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The Sixth International Symposium on Spatial Databases (SSD 99) was held in Hong Kong, China, July 20-23, 1999. This is a ten-year anniversary" edition. The series of conferences started in Santa Barbara in 1989 and continued - annually in Zu rich(1991),Singapore (1993),Portland,Maine (1995),and Berlin (1997). We are very pleased that on this occasion Oliver Gun ther, one of the initiators of the conference in 1989, agreed to give an anniversary talk" in which he presented his view of SSD in the past as well as in the future ten years. SSD is well established as the premier international…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
The Sixth International Symposium on Spatial Databases (SSD 99) was held in Hong Kong, China, July 20-23, 1999. This is a ten-year anniversary" edition. The series of conferences started in Santa Barbara in 1989 and continued - annually in Zu rich(1991),Singapore (1993),Portland,Maine (1995),and Berlin (1997). We are very pleased that on this occasion Oliver Gun ther, one of the initiators of the conference in 1989, agreed to give an anniversary talk" in which he presented his view of SSD in the past as well as in the future ten years. SSD is well established as the premier international conference devoted to the handling of spatial data in databases. The number of submissions has been stable during the last years; in 1999 there were 55 research submissions, which is exactly the same number as for the last conference in Berlin. Out of these, the programcommittee accepted17 excellent papers for presentation.In addition to the anniversary talk", the technical program contained two keynote presen- tions (Christos Papadimitriou, Timos Sellis), four tutorials (Markus Schneider, Leila De Floriani and Enrico Puppo, Jayant Sharma, and Mike Freeston), and one panel. The papers included in these proceedings re?ect some of the current trends in spatial databases. Classical topics such as spatial indexing or spatial join continue to be studied, as well as interesting new directions such as including generalization/scale in indexing or treating multiway instead of binary joins.