Researchers interested in web content and techies interested in methodology may 
find this worth attending --

Kim Sorvig



"Memento" Time Travel for the Web

 

The University Libraries will be presenting another lecture in their e-Research 
series on Wednesday, Feb. 10, 2010 at 3:00 p.m. in the Willard Reading Room in 
Zimmerman Library. "'Memento' Time Travel for the Web" will be presented by Dr. 
Herbert Van de Sompel, Team Leader of the Prototyping Team at the Research 
Library of the Los Alamos National Laboratory.

 

Have you ever felt frustrated by your inability to get to old versions of Web 
pages? Did you bookmark a page last year, and revisit it recently only to find 
that the current content isn't even remotely related to what caught your 
interest back then? Remnants of the past Web are available, and there are many 
efforts ongoing to archive even more Web content even though it is not 
straightforward to get to those old versions. What if you could activate a time 
machine in your browser or bot? At Los Alamos National Laboratory, Dr. Van de 
Sompel along with his team and colleagues from Old Dominion University 
developed the Memento solution to make accessing old Web content as easy as 
accessing current content. The solution is based on existing HTTP capabilities 
applied in a novel way to add a temporal dimension to the Web. The result is a 
framework in which archived resources can seamlessly be reached via the URI of 
their original - protocol-based time travel for the Web. Join us in discovering 
the past via the Web.

 

 



The virtual Herbert Van de Sompel

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