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Hermes: a notification service for digital libraries

Abstract
The high publication rate of scholarly material makes searching and browsing an inconvenient way to keep oneself up-to-date. Instead of being the active part in information access, researchers want to be notified whenever a new paper in one's research area is published. While more and more publishing houses or portal sites offer notification services this approach has several disadvantages. We introduce the Hermes alerting service, a service that integrates a variety of different information providers making their heterogeneity transparent for the users. Hermes offers sophisticated filtering capabilities preventing the user from drowning in a flood of irrelevant information. From the user's point of view it integrates the providers into a single source. Its simple provider interface makes it easy for publishers to join the service and thus reaching the potential readers directly. This paper presents the architecture of the Hermes service and discusses the issues of heterogeneity of information sources. Furthermore, we discuss the benefits and disadvantages of message-oriented middleware for implementing such a service for digital libraries.
Type
Conference Contribution
Type of thesis
Series
Citation
Faensen, S., Faultstich, L., Schweppe, H., Hinze, A. & Steidinger, A. (2001). Hermes: a notification service for digital libraries. In Proceedings of the 1st ACM/IEEE-CS joint conference on Digital libraries, Roanoke, Virginia, United States, 2001(pp. 373-380). New York: ACM.
Date
2001
Publisher
ACM, New York.
Degree
Supervisors
Rights