|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
The advent of the World Wide Web has changed the perspectives of
groupware systems. The interest and deployment of Internet and
intranet groupware solutions is growing rapidly, not just in
academic circles but also in the commercial arena. The first
generation of Web-based groupware tools has already started to
emerge, and leading groupware vendors are urgently adapting their
products for compatibility and integration with Web technologies.
The focus of Groupware and the World Wide Web is to explore the
potential for Web-based groupware. This book includes an analysis
of the key characteristics of the Web, presenting reasons for its
success, and describes developments of a diverse range of Web-based
groupware systems. An emphasis on the technical obstacles and
challenges is implemented by more analytical discussions and
perspectives, including that of Information Technology managers
looking to deploy groupware solutions within their organizations.
Written by experts from different backgrounds - academic and
commercial, technical and organizational - this book provides a
unique overview of and insight into current issues and future
possibilities concerning extension of the World Wide Web for group
working.
Parsing, the syntactic analysis of language, has been studied
extensively in computer science and computational linguistics.
Computer programs and natural languages share an underlying theory
of formal languages and require efficient parsing algorithms. This
introduction reviews the theory of parsing from a novel
perspective. It provides a formalism to capture the essential
traits of a parser that abstracts from the fine detail and allows a
uniform description and comparison of a variety of parsers,
including Earley, Tomita, LR, Left-Corner, and Head-Corner parsers.
The emphasis is on context-free phrase structure grammar and how
these parsers can be extended to unification formalisms. The book
combines mathematical rigor with high readability and is suitable
as a graduate course text.
The advent of the World Wide Web has changed the perspectives of
groupware systems. The interest and deployment of Internet and
intranet groupware solutions is growing rapidly, not just in
academic circles but also in the commercial arena. The first
generation of Web-based groupware tools has already started to
emerge, and leading groupware vendors are urgently adapting their
products for compatibility and integration with Web technologies.
The focus of Groupware and the World Wide Web is to explore the
potential for Web-based groupware. This book includes an analysis
of the key characteristics of the Web, presenting reasons for its
success, and describes developments of a diverse range of Web-based
groupware systems. An emphasis on the technical obstacles and
challenges is implemented by more analytical discussions and
perspectives, including that of Information Technology managers
looking to deploy groupware solutions within their organizations.
Written by experts from different backgrounds - academic and
commercial, technical and organizational - this book provides a
unique overview of and insight into current issues and future
possibilities concerning extension of the World Wide Web for group
working.
|
|