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Tuesday, September 28, 2010

DBMS

DBMS

ABSTRACT:


The development pace of computing appears to accelerate year on year. DBMS have been maturing slowly over the last twenty years and have reached a high level of reliability. The database that is proffered with your library application is important. It is important that it works well (reliably, efficiently and flexibly), can respond to the up-coming changes in the computer and information handling world and is commercially viable.

So when looking at a library system consider the advantages and disadvantages of the various types of DBMS that underlie the system and assess whether your needs are likely to limited by the technologies offered. If you need lower hardware and administration costs then the greater efficiency of Nested Relational DBMS could be useful. If you need in-depth retrieval based on the text of the documents rather than assigned terms then look for a product with a free form DBMS or text retrieval engine
incorporated.

Although database management system (DBMS) technology is very mature, there is a potential for much future innovation in integrating structured and unstructured data, virtualizing access to data, and simplifying data management through greater automation and intelligence.

• DBMS is used to maintain query large datasets.
• Benefits include recovery from system crashes, concurrent access, quick application development, data integrity and security.
• Levels of abstraction give data independence.
• A DBMS typically has a layered architecture.
• DBMS is one of the broadest, most exciting areas in CS.

The future will call for efficient handling of objects and sophisticated Web serving. Simple Web serving is a feature of most systems like DBMS and should not pose problems. Object storage will be interesting to watch, especially as the demand ramps up for libraries to store and deliver more and more images, digitized texts, and video etc.


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