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Light Hypermedia Link Services: A Study of Third Party Application Integration

Light Hypermedia Link Services: A Study of Third Party Application Integration
Light Hypermedia Link Services: A Study of Third Party Application Integration
Recently there has been a tendency for the research community to move away from closed hypermedia systems, towards open hypermedia link services which allow third parties to produce applications so that they are hypertext-enabled. This paper explores the frontiers of this trend by examining the minimum responsibility of an application to co-operate with the underlying link service, and, in the limiting case where the application has not been enabled in any way, it explores the properties and qualities of hypermedia systems that can be produced. A tool, the Universal Viewer, which allows the Microcosm Hypermedia System to co-operate with applications which have not been enabled is introduced and a case study is presented which demonstrates the functionality that may be achieved using entirely third party applications, most of which have not been enabled.
Davis, Hugh C.
1608a3c8-0920-4a0c-82b3-ee29a52e7c1b
Knight, S.
fa13a178-5c19-4fd8-986b-cfdff939aa37
Hall, Wendy
11f7f8db-854c-4481-b1ae-721a51d8790c
Davis, Hugh C.
1608a3c8-0920-4a0c-82b3-ee29a52e7c1b
Knight, S.
fa13a178-5c19-4fd8-986b-cfdff939aa37
Hall, Wendy
11f7f8db-854c-4481-b1ae-721a51d8790c

Davis, Hugh C., Knight, S. and Hall, Wendy (1994) Light Hypermedia Link Services: A Study of Third Party Application Integration. In Proceedings of the 1994 European Conference on Hypermedia Technology, Edinburgh..

Record type: Conference or Workshop Item (Other)

Abstract

Recently there has been a tendency for the research community to move away from closed hypermedia systems, towards open hypermedia link services which allow third parties to produce applications so that they are hypertext-enabled. This paper explores the frontiers of this trend by examining the minimum responsibility of an application to co-operate with the underlying link service, and, in the limiting case where the application has not been enabled in any way, it explores the properties and qualities of hypermedia systems that can be produced. A tool, the Universal Viewer, which allows the Microcosm Hypermedia System to co-operate with applications which have not been enabled is introduced and a case study is presented which demonstrates the functionality that may be achieved using entirely third party applications, most of which have not been enabled.

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Published date: September 1994
Venue - Dates: In Proceedings of the 1994 European Conference on Hypermedia Technology, Edinburgh., 1994-09-01
Organisations: Web & Internet Science

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 250723
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/250723
PURE UUID: 1da721be-c26b-4ff6-8c81-e89054b4b6b0
ORCID for Hugh C. Davis: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1182-1459
ORCID for Wendy Hall: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4327-7811

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 26 Oct 1999
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 02:36

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Contributors

Author: Hugh C. Davis ORCID iD
Author: S. Knight
Author: Wendy Hall ORCID iD

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