3,634 research outputs found

    Interface groups and financial transfer architectures

    Full text link
    Analytic execution architectures have been proposed by the same authors as a means to conceptualize the cooperation between heterogeneous collectives of components such as programs, threads, states and services. Interface groups have been proposed as a means to formalize interface information concerning analytic execution architectures. These concepts are adapted to organization architectures with a focus on financial transfers. Interface groups (and monoids) now provide a technique to combine interface elements into interfaces with the flexibility to distinguish between directions of flow dependent on entity naming. The main principle exploiting interface groups is that when composing a closed system of a collection of interacting components, the sum of their interfaces must vanish in the interface group modulo reflection. This certainly matters for financial transfer interfaces. As an example of this, we specify an interface group and within it some specific interfaces concerning the financial transfer architecture for a part of our local academic organization. Financial transfer interface groups arise as a special case of more general service architecture interfaces.Comment: 22 page

    Teleteaching over Low-Bandwidth Network Channels

    Full text link
    Teleteaching has become an important application of the Internet and the MBone. Unfortunately the costs for the hardware, necessary to participate in remote lectures, are still prohibitively high and the degree of distributiveness of the implemented scenarios is very low. In the Interactive Home Learning project we plan to provide methods to participate in a Teleteaching lecture live from a PC at horne via a low-bandwidth connection (e.g. ISDN). This paper summarises technical aspects of this learning scenario and presents our approach, the fully Java-based Reflection and Scaling Tool jrst, which meets the requirements of an application layer multicast routing demon with a highly restrictive broadcasting policy and a dynamic tunnelling mechanism

    Audiovisual network service optimization by quality of experience estimation

    Get PDF

    NASA Thesaurus supplement: A four part cumulative supplement to the 1988 edition of the NASA Thesaurus (supplement 3)

    Get PDF
    The four-part cumulative supplement to the 1988 edition of the NASA Thesaurus includes the Hierarchical Listing (Part 1), Access Vocabulary (Part 2), Definitions (Part 3), and Changes (Part 4). The semiannual supplement gives complete hierarchies and accepted upper/lowercase forms for new terms

    Civil Space Technology Initiative: a First Step

    Get PDF
    This is the first published overview of OAST's focused program, the Civil Space Technology Initiative, (CSTI) which started in FY88. This publication describes the goals, technical approach, current status, and plans for CSTI. Periodic updates are planned

    Virtual Multicast

    Get PDF

    Designing a videoconference system for active networks

    Get PDF
    Active networks are receiving increasing attention due to their promises of great flexibility in tailoring services to applications. This capability stems from the exploitation of network devices whose behavior can be changed dynamically by applications, possibly using technologies and architectures originally conceived for mobile code systems. Notwithstanding the promises of active networks, real-world applications that clearly benefit by them are still missing. In this work we describe the design of a videoconference system conceived expressly for operation over active networks. The goal of this activity is to pinpoint the benefits that mobile code and active networks bring in this application domain and to provide insights for the exploitation of these concepts in other application domain
    corecore