The prototype database is designed to meet the general needs of users with different backgrounds related to cemetery and cemetery. The scenarios are as follows: The Union of International Archeology and Historical Societies cooperated to fund interdisciplinary databases of the International Historical Cemetery dates back at least 100 years ago. Since this database is used for research by various people including historians, local councils, genealogists, sociologists, epidemiologists and planning of the town, it is expected not only to include information about the cemetery itself, but also to include it Including construction work
Document-based databases have the powerful advantage of prototyping. It is not necessary to define the database schema before development to be useful for rapid prototyping. For the open-source serverless backend Skygear, we have built an SDK that provides a document-like interface for querying and saving data. The backend automatically handles database migration such as creating a table under development or adding a column environment. This is similar to the NoSQL interface, but with a SQL backend, developers using the platform do not need to predefine patterns.
Create a voting database; this is also a prototype of the prototype page. The database has a publicly available Web interface, it can cross reference (as a necessary starting point for definition) to an existing word list and CLL, a link to concordancer (you can view instances of all words in the corpus Space for evidence, space for opposition and evidence, and publicly visible voting. BPFK member volunteers define an example of a mini dictionary. They promise to traverse the entire corpus and make all relevant usage and discussions about the words they define. They wrote their proposal and document in the voting database. Their proposal must characterize the understanding of the semantic meaning to be widely accepted: this is not the time or place of controversy.
This is where the Sylvain constellation and the concept of another futuristic cemetery works. That is wonderful, and Sylvan Constellation may become a reality someday. DeathLAB is currently studying prototypes of shining cemeteries at Arnos Vale Cemetery, a classic Victorian cemetery in Bristol, England. Other quirky future cemetery is also under way like a famous urban death. The Urban Death Project, a death activist and created by architect Katrina Spade, is a desktop care system for environmentally friendly urban residents based on "Our bodies are filled with the potential of life". And this possibility can be found in the form of human compost.