1 / 23

Victoria Marshall and Kevin O'Neill, CLRC Rutherford Appleton Laboratory

DataWeb: Three worlds collide A talk given at the Institutional Web Management Workshop, Newcastle, 15-17 September 1998. Victoria Marshall and Kevin O'Neill, CLRC Rutherford Appleton Laboratory. Contents. What is DataWeb? Motivation General requirement #1: Distributed responsibility

Download Presentation

Victoria Marshall and Kevin O'Neill, CLRC Rutherford Appleton Laboratory

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. DataWeb: Three worlds collideA talk given at the Institutional Web Management Workshop, Newcastle, 15-17 September 1998 Victoria Marshall and Kevin O'Neill, CLRC Rutherford Appleton Laboratory

  2. Contents • What is DataWeb? • Motivation • General requirement #1: Distributed responsibility • General requirement #2: Utilise existing databases • General requirement #3: Consistent(ish) look and feel • Problem #1: Distributed responsibility • Problem #2: User interfaces vs databases • Problem #3: Technology • What is ASP? • Disadvantages of ASP • Advantages of ASP • System architecture • Web design concept #1: Activities • Web design concept #2: Expand-in-place metaphor • Web design concept #3: Different views • Internal web design concept number 1: Weblet managers and editors • Internal web design concept number 2: HTML • Internal web design concept number 3: It's the Web :-( • Design of the database • Conclusions • The future

  3. What Is DataWeb? • It's a web • It's a web created from a database • It's a web created from a database on-the-fly • The DCI web is a practical application of it • Launched in April 1997 • First phase of development finished by October 1997 • About to start planning next (Java) phase

  4. Motivation • Old TCS and CISD webs fairly large (>7K pages) • Design largely unchanged since 1994 • Difficult to maintain by hand so badly out of date • Update bottleneck through just one web manager • Something had to be done... but what?

  5. General requirement #1: Distributed responsibility • Empowerment • Give responsibility for pages to group leaders/project managers • (And everybody else too if they so desire) • "I'd be more inclined to do something if I could do it myself" • Doesn't have to all go through one or two fed-up individuals

  6. General requirement #2:Utilise existing databases • No point in yet another copy to get out of synch • Most administrative DBs already have established update mechanisms so make them work for you • Databases reflect up-to-the-minute changes • Re-use of the data works two ways: • 1. More uses for existing data • 2. More uses for the new data

  7. General requirement #2:Consistent(ish) look and feel • Don't want to have to edit all the pages every time the corporate name changes • ... or the corporate colours change • ... or every time the department is restructured (as happens to DCI) • ... or every time a new browser or version of HTML comes out • ... or every time the web manager decides it's time for a revamp • But allow some individuality if required • But cannot be a closed system

  8. Problem #1: Distributed responsibility • Distributed responsibility --> distributed editing • Distributed editing --> variable HTML expertise • Distributed editing --> no central point of control • But management still need to find out what's going on • (Who did it? When? Why?)

  9. Problem #2:User interfaces vs databases • A good DB structure rarely makes an exciting interface ... and vice-versa • Database people say: "The information must be structured in a meaningful way" • User interface people say: "The information is excruciating and inpenetrably structured" • Database people say: "The colour is immaterial" • User interface people say: "Of *course* the shade of pink matters!" • Need a middle ground - a solid DB, an attractive presentation, and tailored queries in the middle

  10. Problem #3:Technology • Is this feasible? Is it going to be too slow? • Java? cgi-bins? ASP? IDC? Something else? • Management wanted zero budget with zero learning time • ASP happened to come along at just the right time • ASP was a server-side (rather than client-side) solution • ASP + ODBC can access SQL DB for data management

  11. What Is ASP • ASP = Active Server Pages • Part of Microsoft's IIS web server • Enables (VBScript and/or JavaScript) scripting embedded within HTML pages • Example of ASP

  12. Disadvantages of ASP • ASP ties us to Microsoft and NT on the server-side • (But the concepts and DB interface easily translate to, say, Java) • Bad interaction between server and developing code • You're stuck with .asp? in the URLs unless you do something clever...

  13. Advantages of ASP • Cheap and cheerful • No client-side constraints • Very fast to put together (but we're not pretending that this is a real programming language) • Fast execution (for a script) • ODBC links to any data source • Example of ODBC access using ASP

  14. System Architecture • ODBC access to various DBs; Images, PostScript, videos on disk • Copied across at 2am (Buffer Time Zone) • ASP files for data entry NOT copied; nothing goes back inside

  15. Web design concept #1: Activities • Web is architectured in terms of activities (project, CCP, facility etc) • Each activity is a weblet in its own right, with a human-typable URL • Activities organised into broad classes (R&D, Coordination, Facility etc)... Example of the R&D broad class • ... and types within them Example of the Distributed Information sub-class

  16. Web design concept #2: Expand-in-place metaphor • Based on GUIDE (Peter Brown, U. Kent, 1986) Example of an expand-in-place activity • Hyper-(semi)structured text - not the usual 'anarchic' web presentation (more memorable?) • Discourages 'everything linked to everything else' spaghetti • Reader's context is maintained (and no massed ranks of meaningless icons to do it!) • Imposes some linearity on the text

  17. Web design concept #3: Different views • One big HTML page for printing Example • Searching on acronyms, titles, keywords, section headings, body text etc Example search page • By associated people (on person pages) Example person page • Publications by associated activity Example activity publications page • (Note the REFER format just for fun!)

  18. Internal web design concept number 1: Weblet managers and editors • Each activity has a Weblet Manager and Weblet Editor (possibly the same person) • Weblet Manager is the contact person; responsible for the page content • Can choose to delegate the actual editing task to... • Weblet Editor who is part of that activity/group • Group/Team has responsibility for their own pages • They agree changes, new wording etc off-line then Weblet Editor makes them

  19. Internal web design concept number 2: HTML • Proforma approach to inputting text • Web Manager's job to determine departmental and/or corporate L&F (the entire web can be revamped in a matter of minutes) • Authors are freed from having to know the overall presentation policy of the pages • For very simply structured text, no HTML knowledge is required • Better if you know at least <P> • Some limitations imposed by SQL on text size (16K characters)

  20. Internal web design concept number 3: It's the Web :-( • Web browsers were never really designed for input • Forms interface is not a good GUI; Java might help a bit • Major headaches were the Back/Reload buttons • Subtle differences between browsers affect the presentation and input

  21. Design of the database • This was Kevin's job (thank goodness!) • He says "The biggest problem was understanding the interface designer" • Tension between optimising the DB for reporting and updates via the interface

  22. Conclusions • DataWeb is a cutting-edge concept as well as an application • The result is pretty good, and has been in use within the department for over a year • 19 groups on-line, 89 activities, >1000 publications, 270 partners • People don't always realise it's a database! Could you just... Our group is called 'XYZ' but we prefer to be known as 'PQR'; could you change it on our web pages, please? In my photo my hair is too blond; could you make it a bit more brunette, please? • The project has highlighted inconsistencies between personnel's/everybody else's view(s) of the world! • ASP is cheap and cheerful; useful for smallish things

  23. The future • Implementation in Java • Dynamic, virtual weblets • Registration of interest • That was the corporate pitch... Any questions so far? The horror stories

More Related