On Tue, 21 Apr 2009, Eric Lease Morgan wrote:

On Apr 21, 2009, at 10:40 AM, Mike Taylor wrote:

I, and most of the people I've worked with, have been using the terms
"metasearch", "federated search", "broadcast search" and "distributed
search" synonymously for years.  Have they now settled down into
having distinct meanings?  If anyone could summarise, I'd be grateful.



Yes, to me, the quoted phases above are synonymous.

But I believe we are also seeing a new type of index manifesting itself, and this new index has yet to be named. Specifically, I'm thinking of the index where various types of content is aggregated into a single index and then queried.

[trimmed]

Wouldn't this just a "union catalog"?

Now, you might want to differentiate between what's being joined -- multiple types of content all at one location vs. the same type of content at multiple locations. (or both varying). I don't think any of the terms mentioned really show that distinction, however.

We normally use 'heterogeneous' in the science to refer to more than one type of data object, but it's really superflous in our field, as there are very few forms of federated search where you'd have two repositories of similar data -- maybe for browse objects (movies, pre-rendered images), but those are typically viewed as supplementary metadata, and not the object of primary importance.



-----
Joe Hourcle
Principal Software Engineer
Solar Data Analysis Center
Goddard Space Flight Center

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