Conceptual Content Management for Enterprise Web Services

Author(s):  
Sebastian Bossung ◽  
Hans-Werner Sehring ◽  
Joachim W. Schmidt
2020 ◽  
Vol 77 ◽  
pp. 03009
Author(s):  
Wolfgang Ziegler

We address and develop a new concept for the dynamic delivery of topic-based content created within the domain of technical communication. Corresponding content management environments introduced within the last decades, focused so far on semantically structured and mostly XML-based information models and, more recently, on semantic metadata using taxonomies leading together to concepts of so-called intelligent content. Latest developments attempt to extend these concepts with additional explicit semantic approaches modelled and implemented, for example, by using ontologies and related technologies. In this article, we propose how content users might benefit from these semantic concepts by the delivery of sets of logically connected topics, which can be described as microdocuments (“microDocs”). This generic approach of topic assemblies might also play a role in the provisioning of content by web-services being integrated into different types of content processing and content delivery applications.


Author(s):  
Mary Barkworth ◽  
Benjamin Brandt ◽  
Curtis Dyreson ◽  
Neil Cobb ◽  
Will Pearse

Symbiota, the most used biodiversity content management system in the United States, has helped mobilize over 35 million specimen records from over 750 natural history collections via 40+ separate installations. Most Symbiota records come from natural history collections but some Symbiota instances also incorporate records from observations, images, publications, and gardens. Symbiota serves as both a data management system for entering, annotating, and cleaning occurrence data, images and associated specimen data (e.g., genetic sequences, images, publications) and as a primary aggregator/publisher for data stored in any database system that can export to a comma separated value (csv) file. Symbiota integrates and displays data and images from many resources in multiple formats, some of which appeal primarily to researchers, others to land managers, educators, and the general public. After nearly 20 years, Symbiota is going through a major software revision through Symbiota2, a US National Science Foundation-funded project. The broad goals of Symbiota2 are to make it easier for developers to add new functionality, to improve usability, and to help site managers administer a site. Symbiota2 will have a plugin-based architecture that will allow developers to encapsulate functionality in a plugin. Symbiota2 will improve usability by supporting off-line use, enabling Wordpress (content-managment system) integration, and having a customizable user interface. Symbiota2 will help site managers by simplifying installation and management of a site. The three-year project is on-going, but so far we have created a Symbiota2 GithHub repository and a Docker image with all the necessary components for installing, configuring, and running Symbiota2, an object relational mapping (ORM) of the tables in the database management system (DBMS), and web services to connect to the DBMS via the ORM. We used Doctrine 2 for the ORM and API-Platform for the web services. By the third quarter of 2019, we anticipate deploying the plugin framework to encourage developers to create new functionality for biodiversity content management.


Author(s):  
Anne Lämmer ◽  
Sandy Eggert ◽  
Norbert Gronau

Enterprise systems are being transferred into a service-oriented architecture. In this article we present a procedure for the integration of enterprise systems. The procedure model starts with decomposition into Web services. This is followed by mapping redundant functions and assigning of the original source code to the Web services, which are orchestrated in the final step. Finally an example is given how to integrate an Enterprise Resource Planning System and an Enterprise Content Management System using the proposed procedure model.


2011 ◽  
pp. 946-957
Author(s):  
Anne Lammer ◽  
Sandy Eggert ◽  
Norbert Gronau

Enterprise systems are being transferred into a service-oriented architecture. In this article we present a procedure for the integration of enterprise systems. The procedure model starts with decomposition into Web services. This is followed by mapping redundant functions and assigning of the original source code to the Web services, which are orchestrated in the final step. Finally an example is given how to integrate an Enterprise Resource Planning System and an Enterprise Content Management System using the proposed procedure model.


2011 ◽  
pp. 1265-1278
Author(s):  
Anne Lämmer ◽  
Sandy Eggert ◽  
Norbert Gronau

This chapter presents a procedure for the integration of enterprise systems. Therefore enterprise systems are being transferred into a service oriented architecture. The procedure model starts with decomposition into Web services. This is followed by mapping redundant functions and assigning of the original source code to the Web services, which are orchestrated in the final step. Finally, an example is given how to integrate an Enterprise Resource Planning System with an Enterprise Content Management System using the proposed procedure model.


Author(s):  
Anne Lammer ◽  
Sandy Eggert ◽  
Norbert Gronau

Enterprise systems are being transferred into a service-oriented architecture. In this article we present a procedure for the integration of enterprise systems. The procedure model starts with decomposition into Web services. This is followed by mapping redundant functions and assigning of the original source code to the Web services, which are orchestrated in the final step. Finally an example is given how to integrate an Enterprise Resource Planning System and an Enterprise Content Management System using the proposed procedure model.


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