Web Information Systems Course
Here is an informative Web
Information Systems Course at
Cornell University.
This Web Information Systems course explains building information
systems on the World Wide Web. These course lecture notes cover markup
languages, web services, protocols, ontology and knowledge modeling
languages, semi-structured data parsing, and manipulation. This Web
Information Systems course also includes readings, critical reviews,
and technical projects that build expertise in tools and mechanisms for
presenting and organizing information.
Web
Information Systems Lecture Notes:
- Lecture
Notes: Course Introduction - Points on a Spectrum
- Lecture
Notes: Coherence and Invisibility: The Library Behind the Curtain
- Lecture
Notes: Internet and Web: History, Politics, Standards
- Lecture
Notes: Architecture of the World Wide Web
- Lecture
Notes: Content: What is stuff
- Lecture
Notes: Identifiers
- Lecture
Notes: Markup Language
- Examples:
Markup Language
- Lecture
Notes: Namespaces and XML Schema
- Examples:
Namespaces and XML Schema
- Lecture
Notes: Manipulating XML (XPath and XSLT)
- Examples:
Manipulating XML (XPath and XSLT)
- Lecture
Notes: XSLT (2)
- Examples:
XSLT (2)
- Lecture
Notes: XSLT 3
- Examples:
XSLT 3
- Lecture
Notes: Syndication and Mashups
- Assignment:
Project 1 Overview
- Examples:
Project 1 Overview
- Lecture
Notes: Web Publishing and Editing (Atom Publication Protocol)
- Lecture
Notes: Semantic Web: Knowledge Representation on the Web
- Lecture
Notes: Semantic Web Basics (RDF)
- Lecture
Notes: RDF Meta Model and RDF Schema
- Lecture
Notes: Description Logics and Web Ontology Language
- Lecture
Notes: Inference and Querying Triple Stores(cont.)
- Examples:
Inference and Querying Triple Stores(cont.)
- Lecture
Notes: Building and Testing Ontologies with Protege and Racer
- Lecture
Notes: Building and Testing Ontologies with Protege and Racer (2)
- Lecture
Notes: Microformats and RDF-A
- Lecture
Notes: Compound Information Objects
- Lecture
Notes: Scholarly Communication, Escholarship,
repositories
- Lecture
Notes: Longevity and Preservation of Digital Information
Popularity: 8% [?]
Related Posts:
Tags for this post>> Web Development





























