342 research outputs found

    On-line data archives

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    ©2001 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. However, permission to reprint/republish this material for advertising or promotional purposes or for creating new collective works for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or to reuse any copyrighted component of this work in other works must be obtained from the IEEE.Digital libraries and other large archives of electronically retrievable and manipulable material are becoming widespread in both commercial and scientific arenas. Advances in networking technologies have led to a greater proliferation of wide-area distributed data warehousing with associated data management challenges. We review tools and technologies for supporting distributed on-line data archives and explain our key concept of active data archives, in which data can be, processed on-demand before delivery. We are developing wide-area data warehousing software infrastructure for geographically distributed archives of large scientific data sets, such as satellite image data, that are stored hierarchically on disk arrays and tape silos and are accessed by a variety of scientific and decision support applications. Interoperability is a major issue for distributed data archives and requires standards for server interfaces and metadata. We review present activities and our contributions in developing such standards for different application areas.K. Hawick, P. Coddington, H. James, C. Patte

    NASA Tech Briefs, July 1999

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    Topics: Test and Measurement; Electronic Components and Circuits; Electronic Systems; Physical Sciences; Materials; Computer Software; Mechanics; Machinery/Automation; Bio-Medical; Books and Reports; Semiconductors/ICs

    Digital multimedia development processes and optimizing techniques

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    Glueing grids and clouds together: A service-oriented approach

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    Scientific communities are actively developing services to exploit the capabilities of service-oriented distributed systems. This exploitation requires services to be specified and developed for a range of activities such as management and scheduling of workflows and provenance capture and management. Most of these services are designed and developed for a particular community of scientific users. The constraints imposed by architectures, interfaces or platforms can restrict or even prohibit the free interchange of services between disparate scientific communities. Using the notion of 'Platform as a Service' (PaaS), we propose an architectural approach that addresses these limitations so that users can make use of a wider range of services without being concerned about the development of cross-platform middleware, wrappers or any need for bespoke applications. The proposed architecture shields the details of heterogeneous Grid/Cloud infrastructure within a brokering environment, thus enabling users to concentrate on the specification of higher level services. Copyright © 2012 Inderscience Enterprises Ltd

    A survey on personal computer applications in industrial design process

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    Thesis (Master)--Izmir Institute of Technology, Industrial Design, Izmir, 1999Includes bibliographical references (leaves: 157-162)Text in English, Abstract: Turkish and Englishxii, 194 leavesIn this thesis, computer aided design systems are studied from the industrial designer's point of view. The study includes industrial design processes, computer aided design systems and the integration aspects.The technical issues are priorly studied, including current hardware and software technologies. The pure technical concepts are tried to be supported with real-world examples and graphics. Several important design software are examined, whether by personal practice or by literature research, depending on the availability of the software.Finally, the thesis include a case study, a 17" LCD computer monitor designed with a set of graphic programs including two-dimensional and three-dimensional packages.Keywords: Computers, industrial design methods, design software, computer aided design

    An investigation on the vibroacoustic behavior of systems in similitude

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    Similitude theory allows engineers to establish the necessary conditions to design a scaled - up or down - model of a full-scale prototype structure. In recent years, the research on similitude methods, which allow to design the models and establish similitude conditions and scaling laws, has grown so that many obstacles associated with full-scale testing, such as cost and setup, may be overcome. This thesis aims at, on the one hand, expanding the possibilities of similitude methods by means of their application to new structural configurations; on the other hand, at the investigation of new approaches. Therefore, similitude conditions and scaling laws of thin aluminium plates with clamped-free-clamped-free boundary conditions, first, and aluminium foam sandwich plates with simply supported and free-free boundary conditions, then, are derived. Particularly, two sets of conditions are derived for the sandwich plates: the first by expliciting all the geometrical and material properties, the second by combining some parameters into just one with physical meaning, that is, the bending stiffness. These conditions and laws are successively validated by means of dynamic experimental tests, in which reconstructions of the natural frequencies and the velocity response of the prototype are attempted. Also the prediction of the radiated acoustic power is performed for the sandwich plates. All the tests highlight that these laws do not work fine when the models are distorted, i.e., when the similitude conditions are not satisfied. Therefore, the potentialities of machine learning are investigated and used to establish degrees of correlation between similar systems, without invoking governing equations and/or solution schemes. In particular, artificial neural networks are used in order to predict the dynamic characteristics, first, and the scaling parameters, then, of beams, as test (since they do not exhibit distorted models), and plates. In the latter case, the predictions of the artificial neural networks are validated by the results provided by the experimental tests. The networks prove to be robust to noise, very helpful in predicting the response characteristics, and identifying the model type. Finally, the similitude methods are used as a tool for supporting, and eventually validating, noisy experimental measurements, not for predicting the prototype behavior. In this way, they can help to understand if a set of measurements is reliable or not. Therefore, the sandwich plates are analysed with digital image correlation cameras. Then, with the help of an algorithm for blind source separation, the force spectra and velocity responses are reconstructed. It is demonstrated that the similitude results are coherent with the quality of the experimental measurements, since the curves overlap when the spatial patterns are recognizable. Instead, when the displacement field is too polluted by noise, the reconstruction exhibits discrepancies. This proves that the application of similitude methods should not be underestimated, especially in the light of the expanding range of approaches which can extract important information from noisy observations

    NASA Tech Briefs, August 2000

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    Topics include: Simulation/Virtual Reality; Test and Measurement; Computer-Aided Design and Engineering; Electronic Components and Circuits; Electronic Systems; Physical Sciences; Materials; Computer Programs; Mechanics; Machinery/Automation; Manufacturing/Fabrication; Mathematics and Information Sciences; Medical Design

    A framework for the design, prototyping and evaluation of mobile interfaces for domestic environments

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    The idea of the smart home has been discussed for over three decades, but it has yet to achieve mass-market adoption. This thesis asks the question Why is my home not smart? It highlights four main areas that are barriers to adoption, and concentrates on a single one of these issues: usability. It presents an investigation that focuses on design, prototyping and evaluation of mobile interfaces for domestic environments resulting in the development of a novel framework. A smart home is the physical realisation of a ubiquitous computing system for domestic living. The research area offers numerous benefits to end-users such as convenience, assistive living, energy saving and improved security and safety. However, these benefits have yet to become accessible due to a lack of usable smart home control interfaces. This issue is considered a key reason for lack of adoption and is the focus for this thesis. Within this thesis, a framework is introduced as a novel approach for the design, prototyping and evaluation of mobile interfaces for domestic environments. Included within this framework are three components. Firstly, the Reconfigurable Multimedia Environment (RME), a physical evaluation and observation space for conducting user centred research. Secondly, Simulated Interactive Devices (SID), a video-based development and control tool for simulating interactive devices commonly found within a smart home. Thirdly, iProto, a tool that facilitates the production and rapid deployment of high fidelity prototypes for mobile touch screen devices. This framework is evaluated as a round-tripping toolchain for prototyping smart home control and found to be an efficient process for facilitating the design and evaluation of such interfaces

    NASA Tech Briefs, October 2000

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    Topics include: special coverage sections on CAD, CAE, and PDM, and, Composites and Plastics, and sections on electronic components and systems, software, test and measurement, mechanics, manufacturing/fabrication, physical sciences, information sciences, book and reports, and special sections of Electronics Tech Briefs and Motion Control Tech Brief

    NASA Tech Briefs, June 2001

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    Topics covered include: Sensors; Electronic Components and Systems; Software Engineering; Materials; Manufacturing/Fabrication; physical Sciences; Information Sciences
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