2010
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-642-16934-2_22
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Coordinating Services for Accessing and Processing Data in Dynamic Environments

Abstract: International audienceThis paper presents an approach and an associated system named Hypatia for accessing and processing data by coordinating services in dynamic environments. A dynamic environment consists of applications, servers and devices that can be static and nomad, and that produce or consume data on demand (e.g., online applications, Web-hosted DBMS) or continuously (messaging systems, mobile services). In such an environment, data are hidden behind services that export application programming interf… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…6) HYPATIA [29,28] HYPATIA is a system for answering hybrid queries through accessing and processing data by coordinating both data services and computation services in dynamic environments. The notion of hybrid queries has been introduced in [29] to involve mobile and continuous queries and to be evaluated on the top of on demand or streaming static or nomad data services. Queries in HYPATIA are entered via a GUI and specified in a query language similar to CQL.…”
Section: ) Angie [66]mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…6) HYPATIA [29,28] HYPATIA is a system for answering hybrid queries through accessing and processing data by coordinating both data services and computation services in dynamic environments. The notion of hybrid queries has been introduced in [29] to involve mobile and continuous queries and to be evaluated on the top of on demand or streaming static or nomad data services. Queries in HYPATIA are entered via a GUI and specified in a query language similar to CQL.…”
Section: ) Angie [66]mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Last but not least, the architecture has been thought as open as possible (see Fig. 1) to offer a platform to evaluate other systems, from classical DBMSs with ad-hoc programming to research prototypes (e.g., [2,5]). Nowadays, more and more quality norms are specified in industrial tasks, in order to ensure a secure management of these tasks and avoid risks of failure.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%