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  • × theme_ss:"Internet"
  1. Simonitsch, P.: Kontrolle ist besser - aber für wen? : In Genf wurde der Weltinformationsgipfel eröffnet - China gibt Widerstand gegen Pressefreiheit auf (2003) 0.00
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    Source
    Frankfurter Rundschau. Nr.289 vom 11.12.2003, S.22
  2. Wolff, V.: Job für Kreative : "Eierlegende Wollmilchsäue": Entwickler von Internet-Seiten müssen Surfer fesseln können (2004) 0.00
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    Date
    3. 5.1997 8:44:22
  3. Wiethoff, T.: Web Anno Tobak : Ärgerlich: Viele Webseiten enthalten veraltete und damit irreführende Informationen (2004) 0.00
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    Date
    3. 5.1997 8:44:22
  4. Müller, T.: Wort-Schnüffler : Kochrezepte kostenlos: in den USA erlaubt Amazon online das Recherchieren in Büchern (2004) 0.00
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    Date
    3. 5.1997 8:44:22
  5. Krings, N.: Blick in Nachbars Garten : Google Earth - Faszinierende Satelliten-Bilder von allen Teilen der Erde (2006) 0.00
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    Date
    3. 5.1997 8:44:22
  6. Kerkmann, C.: Nicht das wahre Leben : Nach dem großen Rummel um das virtuelle "Second Life" (2008) 0.00
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    Date
    3. 5.1997 8:44:22
  7. Beuth, P.; Funk, V.: ¬Ein Artikel, der nie fertig wird : Der Einfluss von Twitter auf den Journalismus hat sich gewandelt - und soll es wieder tun (2009) 0.00
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    Date
    3. 5.1997 8:44:22
  8. Jendro, O.: Goethe im Netz : Kostenlose eBooks: viele Klassiker werden online zum Download bereitgestellt (2003) 0.00
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    Date
    3. 5.1997 8:44:22
  9. cis: Nationalbibliothek will das deutsche Internet kopieren (2008) 0.00
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    Date
    24.10.2008 14:19:22
  10. Allhoff, M.: Pfadfinder im Datendschungel : Einmal umgekehrt: Menschen ersetzen (Such-) Maschinen (2001) 0.00
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    Abstract
    Würden Sie das bitte buchstabieren? Jacqueline Dietz von der Internet-Auskunft Talking.net ist einen Moment lang irritiert. "S-a-h-r-a-o-u-i?" fragt sie nach. Zugegeben, die Frage war ein wenig exotisch. Der Anrufer sucht Nachrichten über einen Nomadenstamm der westlichen Sahara. Doch schon kommt die Antwort im Cyberslang. "Schauen Sie doch mal unter http://www.der-ueberblick.de/archiv/199904/199904.067/content.html nach." Tatsächlich findet sich gleich unter der ersten Empfehlung ein aktuelles Interview mit dem deutschen Vertreter der Polisario zum Freiheitskampf der Sahraoui in Marokko. Und die freundliche Stimme am anderen Ende der Leitung kann dem Anrufer noch drei weitere Internet-Seiten vermitteln. Jacqueline Dietz ist von Beruf "Netguide". Früher half das Fräulein vom Amt mit Telefonnummern weiter. Heute nimmt der Internet-Berater dem Nutzer einen Teil seiner Recherche ab. Der Beruf ist so neu wie das Unternehmen, bei dem Dietz arbeitet. Talking.Net heißt der Informationsdienst, der mehr kann als herkömmliche Suchdienste oder klassische Telefonauskünfte. "Wir sind die erste Alles-Auskunft, die das Ziel hat, das Internet auch für Menschen ohne Computer nutzbar zu machen", sagt Pressesprecher Tilman Kube, "oder eben für Leute, die das langwierige eigene Suchen im Netz scheuen." - Virtuelle Privatsekretäre - Das Angebot von Talking.net umfasst jede Art von Auskunft, von Telefonnummein und Wettervorhersagen über Zugverbindungen bis hin zu der persönlichen Hilfe bei der Navigation durch das Internet.
  11. Graupp, A.: InetBib 2006 : Beim Web 2.0 besteht erheblicher Nachholbedarf (2006) 0.00
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    Abstract
    In Münster fand vom 6. bis zum 8. September zum 9. Mal die InetBib-Tagung statt, die sich inzwischen im deutschsprachigen Raum zur größten Veranstaltung dieser Art entwickelt hat. I n acht Vortragsblöcken und drei Workshops referierten und diskutierten mehr als 300 Fachleute aus dem In- und Ausland über aktuelle Themen des Internet, über Informationsmanagement, eScience und elektronische Publikationen.
