component connection crawler crawling data markup data mining data points database defined discussed distributed e-commerce e-mail electronic element embedded Employee Record enables encrypted example Figure function graph header HITS Algorithm important information retrieval input instance integration interface Internet IP address itemsets Latent Semantic Indexing layer linear classifier Markup Language match methods mobile device module Name node packet query expansion relevant search engines sequence Short Messaging SMTP SOAP specified standards stored structure stylesheet Table techniques TF-IDF training data transaction transformation transmission UDDI user's vector Web mining web services wireless markup Wireless Markup Language words World Wide World Wide Web WSDL XML document XML Schema