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  • × year_i:[1990 TO 2000}
  • × theme_ss:"Auszeichnungssprachen"
  1. Patrick, D.A.: XML in der Praxis : Unternehmensübergreifende Vorteile durch Enterprise Content Management (1999) 0.01
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    Abstract
    In dem Maße, in dem Unternehmen ihren Erfolg in einem zunehmend von Konkurrenz geprägten Weltmarkt suchen, ist ds Content Management als Informationslösung interessant geworden. Content Management-Systeme können dabei helfen, die enormen betrieblichen Investitionen in die Information zu verringern. Wie bei jeder neuartigen Technologie bestehen auch hier noch keine klaren Vorstellungen darüber, was ContentnManagement eigentlich ausmacht. In diesem Beitrag werden die Probleme und Technologien im Zusammenhang mit dem Content Management untersucht und der aktuelle Stand in Sachen Content Management beschrieben. Content Management ist mehr als nur eine neue Technologie. Im Kern erlaubt Content Management Unternehmen, Informationen zum aufbau intensiverer Beziehungen entlang der Wertschöpfungskette aufzubauen, wobei Kunden, Vertriebspartner, Zulieferer und Hersteller verbunden werden
    Date
    30. 3.2003 10:50:22
    Source
    nfd Information - Wissenschaft und Praxis. 50(1999) H.1, S.5-12
  2. Michel, T.F.: XML kompakt : Eine praktische Einführung (1999) 0.00
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    Abstract
    XML stellt eine Basistechnologie der Informationsverarbeitung dar. Sie liefert die Regeln zur anwendungs-, system- und medienneutralen Definition von Informationstypen. Der Autor reduziert deshalb XML einschließlich seiner Drivate - XLink und XPointer - nicht auf Internet-Technologien. Vielmehr behandelt er XML als Grundlage für den Austausch, die Verwaltung und die Präsentation von Informationen in Netzwerken und Datenbanken
  3. Eckstein, R.: XML: Kurz und gut (1999) 0.00
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  4. Miller, E.; Schloss. B.; Lassila, O.; Swick, R.R.: Resource Description Framework (RDF) : model and syntax (1997) 0.00
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    Content
    RDF Data Model At the core of RDF is a model for representing named properties and their values. These properties serve both to represent attributes of resources (and in this sense correspond to usual attribute-value-pairs) and to represent relationships between resources. The RDF data model is a syntax-independent way of representing RDF statements. RDF statements that are syntactically very different could mean the same thing. This concept of equivalence in meaning is very important when performing queries, aggregation and a number of other tasks at which RDF is aimed. The equivalence is defined in a clean machine understandable way. Two pieces of RDF are equivalent if and only if their corresponding data model representations are the same. Table of contents 1. Introduction 2. RDF Data Model 3. RDF Grammar 4. Signed RDF 5. Examples 6. Appendix A: Brief Explanation of XML Namespaces