• DocumentCode
    2267008
  • Title

    What synchronous groupware needs: notification services

  • Author

    Day, Mark

  • Author_Institution
    Lotus Dev. Corp., Cambridge, MA, USA
  • fYear
    1997
  • fDate
    5-6 May 1997
  • Firstpage
    118
  • Lastpage
    122
  • Abstract
    Synchronous groupware is the class of applications in which two or more people collaborate in what they perceive to be real time. Most previous efforts to deploy synchronous groupware have failed. The author argues that: synchronous groupware can often be deployed independently of system support for audio, video, or persistent storage; deployment and maintenance of different synchronous groupware applications becomes more reasonable if those applications can share and reuse a common coordination infrastructure, called a notification service; and the most likely way to achieve such sharing and reuse is by the definition of a common notification service protocol. At Lotus, we have designed and implemented such a protocol, called the Notification Service Transfer Protocol (NSTP). Our implementation, called PlaceHolder, has been available from our Web site since November 1996
  • Keywords
    groupware; protocols; real-time systems; software reusability; supervisory programs; synchronisation; Lotus; NSTP; Notification Service Transfer Protocol; PlaceHolder; common coordination infrastructure; common notification service protocol; notification services; real time computing; synchronous groupware; Collaboration; Collaborative software; Collaborative work; Consumer electronics; Operating systems; Protocols; Telephony; Trademarks; Video sharing; Videoconference;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Operating Systems, 1997., The Sixth Workshop on Hot Topics in
  • Conference_Location
    Cape Cod, MA
  • Print_ISBN
    0-8186-7834-8
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/HOTOS.1997.595193
  • Filename
    595193