Data Source: Difference between revisions
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A [[Data Source]] is a source of a [[Data Set]]. | A [[Data Source]] is a source of a [[Data Set]]. | ||
* <B>AKA</B> | * <B>AKA:</B> [[Data Feed]]. | ||
* <B>Context</U>:</B> | * <B>Context</U>:</B> | ||
** It can range from being a [[Batch Data Source]] to being an [[Real-Time Data Source]] (such as a [[Real-Time Data Source]]). | ** It can range from being a [[Batch Data Source]] to being an [[Real-Time Data Source]] (such as a [[Real-Time Data Source]]). |
Revision as of 06:14, 21 September 2014
A Data Source is a source of a Data Set.
- AKA: Data Feed.
- Context:
- It can range from being a Batch Data Source to being an Real-Time Data Source (such as a Real-Time Data Source).
- Example(s):
- the New York Stock Exchange Data Feed, is a Data Stream.
- the UCI ML Repository.
- a Product Data Feed.
- See: Data Collection Task, Real-Time Computing, Web Feed, RSS Feed, Product Feed, E-Commerce, Internet Marketing.
References
2014
- (Wikipedia, 2014) ⇒ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/data_feed Retrieved:2014-2-10.
- Data feed is a mechanism for users to receive updated data from data sources. It is commonly used by real-time applications in point-to-point settings as well as on the World Wide Web. The latter is also called web feed. News feed is a popular form of web feed. RSS feed makes dissemination of blogs easy. Product feeds play increasingly important role in e-commerce and internet marketing. Data feeds usually requires structured data. At the present time unstructured data, e.g. HTML pages, dominate the Web. As a result, data feeds have the potential to make a bigger impact on the Web in the future.