  12. XML data management : native XML and XML-enabled database systems (2003) 0.00
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    Footnote
    Relational database Management systems have been one of the great success stories of recent times and sensitive to the market, Most major vendors have responded by extending their products to handle XML data while still exploiting the range of facilities that a modern RDBMS affords. No book of this type would be complete without consideration of the "big these" (Oracle 9i, DB2, and SQL Server 2000 which each get a dedicated chapter) and though occasionally overtly piece-meal and descriptive the authors all note the shortcomings as well as the strengths of the respective systems. This part of the book is somewhat dichotomous, these chapters being followed by two that propose detailed solutions to somewhat theoretical problems, a generic architecture for storing XML in a RDBMS and using an object-relational approach to building an XML repository. The biography of the author of the latter (Paul Brown) contains the curious but strangely reassuring admission that "he remains puzzled by XML." The first five components are in-depth case studies of XMLdatabase applications. Necessarily diverse, few will be interested in all the topics presented but I was particularly interested in the first case study an bioinformatics. One of the twentieth century's greatest scientific undertakings was the Human Genome Project, the quest to list the information encoded by the sequence of DNA that makes up our genes and which has been referred to as "a paradigm for information Management in the life sciences" (Pearson & Soll, 1991). After a brief introduction to molecular biology to give the background to the information management problems, the authors turn to the use of XML in bioinformatics. Some of the data are hierarchical (e.g., the Linnaean classification of a human as a primate, primates as mammals, mammals are all vertebrates, etc.) but others are far more difficult to model. The Human Genome Project is virtually complete as far as the data acquisition phase is concerned and the immense volume of genome sequence data is no longer a very significant information Management issue per se. However bioinformaticians now need to interpret this information. Some data are relatively straightforward, e.g., the positioning of genes and sequence elements (e.g., promoters) within the sequences, but there is often little or no knowledge available an the direct and indirect interactions between them. There are vast numbers of such interrelationships; many complex data types and novel ones are constantly emerging, necessitating an extensible approach and the ability to manage semi-structured data. In the past, object databases such as AceDB (Durbin & Mieg, 1991) have gone some way to Meeting these aims but it is the combination of XML and databases that more completely addresses knowledge Management requirements of bioinformatics. XML is being enthusiastically adopted with a plethora of XML markup standards being developed, as authors Direen and Jones note "The unprecedented degree and flexibility of XML in terms of its ability to capture information is what makes it ideal for knowledge Management and for use in bioinformatics."
    After several detailed examples of XML, Direen and Jones discuss sequence comparisons. The ability to create scored comparisons by such techniques as sequence alignment is fundamental to bioinformatics. For example, the function of a gene product may be inferred from similarity with a gene of known function but originating from a different organism and any information modeling method must facilitate such comparisons. One such comparison tool, BLAST utilizes a heuristic method has become the tool of choice for many years and is integrated into the NeoCore XMS (XML Management System) described herein. Any set of sequences that can be identified using an XPath query may thus become the targets of an embedded search. Again examples are given, though a BLASTp (protein) search is labeled as being BLASTn (nucleotide sequence) in one of them. Some variants of BLAST are computationally intensive, e.g., tBLASTx where a nucleotide sequence is dynamically translated in all six reading frames and compared against similarly translated database sequences. Though these variants are implemented in NeoCore XMS, it would be interesting to see runtimes for such comparisons. Obviously the utility of this and the other four quite specific examples will depend an your interest in the application area but two that are more research-oriented and general follow them. These chapters (on using XML with inductive databases and an XML warehouses) are both readable critical reviews of their respective subject areas. For those involved in the implementation of performance-critical applications an examination of benchmark results is mandatory, however very few would examine the benchmark tests themselves. The picture that emerges from this section is that no single set is comprehensive and that some functionalities are not addressed by any available benchmark. As always, there is no Substitute for an intimate knowledge of your data and how it is used. In a direct comparison of an XML-enabled and a native XML database system (unfortunately neither is named), the authors conclude that though the native system has the edge in handling large documents this comes at the expense of increasing index and data file size. The need to use legacy data and software will certainly favor the all-pervasive XML-enabled RDBMS such as Oracle 9i and IBM's DB2. Of more general utility is the chapter by Schmauch and Fellhauer comparing the approaches used by database systems for the storing of XML documents. Many of the limitations of current XML-handling systems may be traced to problems caused by the semi-structured nature of the documents and while the authors have no panacea, the chapter forms a useful discussion of the issues and even raises the ugly prospect that a return to the drawing board may be unavoidable. The book concludes with an appraisal of the current status of XML by the editors that perhaps focuses a little too little an the database side but overall I believe this book to be very useful indeed. Some of the indexing is a little idiosyncratic, for example some tags used in the examples are indexed (perhaps a separate examples index would be better) and Ron Bourret's excellent web site might be better placed under "Bourret" rather than under "Ron" but this doesn't really detract from the book's qualities. The broad spectrum and careful balance of theory and practice is a combination that both database and XML professionals will find valuable."
