Notification Infrastructure

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Peter Druschel - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • scribe the design of a large scale event Notification Infrastructure
    Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 2001
    Co-Authors: Antony Rowstron, Annemarie Kermarrec, Miguel Castro, Peter Druschel
    Abstract:

    This paper presents Scribe, a large-scale event Notification Infrastructure for topic-based publish-subscribe applications. Scribe supports large numbers of topics, with a potentially large number of subscribers per topic. Scribe is built on top of Pastry, a generic peer-to-peer object location and routing substrate overlayed on the Internet, and leverages Pastry's reliability, self-organization and locality properties. Pastryi s used to create a topic (group) and to build an efficient multicast tree for the dissemination of events to the topic's subscribers (members). Scribe provides weak reliability guarantees, but we outline how an application can extend Scribe to provide stronger ones.

  • Networked Group Communication - SCRIBE: The Design of a Large-Scale Event Notification Infrastructure
    Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 2001
    Co-Authors: Antony Rowstron, Annemarie Kermarrec, Miguel Castro, Peter Druschel
    Abstract:

    This paper presents Scribe, a large-scale event Notification Infrastructure for topic-based publish-subscribe applications. Scribe supports large numbers of topics, with a potentially large number of subscribers per topic. Scribe is built on top of Pastry, a generic peer-to-peer object location and routing substrate overlayed on the Internet, and leverages Pastry's reliability, self-organization and locality properties. Pastryi s used to create a topic (group) and to build an efficient multicast tree for the dissemination of events to the topic's subscribers (members). Scribe provides weak reliability guarantees, but we outline how an application can extend Scribe to provide stronger ones.

Antony Rowstron - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • scribe the design of a large scale event Notification Infrastructure
    Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 2001
    Co-Authors: Antony Rowstron, Annemarie Kermarrec, Miguel Castro, Peter Druschel
    Abstract:

    This paper presents Scribe, a large-scale event Notification Infrastructure for topic-based publish-subscribe applications. Scribe supports large numbers of topics, with a potentially large number of subscribers per topic. Scribe is built on top of Pastry, a generic peer-to-peer object location and routing substrate overlayed on the Internet, and leverages Pastry's reliability, self-organization and locality properties. Pastryi s used to create a topic (group) and to build an efficient multicast tree for the dissemination of events to the topic's subscribers (members). Scribe provides weak reliability guarantees, but we outline how an application can extend Scribe to provide stronger ones.

  • Networked Group Communication - SCRIBE: The Design of a Large-Scale Event Notification Infrastructure
    Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 2001
    Co-Authors: Antony Rowstron, Annemarie Kermarrec, Miguel Castro, Peter Druschel
    Abstract:

    This paper presents Scribe, a large-scale event Notification Infrastructure for topic-based publish-subscribe applications. Scribe supports large numbers of topics, with a potentially large number of subscribers per topic. Scribe is built on top of Pastry, a generic peer-to-peer object location and routing substrate overlayed on the Internet, and leverages Pastry's reliability, self-organization and locality properties. Pastryi s used to create a topic (group) and to build an efficient multicast tree for the dissemination of events to the topic's subscribers (members). Scribe provides weak reliability guarantees, but we outline how an application can extend Scribe to provide stronger ones.

Annemarie Kermarrec - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • scribe the design of a large scale event Notification Infrastructure
    Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 2001
    Co-Authors: Antony Rowstron, Annemarie Kermarrec, Miguel Castro, Peter Druschel
    Abstract:

    This paper presents Scribe, a large-scale event Notification Infrastructure for topic-based publish-subscribe applications. Scribe supports large numbers of topics, with a potentially large number of subscribers per topic. Scribe is built on top of Pastry, a generic peer-to-peer object location and routing substrate overlayed on the Internet, and leverages Pastry's reliability, self-organization and locality properties. Pastryi s used to create a topic (group) and to build an efficient multicast tree for the dissemination of events to the topic's subscribers (members). Scribe provides weak reliability guarantees, but we outline how an application can extend Scribe to provide stronger ones.

