By S. Jerrold Kaplan, Mitchell D. Kapor, Edward J. Belove, Richard A. Landsman, Todd R. Drake
Communications of the ACM,
July 1990,
Vol. 33 No. 7, Pages 105-116
10.1145/79204.79212
Comments
The free-form, evolving, personal information that people deal with in the course of their daily activities requires more flexible data structures and data management systems than tabular data structures provide. A tool for managing personal information must conveniently handle freetextual data; allow for structure to evolve gracefully as the database grows; represent unnormalized data; and support data entry through database views. We have designed a new type of database that serves these needs—“item/category” database—and realized this design in a commercial personal computer software product named “Agenda.”
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