I have posted a question to today’s Adobe Connect session, just to
signal the question, and not to get an answer there.
The question is: Does anyone in the working group have
knowledge of octree data management techniques?
The technique holds promise for how the end product of this rds-pdp
working group might be implemented.
Octree data management techniques are already used in Internet
infrastructures (to reduce collisions etc.).
I am doing some tiny work with non-destructive archaeology
(think of opening up a tomb or crypt, installing a “Mars Rover”
type facility, sealing up the tomb and collecting data remotely).
Octree database techniques are increasingly being considered in
archaeology as a way of archiving data for wider access and allow
levels of gated access.
Most archaeologists cannot physically access a site (certainly not
all at once) and the approach both protects the integrity of the
site, and opens a more level playing field for archaeology research.
One additional advantage of using an octree technique, rather than
common database management techniques, is that users can further tag
data as it relates to their individual uses.
Those tags are simply a extension further down the octree tree,
where the tags are integral to the subsets of the data assembled by
the users, and tied to the work they are engaged in.
My impression is that at the Registrar/Registry level this is no
more difficult to implement than a relatively flat standard
database, but is rich in the range of applications it supports.
Sam L.