  • Networked Group Communication - SCRIBE: The Design of a Large-Scale Event Notification Infrastructure
    Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 2001
    Co-Authors: Antony Rowstron, Annemarie Kermarrec, Miguel Castro, Peter Druschel
    Abstract:

    This paper presents Scribe, a large-scale event Notification Infrastructure for topic-based publish-subscribe applications. Scribe supports large numbers of topics, with a potentially large number of subscribers per topic. Scribe is built on top of Pastry, a generic peer-to-peer object location and routing substrate overlayed on the Internet, and leverages Pastry's reliability, self-organization and locality properties. Pastryi s used to create a topic (group) and to build an efficient multicast tree for the dissemination of events to the topic's subscribers (members). Scribe provides weak reliability guarantees, but we outline how an application can extend Scribe to provide stronger ones.

Miguel Castro - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • scribe the design of a large scale event Notification Infrastructure
    Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 2001
    Co-Authors: Antony Rowstron, Annemarie Kermarrec, Miguel Castro, Peter Druschel
    Abstract:

    This paper presents Scribe, a large-scale event Notification Infrastructure for topic-based publish-subscribe applications. Scribe supports large numbers of topics, with a potentially large number of subscribers per topic. Scribe is built on top of Pastry, a generic peer-to-peer object location and routing substrate overlayed on the Internet, and leverages Pastry's reliability, self-organization and locality properties. Pastryi s used to create a topic (group) and to build an efficient multicast tree for the dissemination of events to the topic's subscribers (members). Scribe provides weak reliability guarantees, but we outline how an application can extend Scribe to provide stronger ones.

  • Networked Group Communication - SCRIBE: The Design of a Large-Scale Event Notification Infrastructure
    Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 2001
    Co-Authors: Antony Rowstron, Annemarie Kermarrec, Miguel Castro, Peter Druschel
    Abstract:

    This paper presents Scribe, a large-scale event Notification Infrastructure for topic-based publish-subscribe applications. Scribe supports large numbers of topics, with a potentially large number of subscribers per topic. Scribe is built on top of Pastry, a generic peer-to-peer object location and routing substrate overlayed on the Internet, and leverages Pastry's reliability, self-organization and locality properties. Pastryi s used to create a topic (group) and to build an efficient multicast tree for the dissemination of events to the topic's subscribers (members). Scribe provides weak reliability guarantees, but we outline how an application can extend Scribe to provide stronger ones.

Wolfgang Prinz - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • Ubiquitous Awareness of Cooperative Activities in a Theatre of Work
    2020
    Co-Authors: Wolfgang Prinz, Tom Gross
    Abstract:

    Awareness of the cooperative activities in a distributed team is essential for successful cooperation between different locations. Different approaches for the provision of this information exist, but most concentrate on the provision of awareness indications at the users desktop. The Theatre of Work collects activity information through a variety of software and hardware-sensors and distributes them through an Internet based event and Notification Infrastructure. The awareness indications are presented in a multi-user 3D environment. Users and their current actions on shared objects while using groupware applications are represented by avatars and their symbolic actions. Avatars of users who work in a similar context appear spatially close in the 3D environment. The integration of the Theatre of Work into the ambience of a work setting through ambient displays and ambient indicators presents an example for the application of pervasive computing to support distributed cooperative activities. It opens new opportunities for spontaneous encounters and spontaneous contacts in distributed teams.

  • Modelling Shared Contexts in Cooperative Environments: Concept, Implementation, and Evaluation
    Computer Supported Cooperative Work (CSCW), 2004
    Co-Authors: Tom Gross, Wolfgang Prinz
    Abstract:

    Users who work together require adequate information about their cooperative environment: about other group members’ presence and activities, about shared artefacts, etc. In the CSCW literature several concepts, prototypes, and systems for providing this group awareness information have been presented. In general, they capture information from the environment, process it, and present it to the users. This paper addresses the processing aspect; in particular, we present a concept for processing awareness information by means of awareness contexts. With this concept we address the problem of contextualising event Notifications enabling the presentation of Notifications in the appropriate user situation. We describe a lightweight model and its integration into an event and Notification Infrastructure. We report on an empirical study, and draw some conclusions for the design of context-awareness for cooperative environments.