Active Pages: Intelligent Nodes on the World Wide Web
Proceedings of the 1994 World Wide Web Conference,
Geneva, Switzerland, May 1994.
D. Wetherall,
C. Lindblad, and
H. Houh
Abstract
Active pages provide a common interface to World Wide Web
applications, crossing browser, platform and operating system
boundaries. They are hypertext documents that present a front-end to
intelligent applications. Typically implemented as interpreted
programs with an associated database, they use the forms extension for
application input. There are four advantages to the active pages
approach for application interfaces: widespread accessibility, support
for collaborative work, self-documentation, and seamless integration
with other Web pages. In this paper, we present our active page design
methodology and demonstrate it with two examples from our server: WEBDNS, a facility for
editing Internet Domain Name System master files; and The
People Directory, an editable personnel database that includes
hypertext links to biographical pages.
Keywords
collaborative applications, World Wide Web programs, user interfaces,
portable applications
(html,
postscript)
