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ICE Interdisciplinary Collaboration Environment

ICE Interdisciplinary Collaboration Environment. Team Members Akram Patrick Maetee Phichet. Introduction. Title Interdisciplinary Collaboration Environment – ICE Description A research project collaboration tool for universities and colleges Need

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ICE Interdisciplinary Collaboration Environment

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  1. ICEInterdisciplinary Collaboration Environment Team Members Akram Patrick Maetee Phichet

  2. Introduction • Title • Interdisciplinary Collaboration Environment – ICE • Description • A research project collaboration tool for universities and colleges • Need • No dedicated solution to the problem exists • Client • MU-ACM and Chris Topinka

  3. Project Background • What is the problem? • University and college research projects are currently maintained in scattered websites, e-mails and departmental newsletters • Very limited awareness of research conducted by other departments • The result is many opportunities are unseen

  4. Project Background – Cont. • What exactly is ICE? • A web-based system • Maintains database of research material and project information • Provides information sharing and collaboration opportunities • Who uses ICE? • Graduate Students working towards master’s degrees or PhDs • Professors working on research • Undergraduates interested in working on projects or with professors

  5. Project Background – Cont. • Are there any solutions currently? • Open source or commercial Content Management Systems (CMS) such as Mambo, Drupal, Plone and Sharepoint • Why not just use a CMS? • CMS’s are very general and need to be configured before they offer any real use • Only a small amount of professors or researchers have the technical expertise to configure such systems • Unless a system is adopted by a large entity such as a University or College, the problem of interdisciplinary collaboration is not solved

  6. Plone plone.org

  7. Drupal drupal.org

  8. Mambo mamboserver.com

  9. Sharepoint microsoft.com/windowsserver2003/technologies/sharepoint/default.mspx

  10. Project Background – Cont. • How will ICE solve the current need? • ICE will be built to specifically address the needs of the research community. • ICE will be easy to deploy and will not require much expertise to configure or use • Potential problems when building the system • Additional requirements or change in requirements might occur during implementation • Some desired requirements could be conflicting • Different departments or colleges might have special requirements for maintaining data

  11. Market Analysis • Cost of Technology • All software technology used in this project is open-source or freely available • ICE can be deployed on any server that supports the software technology used • ACM will be providing several software titles and server space • Could ICE be sold?

  12. Constraints • Technological • ICE will only function on servers. The server must be running the correct versions of MySQL and PHP. • Performance can be affected by quality of server running ICE • Social • ICE is community driven software. Without a community of users, ICE performs only a portion of it’s functions.

  13. Literature Review • Advanced Indexing and Retrieval in Present-day Content Management Systems • Metadata generation upon media acquisition • Advanced editing of Metadata • Splitting media into arbitrarily sized chunks • Multilingual queries through translation engine

  14. Literature Review – Cont. • DynG: Enabling Structured Non-monolithic Electronic Collaboration • Protocol geared toward dynamic groups of collaborators • Defines rules for creating and answering questions, defining groups, performing user actions • Can be implemented through many technologies

  15. Literature Review – Cont. • A Knowledge Sharing and Collaboration System Model based on the Internet • A protocol which would link many unrelated servers together for data sharing from knowledge bases • Capable of converting data into XML so data can be used in a variety of environments • Emphasis on speed and transparency to user

  16. Literature Review – Cont. • Content Mismanagement Systems • Argues that URLs generated by many CMS’s are not human-readable • Makes general argument of inconvenience to users, regarding book-marking, exchanging and following links • Potential harms include hampering of ‘viral-marketing,’ and willingness to follow, preserve links

  17. Literature Review – Cont. • Plone and Content Management • Describes in detail the merits of Plone as a CMS • Designation of content as specific type, attributes • Structured Text editing • Customizable visual component • Extend functionality through plugins • Building ICE with Plone is very feasible

  18. System Components • Technology • MySQL • PHP • Standard Web Technology (HTML, CSS, JavaScript) • Recommended Possibilities • Python • CMS (Plone, Mambo, Drupal)

  19. System Components – Cont. • Users • User • The basic user: Can create and maintain projects, communication, collaboration requests • Admin • All the abilities of the User, control of all configurable options

  20. System Components – Cont. • Components • Project • Stores all relevant information regarding research projects such as title, participants and departmental affiliation • User • Stores all relevant information regarding users such as name, title, additional biographic information, current projects

  21. System Components – Cont. • Components • Collaboration • Stores all relevant information regarding job or assistance postings, such as referring Professor, job description, time frame • External Users • No information is stored regarding external users, but they are allowed to view certain portions of ICE

  22. System Components – Cont. • Components • Hierarchy • Maintains the hierarchy of all the universities, colleges and departments affiliated with a particular installation of ICE • Keyword • Stores and maintains user specified keywords0

  23. System Components – Cont. • Components • User Interface • Allows for use of the ICE system • Communication • Allows for sending and receiving messages to ICE users from within the system, and for leaving comments on projects

  24. System Diagram

  25. System Design • Waterfall, Spiral Model hybrid • Specifications are defined, hence waterfall • Revisions and examination of current implementation will be needed occasionally throughout development, hence spiral

  26. Goals and Objectives • Initial Prototype • Provide a useful tool for MU-ACM and the Computer Science department • Ease of use • Simplicity of system • Easy to deploy and configure • Future • Expand to many colleges and departments within the University of Missouri • Possibly expand to multiple universities

  27. Advantages • Designed for non-technical users so a wide audience can benefit from the system • Provides unified environment for sharing data and collaboration between projects • Increases communication between users • Easily deployable

  28. Disadvantages • Specific application built for specific type of client and environment • Some professors may not want to use the system at all, harming the collaboration element

  29. Questions

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