135,065 research outputs found
Event-Cloud Platform to Support Decision- Making in Emergency Management
The challenge of this paper is to underline the capability of an Event-Cloud
Platform to support efficiently an emergency situation. We chose to focus on a
nuclear crisis use case. The proposed approach consists in modeling the
business processes of crisis response on the one hand, and in supporting the
orchestration and execution of these processes by using an Event-Cloud Platform
on the other hand. This paper shows how the use of Event-Cloud techniques can
support crisis management stakeholders by automatizing non-value added tasks
and by directing decision- makers on what really requires their capabilities of
choice. If Event-Cloud technology is a very interesting and topical subject,
very few research works have considered this to improve emergency management.
This paper tries to fill this gap by considering and applying these
technologies on a nuclear crisis use-case
Secure Cloud Storage: A Framework for Data Protection as a Service in the Multi-cloud Environment
This paper introduces Secure Cloud Storage (SCS), a framework for Data Protection as a Service (DPaaS) to cloud computing users. Compared to the existing Data Encryption as a Service (DEaaS) such as those provided by Amazon and Google, DPaaS provides more flexibility to protect data in the cloud. In addition to supporting the basic data encryption capability as DEaaS does, DPaaS allows users to define fine-grained access control policies to protect their data. Once data is put under an access control policy, it is automatically encrypted and only if the policy is satisfied, the data could be decrypted and accessed by either the data owner or anyone else specified in the policy. The key idea of the SCS framework is to separate data management from security management in addition to defining a full cycle of data security automation from encryption to decryption. As a proof-of-concept for the design, we implemented a prototype of the SCS framework that works with both BT Cloud Compute platform and Amazon EC2. Experiments on the prototype have proved the efficiency of the SCS framework
Risk Management Considerations in Cloud Computing Adoption
Information and Communication Technology (ICT) plays
a pivotal role in enabling organizational capability and
productivity, and in initiating and facilitating innovation
across all industry sectors. In recent years, cloud
computing has emerged as a growing trend because it
serves as an enabler of scalable, flexible and powerful
computing. Consequently, each year significant global
investment is made in migrating to the cloud
environment. However, despite its growing popularity,
several risks and security concerns surround the cloud
computing model. Therefore, understanding an
organization’s readiness and ability to mitigate
associated risks is critical prior to embarking on the
cloud computing journey. One approach to determining
an organization’s ability to effectively migrate to the
cloud is to determine the current maturity of both its
cloud computing capabilities and its risk management
capabilities. As such, the Cloud Computing tool and the
Risk Management (RM) Critical Capability of the IT
Capability Maturity Framework (IT-CMF) are proposed
as effective maturity assessment instruments to enable
organizations to establish future roadmaps that will
improve their maturity with respect to their cloud
computing readiness. Increasing the level of maturity
improves organizational practices surrounding the
identification and mitigation of risks/threats that pertain
to the cloud environment
Neuro-memristive Circuits for Edge Computing: A review
The volume, veracity, variability, and velocity of data produced from the
ever-increasing network of sensors connected to Internet pose challenges for
power management, scalability, and sustainability of cloud computing
infrastructure. Increasing the data processing capability of edge computing
devices at lower power requirements can reduce several overheads for cloud
computing solutions. This paper provides the review of neuromorphic
CMOS-memristive architectures that can be integrated into edge computing
devices. We discuss why the neuromorphic architectures are useful for edge
devices and show the advantages, drawbacks and open problems in the field of
neuro-memristive circuits for edge computing
Framework Design of Emergency Management Information System for Cloud Computing in Chemical Park
Collaborative emergency management mode provides a new idea for further reducing system safety risk in the chemical park. In this paper, the cloud computing and the expert system were used for the framework design of the emergency management information system to enhance emergency response capability of collaborative emergency managementmechanisms. The use of middleware integrated with multi-source data achieved the unified data manipulation interface. Intelligent delivery of information system was provided. Using agent-middleware technology to build decision layer could make massive data analysis, data mining and decision from the “cloud computing” platform access for every user. It can provide the necessary theoretical and technical support for enterprises in the chemical park, to give full play to the collaborative emergency management capability.</p
The potential use of service-oriented infrastructure framework to enable transparent vertical scalability of cloud computing infrastructure
Cloud computing technology has become familiar to most Internet users. Subsequently, there has been an increased growth in the use of cloud computing, including Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS). To ensure that IaaS can easily meet the growing demand, IaaS providers usually increase the capacity of their facilities in a vertical IaaS increase capability and the capacity for local IaaS amenities such as increasing the number of servers, storage and network bandwidth. However, at the same time, horizontal scalability is sometimes not enough and requires additional strategies to ensure that the large number of IaaS service requests can be met. Therefore, strategies requiring horizontal scalability are more complex than the vertical scalability strategies because they involve the interaction of more than one facility at different service centers. To reduce the complexity of the implementation of the horizontal scalability of the IaaS infrastructures, the use of a technology service oriented infrastructure is recommended to ensure that the interaction between two or more different service centers can be done more simply and easily even though it is likely to involve a wide range of communication technologies and different cloud computing management. This is because the service oriented infrastructure acts as a middle man that translates and processes interactions and protocols of different cloud computing infrastructures without the modification of the complex to ensure horizontal scalability can be run easily and smoothly. This paper presents the potential of using a service-oriented infrastructure framework to enable transparent vertical scalability of cloud computing infrastructures by adapting three projects in this research: SLA@SOI consortium, Open Cloud Computing Interface (OCCI), and OpenStack
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