Principles of transaction-oriented database recovery
ACM Computing Surveys (CSUR)
Lecture notes in computer science on Advances in object-oriented database systems
Implementing recoverable requests using queues
SIGMOD '90 Proceedings of the 1990 ACM SIGMOD international conference on Management of data
Lightweight causal and atomic group multicast
ACM Transactions on Computer Systems (TOCS)
Database transaction models for advanced applications
Database transaction models for advanced applications
Oracle's symmetric replication technology and implications for application design
SIGMOD '94 Proceedings of the 1994 ACM SIGMOD international conference on Management of data
Transactional publish/subscribe: the proactive multicast of database changes (abstract)
SIGMOD '98 Proceedings of the 1998 ACM SIGMOD international conference on Management of data
Replication and fault-tolerance in the ISIS system
Proceedings of the tenth ACM symposium on Operating systems principles
Distributed Systems: Concepts and Design
Distributed Systems: Concepts and Design
ICDE '98 Proceedings of the Fourteenth International Conference on Data Engineering
Semantic Networks in a Knowledge Management Portal
KI '01 Proceedings of the Joint German/Austrian Conference on AI: Advances in Artificial Intelligence
Text Mining And Its Applications To Intelligence, Crm And Knowledge Management (Advances in Management Information)
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Requirements for information systems, especially in the banking and finance industry, have drastically changed in the past few years to cope with phenomena like globalization and the growing impact of financial markets. Nowadays flexibility and profitability in this segment of the economy depends on the availability of ready, actual and accurate information at the working place of every single employee. These theses are exemplified by outlining two modern real-life banking applications, each different. Their business value is founded on the rapid dissemination of accurate information in a global, distributed working environment. To succeed technically, they employ a combination of modern database, networking and software engineering concepts. One case study centers on the swift dissemination of structured financial data to hundreds of investment bankers; the other deals with the rapid dissemination of semi-structured and/or unstructured information in a knowledge retrieval context.