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A Multimedia Database Management System (MMDBMS) is a framework that manages different types of data potentially represented in a wide diversity of formats on a wide array of media sources. It provides support for multimedia data types , and facilitate for creation, storage, access, query and control of a multimedia database.
A content management framework (CMF) is a system that facilitates the use of reusable components or customized software for managing Web content. It shares aspects of a Web application framework and a content management system (CMS). Below is a list of notable systems that claim to be CMFs.
Multimedia search enables information search using queries in multiple data types including text and other multimedia formats. Multimedia search can be implemented through multimodal search interfaces, i.e., interfaces that allow to submit search queries not only as textual requests, but also through other media.
Multimedia information retrieval (MMIR or MIR) is a research discipline of computer science that aims at extracting semantic information from multimedia data sources. [1] [failed verification] Data sources include directly perceivable media such as audio, image and video, indirectly perceivable sources such as text, semantic descriptions, [2] biosignals as well as not perceivable sources such ...
MMDB or Molecular Modeling Database is a database of biomolecular structures. MMDB may also refer to: Multimedia database, a collection of related digital media objects; Main memory database system or in-memory database, a database management system
Oracle Multimedia (formerly Oracle interMedia from versions 8 to 10gR2 [1]) is a feature available for Oracle databases, which provides multimedia utilities in a database environment, generating as a result a multimedia database (MMDB). Oracle Multimedia was deprecated in Oracle 18c [2] and desupported in Oracle 19c. [3]
A CMS typically has two major components: a content management application (CMA), as the front-end user interface that allows a user, even with limited expertise, to add, modify, and remove content from a website without the intervention of a webmaster; and a content delivery application (CDA), that compiles the content and updates the website.
Multimedia used to be saved on CD-ROMs, which could store roughly 700 MB of data, and floppy disks, which could only store 1.44 MB. Multimedia files are now easier to keep and retrieve because of the widespread usage of USB devices, cloud storage, and solid-state drives (SSDs), which provide significantly greater speed and space. [10]