  13. Opaschowski, H.W.: ¬Die digitale Revolution fällt aus (2001) 0.00
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    Content
    "Für Optimisten wie den amerikanischen Computerwissenschaftler Nicholas Negroponte bricht das kommende Digitalzeitalter wie eine Naturgewalt über uns herein. Als Zukunftsforscher kann ich jedoch nicht in den Tenor der üblichen kühnen Prophezeiungen der Medienbranche einstimmen. In Deutschland und den USA wird zwar viel über E-Commerce spekuliert. In Wirklichkeit nutzen aber die privaten Verbraucher dort Shopping, Reisebuchung und Bücherkauf per PC kaum (je unter 3 %), Hornebanking nur 5 % der Amerikaner und 3 % der Deutschen. Obwohl immer mehr Firmen online gehen, halten die Verbraucher weitgehend an ihren außerhäuslichen Konsumgewohnheiten fest. Bisher bietet das Netz gefühls- und erlebnismäßig einfach zu wenig. Auch 2010 werden über 90 % des privaten Verbrauchs nicht über OnlineGeschäfte getätigt. Selbst wenn sich der E-Commerce-Umsatz der privaten Verbraucher jährlich verdoppeln sollte, werden die Online-Geschäfte in Deutschland auch 2002 keine 3 % des Einzelhandelsumsatzes ausmachen (derzeit: 22 Milliarden Mark Einzelhandelsumsatz zu 2,5 Milliarden aus Online-Geschäften). Die Frage, warum Online-Shopping so wenig Resonanz findet, lässt sich auf folgende Ursachen zurückführen: Erlebniskonsum in den Shopping-Centern ist attraktiver; wachsende Ungeduld bei langem Laden der Website, Unzufriedenheit über verwirrend gestaltete Online-Shops, Enttäuschung über nicht verfügbare Produkte sowie Abbruch der Kaufabsicht, wenn das Shop-System abstürzt. Leider findet die digitale Revolution in Deutschland bisher fast nur auf Unternehmensseite statt, die Fragen nach den Bedürfnissen der Konsumenten bleiben weitgehend unbeantwortet.
  14. Glotz, P.: ¬Das World Wide Web hat alles verändert : Professor Peter Glotz über das Internet, Cybersex und den digitalen Kapitalismus (2003) 0.00
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    Date
    3. 5.1997 8:44:22
  15. Sixtus, M.: Füttern erlaubt : Webseiten versorgen zunehmend "Feedreader" mit Informationen - das erlaubt gezieltes Lesen statt langem Surfen (2003) 0.00
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    Date
    26. 9.2003 12:42:22
  16. Sixtus, M.: ¬Das Gemeinschaftsnetz : Im Wiki-Web können alle Surfer Seiten umschreiben und hinzufügen - so entstehen ganze Enzyklopädien (2003) 0.00
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    Date
    17. 7.1996 9:33:22
  17. Klimes, T.: ¬Der Freunde-Verkäufer : Mark Zuckerberg handelt mit Privatdaten - nun umgarnt ihn die globale Werbewirtschaft (2008) 0.00
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    Source
    Frankfurter Rundschau. Nr.22 vom 26.1.2008, S.48
  18. Beuth, P.: Kurz und fündig : Microsoft setzt jetzt auf Kurzmeldungen (2009) 0.00
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    Date
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  19. Berberich, C.: Wie das Netz zwitschert : Zuerst wollten sich nur Freunde über Twitter austauschen - heute nutzen es Politiker und Firmen (2009) 0.00
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  20. Lischka, K.: Scherzbolde im Whitehouse.net : Die neuen Internet-Adressen wie .info oder.biz brachten nicht die erhoffte Systematik in das Netz (2003) 0.00
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    Date
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