James E. Pitkow

ACCESS LOG ANALYSIS (2008)

James E. Pitkow, Krishna A. Bharat

Various programs have emerged that provide statistical analysis of World-Wide Web (WWW) access logs. These programs typically detail the number of accesses for a file, the number of times a site has...

Abstract Summary of WWW Characterizations (2008)

James E. Pitkow

To date there have been a number of efforts that attempt to characterize various aspects of the World Wide Web. This paper presents a summary of these efforts, highlighting regularities and insights...

Abstract Results from the Third WWW User Survey (2007)

James E. Pitkow, Colleen M. Kehoe

The tremendous success of the World Wide Web has led to an ever-increasing user base. Intuitively, one would expect this base to change over time as more people from different segments of the...

Strong Regularities in World Wide Web Surfing (2007)

B. H. Hager, M. A. Richards, Philos Trans R, Bernardo A. Huberman, James E. Pitkow, ...

26. This CMB response time is accelerated by a factor of 2, relative to a model without core heating. 27. The correspondence of the mantle response time and the time period for reliable...

Analyzing differences between Internet information system software architectures (2007)

Rick Kazman, Gregory D. Abowd, James E. Pitkow

: The history of software development is a steady progression of complexity. In response to increasingly complex software, software engineers have provided ever higher levels of abstraction with...

Analyzing differences between Internet information system software architectures (2007)

Rick Kazman, Gregory D. Abowd, James E. Pitkow

: The history of software development is a steady progression of complexity. In response to increasingly complex software, software engineers have provided ever higher levels of abstraction with...

Distributions of surfers’ paths through the World Wide Web: Empirical characterizations (1999)

Peter Pirolli, James E. Pitkow

Surfing the World Wide Web (WWW) involves traversing hyperlink connections among documents. The ability to predict surfing patterns could solve many problems facing producers and consumers of WWW...

Distributions of surfers’ paths through the World Wide Web: Empirical characterizations (1999)

Peter Pirolli, James E. Pitkow

Surfing the World Wide Web (WWW) involves traversing hyperlink connections among documents. The ability to predict surfing patterns could solve many problems facing producers and consumers of WWW...

Summary of WWW Characterizations (1998)

James E. Pitkow

To date there have been a number of efforts that attempt to characterize various aspects of the World Wide Web. This paper presents a summary of these efforts, highlighting regularities and...

Analyzing Differences Between Internet Information System Software Architectures (1996)

Gregory D. Abowd, James E. Pitkow, Rick Kazman

Abstract: While the growth and variety of Internet information systems has been dramatic over the past five years, the methodical consideration of the differences between systems has not been...

Surveying the territory: GVU's five WWW user surveys (1996)

Colleen M. Kehoe, James E. Pitkow

Five years is not very long on most historical scales, but for the World Wide Web (WWW) it constitutes a lifetime. A question almost as old as the web itself is, "Who is using it, and for...

Surveying the Territory: GVU's Five WWW User Surveys (1996)

Colleen M. Kehoe, James E. Pitkow

Introduction Five years is not very long on most historical scales, but for the World Wide Web (WWW) it constitutes a lifetime. A question almost as old as the web itself is, "Who is using it,...

Emerging Trends in the WWW User Population (1996)

James E. Pitkow, Colleen M. Kehoe

this paper will focus on changes in user demographics, content providers, and usage patterns. The reader is referred to [Pitkow & Kehoe 1995a] complete coverage of the results. Where not...

Characterizing browsing strategies in the World-Wide Web (1995)

Lara D. Catledge, James E. Pitkow

This paper presents the results of a study conducted at Georgia Institute of Technology that captured client-side user events of NCSA's XMosaic. Actual user behavior, as determined from...

Towards an intelligent publishing environment (1995)

James E. Pitkow

This paper presents an environment for publishing information on the World-Wide Web (WWW). Previous work has pointed out that the explosive growth of the WWW is in part due to the ease with which...

Results from the Third WWW User Survey (1995)

James E. Pitkow, Colleen M. Kehoe

The tremendous success of the World Wide Web has led to an ever-increasing user base. Intuitively, one would expect this base to change over time as more people from different segments of the...

Using the Web as a Survey Tool: Results from the Second WWW User Survey (1995)

James E. Pitkow, Margaret M. Recker

This paper presents the initial results from the second WorldWide Web User Survey, which was advertised and made available to the Web user population for 38 days during October and November 1994. The...

Integrating Bottom-Up and Top-Down Analysis for Intelligent Hypertext (1994)

James E. Pitkow, Mimi Recker

The range of hypertext systems continues to expand, from custom-tailored, closed systems to dynamic, distributed, and open systems like the World-Wide Web (WWW). The shift from closed to open systems...

A Simple Yet Robust Caching Algorithm Based on Dynamic Access Patterns (1994)

James E. Pitkow, Margaret M. Recker

The World-Wide Web continues its remarkable and seemingly unregulated growth. This growth has seen a corresponding increase in network loads and user response times. One common approach for improving...

Integrating Bottom-Up and Top-Down Analysis For Intelligent Hypertext (1994)

James E. Pitkow, Mimi Recker

The range of hypertext systems continues to expand, from custom-tailored closed systems to dynamic, distributed, and open systems like the World-Wide Web (WWW). The shift from closed to open systems...