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Duckling (software)

In this article, Duckling (software) will be approached from different perspectives with the aim of delving into its importance and relevance today. Throughout the reading, key aspects related to Duckling (software) will be analyzed, from its origin and evolution to its impact on current society. Different points of view and opinions of experts on the subject will be examined, in order to offer a comprehensive and enriching vision of Duckling (software). Likewise, concrete examples and case studies will be presented that will allow the reader to better understand the relevance and application of Duckling (software) in everyday life. This article seeks to provide a global and complete vision of Duckling (software), with the purpose of contributing to the knowledge and understanding of this broad and significant topic.

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Duckling, the collaboration environment software suite for e-Science, is an open-source software suite developed by the Collaboration Environment Research Center[1] of Computer Network Information Center[2] of the Chinese Academy of Sciences to meet the rapid progress of the Chinese Academy of Sciences’ e-Science activities. The goals of Duckling include integrating various resources such as digital hardware, software and data, and building a high efficient and easy-to-use environment over Internet for scientists distributed in different positions to enable a new type scientific action mode.

Components

Duckling consists of UMT, DCT, CLB and DLOG.

  • User Management Tool (UMT): used for creating, editing and deleting users, groups and roles.
  • Document Collaboration Tool (DCT): used for data publish in wiki mode.
  • Collaboration Library (CLB): used for data sharing among team members.
  • Duckling Log (DLOG): used for monitoring the events created by core services and plugins.

Moreover, various application plugins can be developed based on Duckling core services. Currently, there are several general application plugins, such as the Universal Communication Tool (UCT), the Conference Service Platform (CSP) and the Activities Arrangement Tool (AAT).

History

  • Jan, 2006, CNIC launched the development of Duckling;
  • Nov 28, 2008, Duckling 1.0 Version released;
  • Sep 22, 2009, Duckling 1.2 version released;
  • Mar 17, 2010, Duckling released the first open source version on the SourceForge site.

Goal

To enable resource sharing, data fusion and collaboration working among scientific team members.

Communities

Duckling had been used in 63 teams, including the bio-energy, the accelerator mass spectrometry instrument and the atmosphere monitoring.

References

Bibliography

  • Kai Nan, Kejun Dong, Yongzheng Ma, et al. The Collaboration Environment for e-Science, e-Science Technology and Application, 2008.1