Putting Home Data Management into Perspective

Abstract

Distributed storage is coming home. An increasing number of home and personal electronic devices create, use, and display digitized forms of music, images, videos, as well as more conventional files (e.g., financial records and contact lists). In-home networks enable these devices to communicate, and a variety of device-specific and datatype-specific tools are emerging. The transition to digital homes gives exciting new capabilities to users, but it also makes them responsible for administration tasks usually handled by dedicated professionals in other settings. It is unclear that traditional data management practices will work for "normal people" reluctant to put time into administration. This dissertation presents a number of studies of the way home users deal with their storage. One intriguing finding of these studies is that home users rarely organize and access their data via traditional folder-based naming - usually, they do so based on data attributes. Computing researchers have long talked about attribute-based data navigation, while continuing to use folder-based approaches. However, users of home and personal storage live it. Popular interfaces (e.g., iTunes, iPhoto, and even drop-down lists of recently-opened Word documents) allow users to navigate file collections via attributes like publisher-provided metadata, extracted keywords, and date/time. In contrast, the abstractions provided by filesystems and associated tools for managing files have remained tightly tied to namespaces built on folders. To correct the disconnect between semantic data access and folder-based replica management, this dissertation presents a new primitive that I call a \view", as a replacement for the traditional volume abstraction. A view is a compact description of a set of files, expressed much like a search query, and a device on which that data should be stored.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Dec 01, 2009
Accession Number
ADA522561

Entities

People

  • Brandon W. Salmon

Organizations

  • Carnegie Mellon University

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Biomedical
  • Energy and Power Technologies
  • Human Systems

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Cameras
  • Cognitive Systems Engineering
  • Computer Programming
  • Computers
  • Data Management
  • Data Sets
  • Databases
  • Digital Information
  • Graphical User Interface
  • Human-Computer Interaction
  • Information Science
  • Mobile Devices
  • Mobile Phones
  • Operating Systems
  • Theses
  • Ubiquitous Computing
  • User Interface

Fields of Study

  • Computer science

Readers

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  • Database Systems and Applications
  • Rehabilitation and Prosthetic Care for Military Service Members and Veterans with Limb Loss or Disability.

Technology Areas

  • Microelectronics