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wiseCIO: Web-Based Intelligent Services Engaging Cloud Intelligence Outlet

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Intelligent Computing (SAI 2020)

Part of the book series: Advances in Intelligent Systems and Computing ((AISC,volume 1228))

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Abstract

A web service usually serves web documents (HTML, JSON, XML, Images) in interactive (request) and responsive (reply) ways for specific domain problem solving over the web (WWW, Internet, HTTP). However, as more and more websites are shifted onto the cloud computing environment, customers tend to lose interest in “dry”, but in favor of “live” informative content. Furthermore, customers may pursue anything from the Cloud that is disclosed as intelligence for business, education, or entertainment (iBEE) for the sake of decision-making. WiseCIO was created to provide web-based intelligent services (WISE) via human-centered computing technology throughout computational thinking. As part of the intelligent service, a timely born “iBee” runs on individual devices as a Just-in-time Agent System (JAS, an imaginary “intelligent bee” helping with iBEE) to access, assemble and synthesize in order to propagate iBEE over the big database. Imaginatively, tens of thousands of concurrent and distributed “iBee” of JAS run on devices with universal interface (UnI), user-centered (UcX) experience via ubiquitous web-intensive sections (UwS). This is how wiseCIO works as a wise CIO: it involves Cloud computing over multidimensional databases, Intelligence synthesized via context-aware pervasive service, and Outlet that enables sentimental presentation out of information analytical synthesis. In particular, wiseCIO eliminates organizational and experiential issues that may be seen with traditional websites across a variety of devices. As a result, wiseCIO has achieved UnI without being programmed in HTML/CSS, UcX of not driving users like “a chasing after webpages” (a saying borrowed from Ecclesiastes 1:14), and UwS of analytical synthesis via failover and load-balancing in a feasible, automated, scalable, and testable (FAST) approach toward novel networking operations via logical organization of web content and relational information groupings that are vital steps in the ability of an archivist or librarian to recommend and retrieve information for a researcher. More important, wiseCIO also plays a key role as a delivery system and platform in web content management and web-based learning with capacity of hosting 10,000+ traditional webpages with great ease.

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Notes

  1. 1.

    FAST stands for a computational solution that is feasible, automated, scalable and testable, throughout continuous integration and continuous delivery, and more specifically, test-driven and agile development via pattern recognition for machine learning.

  2. 2.

    DdB shards, different from fragments, but in favor of distributed storage and analytical synthesis, where were first introduced for the course “Advanced Database Applications” at Oklahoma Christian University in support of the retail distribution and product management. The DdB with shards were deepened with the initiated course “Software Engineering for UI & UX” offered at Miami University in order for a hands-on project to promote user-centred experience by turning seven colleges into revised user interface design via rapid assembly and analytical synthesis.

  3. 3.

    An “IKEA furniture box” is more about user interface in very brief ways than about the real furniture itself. That is to say, a WiSec is like a brief box in transmission, and assembled on the user’s device to fulfill furniture function as a whole.

  4. 4.

    An HTML tag is commonly defined as a set of characters constituting a formatted command for a Web page, while the “advanced & extensible TAG” defined as an intelligent unit of well-recognized patterns.

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Liang, S., Lebby, K., McCarthy, P. (2020). wiseCIO: Web-Based Intelligent Services Engaging Cloud Intelligence Outlet. In: Arai, K., Kapoor, S., Bhatia, R. (eds) Intelligent Computing. SAI 2020. Advances in Intelligent Systems and Computing, vol 1228. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-52249-0_12

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