oldBdeReplay_JanNewmarchHomePage051021.txt -------------------------------------------------------- saturn.cs.uml.edu(353)> echo $RBGB /usr/cs/fac1/lechner/bde2alpha_rl/sandbox/bdeNT050526/bdegen13/bde saturn.cs.uml.edu(354)> lg $RBGB/ImakeCheckout/replayXt/src/ReplayXt.man -rw-r--r-- 1 lechner 04f522 29512 May 8 1995 /usr/cs/fac1/lechner/bde2alpha_rl/sandbox/bdeNT050526/bdegen13/bde/ImakeCheckout/replayXt/src/ReplayXt.man saturn.cs.uml.edu(355)> This path was checked-out of $BDEROOT from CVS and has C McLain's Tcl replay project with this man page: $RBGB/ImakeCheckout/replayXt/src/ReplayXt.man which ends with an author link to Jan Newmarch's Home Page: http://pandonia.canberra.edu.au/ ------------- I am Associate Professor in the School of Network Computing at Monash University I am interested in more aspects of Computing than I have time to pursue, but the major thrust over the last few years has developed from user interfaces under Unix into Java, the Web and now into pervasive systems. I have developed a number of publically available software systems in these areas. -------------------- .; $Id: ReplayXt.man,v 1.2 1995/05/08 21:13:03 cmclain Exp $ .; .TH ReplayXt 1 "18 April 1994" (900 lines) .. .SH Author Jan Newmarch, University of Canberra, PO Box 1, Belconnen, ACT 2616, Australia. Email: jan@ise.canberra.edu.au. URL: http://pandonia.canberra.edu.au/ ----------------------------------------------------------------- http://pandonia.canberra.edu.au/ lookup 051021: Newmarch has a current Web-Blog with Lots of OWL and ontology and WSDL and JINI related comments and annotated bibliography. E.g.: ========================== Tue, 15 Feb 2005 Sites Relevant to Ontologies and Knowledge Sharing See http://ksl-web.stanford.edu/kst/ontology-sources.html In "Compound Types for Java" by Martin Buchi and Wolfgang Weck http://pllab.cs.nthu.edu.tw/cs5403/Papers/JavaBean/buchi98compound.pdf "In object-oriented programming, combining independently emerged frameworks has been described as an open problem [21]." and "The problem described above can be attributed to Java's use of name equivalence of types. Types are compatible only if explicitly declared so. A radical cure would be to use structure equivalence instead, as for instance proposed in [16]. All types that look alike would be considered compatible in this case." ============================= .Mon, 14 Feb 2005 Service matching with types A google search for "service discovery type matching" turned up some more papers ... . ==================== Sun, 06 Feb 2005 Association roles Association roles as defined in UML act as labels, possibly with actions (?). They do not allow attributes. Some don't care, and just allow roles to be modelled as interfaces. Others extend roles to include attributes e.g. "On the Integration of Roles in the UML Technical Report No. 214" University of Paderborn, August 2000 ¨ Ralph Depke, Gregor Engels, Jochen Malte Kuster or "Modeling Roles A practical series of Analysis Patterns" by Francis G. Mossé, at http://www.objectdiscovery.com/papers/Embarcadero/ ================= http://pandonia.canberra.edu.au/cgi-bin/blosxom.cgi Sat, 31 Jul 2004 Mail readers I have been using pine since my sysadmin stopped supporting elm (back in ... 1999). Often it is hard work: it took ages to figure out to to use IMAP (the syntax is obscure!!!) and I still haven't figured out how to have my addressbook both local and on my IMAP server. I have tried some GUI clients like Mozilla and Evolution and these just failed to deal with my mailboxes - I have over 700 of them. Mozilla wanted me to browse to one, Evolution simply crashed trying to load them. Pine handles them really well. But pine is always losing my ADSL connection - which is flakey anyway. My current guess is that Telstra drops the connection frequently and my modem can't pick it up properly when it reconnects. On bad days that can happen several times a night. But pine drops out much more frequently - on bad days, every ten minutes. At work it is fine, I only have this problem at home using ADSL. So I looked for another. mutt is recommended by Linux Journal. This site by Nancy McGough contains lots if pro-pine arguments, though http://ii.best.vwh.net/internet/messaging/pine/#compare