50,496 research outputs found

    Feasibility study of an Integrated Program for Aerospace-vehicle Design (IPAD) system. Volume 1: Summary

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    An overview is provided of the Ipad System, including its goals and objectives, organization, capabilities and future usefulness. The systems implementation is also presented with operational cost summaries

    Firm Assets and Investments in Open Source Software Products

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    Open source software (OSS) has recently emerged as a new way to organize innovation and product development in the software industry. This paper investigates the factors that explain the investment of profit-oriented firms in OSS products. Drawing on the resource-based theory of the firm, we focus on the role played by pre-OSS firm assets both upstream and downstream, in the software and the hardware dimensions, to explain the rate of product introduction in OSS. Using a self-assembled database of firms that have announced releases of OSS products during the period 1995-2003, we find that the intensity of product introduction can be explained by a strong position in software technology and downstream market presence in hardware. Firms with consolidated market presence in proprietary software and strong technological competences in hardware are more reluctant to shift to the new paradigm. The evidence is stronger for operating systems than for applications. The fear of cannibalization, the crucial role of absorptive capacity, and complementarities between hardware and software are plausible explanations behind our findings.Product Introduction, Open Source Software, Absorptive Capacity

    Elhauge on Tying: Vindicated by History

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    This video of this paper being presented is also available

    Construction d'un systÚme d'exploitation fondé sur Linux pour le support des organisations virtuelles dans les grilles de nouvelle génération

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    This document comprises the final report on the IST Integrated Project XtreemOS - "Building and promotinga Linux-based operating systems to support virtual organizations for next generation Grids".The project started in June 2006 and ended in September 2010.The XtreemOS operating system provides for Grids what a traditional operating system offers fora single computer: abstraction from the hardware and secure resource sharing between different users.It thus simplifies the work of users belonging to virtual organizations by giving them the illusion ofusing a traditional computer while removing the burden of complex resource management issues of atypical Grid environment.We have developed a comprehensive set of cooperating system services. XtreemOS softwarecomponents range from Linux kernel modules to application-support libraries. The XtreemOS operatingsystem provides three major distributed services to users: application execution management(providing scalable resource discovery and job scheduling for distributed interactive applications),data management (accessing and storing data in XtreemFS, a POSIX-like file system spanning theGrid) and virtual organization management (building and operating dynamic virtual organizations).Three flavours of the system have been implemented for individual PC, clusters and mobile devices(PDA, smartphone, notebook).The XtreemOS software has been experimented and validated with a wide range of applications.Various demonstrators were implemented, shown at different events and published on the web.The project results are available as open source software. The consortium member organizationsplan to exploit some of the results in follow-up research projects and in future products.1

    Building an Emulation Environment for Cyber Security Analyses of Complex Networked Systems

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    Computer networks are undergoing a phenomenal growth, driven by the rapidly increasing number of nodes constituting the networks. At the same time, the number of security threats on Internet and intranet networks is constantly growing, and the testing and experimentation of cyber defense solutions requires the availability of separate, test environments that best emulate the complexity of a real system. Such environments support the deployment and monitoring of complex mission-driven network scenarios, thus enabling the study of cyber defense strategies under real and controllable traffic and attack scenarios. In this paper, we propose a methodology that makes use of a combination of techniques of network and security assessment, and the use of cloud technologies to build an emulation environment with adjustable degree of affinity with respect to actual reference networks or planned systems. As a byproduct, starting from a specific study case, we collected a dataset consisting of complete network traces comprising benign and malicious traffic, which is feature-rich and publicly available

    Impliance: A Next Generation Information Management Appliance

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    ably successful in building a large market and adapting to the changes of the last three decades, its impact on the broader market of information management is surprisingly limited. If we were to design an information management system from scratch, based upon today's requirements and hardware capabilities, would it look anything like today's database systems?" In this paper, we introduce Impliance, a next-generation information management system consisting of hardware and software components integrated to form an easy-to-administer appliance that can store, retrieve, and analyze all types of structured, semi-structured, and unstructured information. We first summarize the trends that will shape information management for the foreseeable future. Those trends imply three major requirements for Impliance: (1) to be able to store, manage, and uniformly query all data, not just structured records; (2) to be able to scale out as the volume of this data grows; and (3) to be simple and robust in operation. We then describe four key ideas that are uniquely combined in Impliance to address these requirements, namely the ideas of: (a) integrating software and off-the-shelf hardware into a generic information appliance; (b) automatically discovering, organizing, and managing all data - unstructured as well as structured - in a uniform way; (c) achieving scale-out by exploiting simple, massive parallel processing, and (d) virtualizing compute and storage resources to unify, simplify, and streamline the management of Impliance. Impliance is an ambitious, long-term effort to define simpler, more robust, and more scalable information systems for tomorrow's enterprises.Comment: This article is published under a Creative Commons License Agreement (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/.) You may copy, distribute, display, and perform the work, make derivative works and make commercial use of the work, but, you must attribute the work to the author and CIDR 2007. 3rd Biennial Conference on Innovative Data Systems Research (CIDR) January 710, 2007, Asilomar, California, US
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