description
| - Abstraction over File System (or Filesystem) and Database Management System (DBMS) that provides
a single access point to data originating from disparate sources. In conventional Filesystem form,
a File Manager oriented interface offers one form of interaction for read-write operations. In similar
form, with regards to DBMS oriented functionality, operations targeting larger amounts of data are feasible,
scalable, and consistent with ACID (Atomicity, Consistency, Isolation, and Durability) transaction semantics
using one or more declarative query languages (e.g., SQL, SPARQL).
- Abstraction over File System (or Filesystem) and Database Management System (DBMS) that provides
a single access point to data originating from disparate sources. In conventional Filesystem form,
a File Manager oriented interface offers one form of interaction for read-write operations. In similar
form, with regards to DBMS oriented functionality, operations targeting larger amounts of data are feasible,
scalable, and consistent with ACID (Atomicity, Consistency, Isolation, and Durability) transaction semantics
using one or more declarative query languages (e.g., SQL, SPARQL).
- Abstraction over File System (or Filesystem) and Database Management System (DBMS) that provides
a single access point to data originating from disparate sources. In conventional Filesystem form,
a File Manager oriented interface offers one form of interaction for read-write operations. In similar
form, with regards to DBMS oriented functionality, operations targeting larger amounts of data are feasible,
scalable, and consistent with ACID (Atomicity, Consistency, Isolation, and Durability) transaction semantics
using one or more declarative query languages (e.g., SQL, SPARQL).
- Abstraction over File System (or Filesystem) and Database Management System (DBMS) that provides
a single access point to data originating from disparate sources. In conventional Filesystem form,
a File Manager oriented interface offers one form of interaction for read-write operations. In similar
form, with regards to DBMS oriented functionality, operations targeting larger amounts of data are feasible,
scalable, and consistent with ACID (Atomicity, Consistency, Isolation, and Durability) transaction semantics
using one or more declarative query languages (e.g., SQL, SPARQL).
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