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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

On-line multimedia management system

Jiang, Yibin 01 January 2007 (has links)
Online Multimedia Management System (OMMS) is a project to provide users to store and share their mutimedia files. The users and administrator can modify and update the multimedia files and database information from a normal web browser. The administrator and users with access have different levels of permission.
2

Ebay learning center system

Chen, Jessica 01 January 2007 (has links)
The project developed eBay Learning Center System (ELCS), a web-based application that provides current and potential eBay users a way to learn about the many functions of the popular online auction and shopping web site and be successful eBay traders. ELCS provides end users with online tutorials, available both in multimedia and text formats, and methods of communicating with system administrators and other users by means of a message box and a discussion forum to facilitate learning and collaborative problem solving. The system employs current technologies such as SQL, HTML, ASP.NET, VBScript, XML, ODBC, and ADO.
3

Computer science graduate project management system

Huang, Jianyuan 01 January 2007 (has links)
This project is a development and tracking system for graduate students in the Department of Computer Science of CSUSB. This project will cover front-end web site development, back-end database design and security. This website provides secure access to information about ideas for projects, status on on-going projects, and reports of finished projects using My SQL and Apache Tomcat.
4

Development of a functional prototype of an environmental risk assessment parameter database on the World-Wide Web

Potter, Nathan Kent 06 August 1997 (has links)
The goal of the project was to develop a functional prototype of an environmental risk assessment parameter database on the World-Wide Web. The ability to develop a consolidated environmental database has become possible due to the phenomenal growth of the Internet and the World-Wide Web over the past few years. A large number of environmental resources do currently exist; however, with the large volume of information available, access, management, reliability, and retrievability have become increasingly difficult. To illustrate the prototype database, a practical environmental concern and the tools necessary to evaluate and characterize that concern were needed. Uranium (�������U) daughters leaching from abandoned mill tailing piles at three abandoned uranium mines in southwestern Colorado were chosen to demonstrate the database concept. The RESRAD environmental pathway modeling code served as the evaluation and characterization tool. Due to the size and complexity of RESRAD, a single radionuclide release rate equation was isolated as a controllable component of the code. The equation was a small part of the water pathway factor and examined the rate at which radionuclides absorbed in soil were leached by infiltrating water. This serves as the source term for groundwater contamination and directly applies to the �������U progeny leaching from mill tailing piles scenario. Parameters selected from the equation dealt with the background data that directly influenced the mobility of contaminates in the environment. Environmental data for the three Colorado sites were gathered and interpreted. Probability Density Functions (PDFs) were developed for input parameters and the results were then incorporated into the web site. / Graduation date: 1998
5

Web-based interactive self-evaluation system for computer science in generic tutorial system for the sciences project

Praritsantik, Supachai 01 January 2002 (has links)
The goal of this master project is to promote and facilitate the use of new web-based and Java-based technologies in the development of self-evaluation systems for computer science; in particular, analysis of sorting algorithms.
6

Website developer: Web application

Tummeti, Venkata Krishna Reddy 01 January 2003 (has links)
The purpose of the project is to use Java Server Page (JSP) technology to create a web application that could be used by any person who has the basic knowledge of browsing through the Web. There are many programs on the market that aid users in creating web pages, but the process involved in creating web pages using the available software and hosting their website is fairly complex for general people.
7

An evaluation of computer-supported backtracking in a hierarchical database

Vargo, Cortney G. 12 March 2009 (has links)
A common concern for people using computer databases is becoming "lost" within the complex hierarchy of entries. Most direct manipulation interface design guidelines suggest designers should include a feature for “undoing” user inputs (Smith and Mosier, 1986). In the case of a database, undo translates to backtracking support. The first purpose of this research was to confirm that computer-supported backtracking tools reduce navigation time over manual backtracking. The second purpose was to compare navigation times among a subset of backtracking tools. The third purpose was to determine if users prefer to use one or more backtracking tools significantly more than others. Four backtracking tools were developed by crossing two factors: History (history list vs no history list) and Level (component vs entry). History list indicates the user may view a chronological listing of nodes that have been viewed and directly select a destination node. No history list means the user must backtrack through each visited node with no shortcuts. Component indicates the backtracking tools operate only at the lowest level, or smallest definable node, of the tree-like database structure. Entry means that backtracking occurs at the higher parent node. Thus, multiple components make up an entry . In addition to the four computer backtracking tools, overall navigating and manual backtracking was done using a hierarchical Table of Contents. The tools were evaluated in an experimental, hierarchical, direct-manipulation database. Trials were conducted in the form of a multiple-choice information retrieval task. The independent variables included the backtracking tool (four-computer supported, one-manual) and the backtrack Task Length. The dependent measures included navigation time, the frequency with which the computer tool was used over manual backtracking (Table of Contents), and questionnaire responses. The results of this study provided some of the first solid support for the many guidelines that have been written recommending user recovery, or undo support. Backtracking with any of the four computer-supported tools resulted in a significantly smaller navigation time than manual backtracking using the Table of Contents. Subjects using either of the entry tools had consistent backtracking times across trials regardless of backtrack task length. When provided with a history list, subjects in the entry condition had significantly smaller navigation times than subjects in the component condition. Users did not show any differences between computer tools in rated efficiency, ease of use, or objective preference measures. / Master of Science

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