61,671 research outputs found
Requirements for Topology in 3D GIS
Topology and its various benefits are well understood within the context of 2D Geographical Information Systems. However, requirements in three-dimensional (3D) applications have yet to be defined, with factors such as lack of users' familiarity with the potential of such systems impeding this process. In this paper, we identify and review a number of requirements for topology in 3D applications. The review utilises existing topological frameworks and data models as a starting point. Three key areas were studied for the purposes of requirements identification, namely existing 2D topological systems, requirements for visualisation in 3D and requirements for 3D analysis supported by topology. This was followed by analysis of application areas such as earth sciences and urban modelling which are traditionally associated with GIS, as well as others including medical, biological and chemical science. Requirements for topological functionality in 3D were then grouped and categorised. The paper concludes by suggesting that these requirements can be used as a basis for the implementation of topology in 3D. It is the aim of this review to serve as a focus for further discussion and identification of additional applications that would benefit from 3D topology. © 2006 The Authors. Journal compilation © 2006 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Benefits of Location-Based Access Control:A Literature Study
Location-based access control (LBAC) has been suggested as a means to improve IT security. By 'grounding' users and systems to a particular location, \ud
attackers supposedly have more difficulty in compromising a system. However, the motivation behind LBAC and its potential benefits have not been investigated thoroughly. To this end, we perform a structured literature review, and examine the goals that LBAC can potentially fulfill, \ud
the specific LBAC systems that realize these goals and the context on which LBAC depends. Our paper has four main contributions:\ud
first we propose a theoretical framework for LBAC evaluation, based on goals, systems and context. Second, we formulate and apply criteria for evaluating the usefulness of an LBAC system. Third, we identify four usage scenarios for LBAC: open areas and systems, hospitals, enterprises, and finally data centers and military facilities. Fourth, we propose directions for future research:\ud
(i) assessing the tradeoffs between location-based, physical and logical access control, (ii) improving the transparency of LBAC decision making, and \ud
(iii) formulating design criteria for facilities and working environments for optimal LBAC usage
Report to the Budgetary Authority concerning mini-budgets. Communication of the Commission to the Council and to the Parliament. SEC (90) 995 final, 24 July 1990
Metadata for Energy Disaggregation
Energy disaggregation is the process of estimating the energy consumed by
individual electrical appliances given only a time series of the whole-home
power demand. Energy disaggregation researchers require datasets of the power
demand from individual appliances and the whole-home power demand. Multiple
such datasets have been released over the last few years but provide metadata
in a disparate array of formats including CSV files and plain-text README
files. At best, the lack of a standard metadata schema makes it unnecessarily
time-consuming to write software to process multiple datasets and, at worse,
the lack of a standard means that crucial information is simply absent from
some datasets. We propose a metadata schema for representing appliances,
meters, buildings, datasets, prior knowledge about appliances and appliance
models. The schema is relational and provides a simple but powerful inheritance
mechanism.Comment: To appear in The 2nd IEEE International Workshop on Consumer Devices
and Systems (CDS 2014) in V\"aster{\aa}s, Swede
Heuristic optimization of clusters of heat pumps: A simulation and case study of residential frequency reserve
The technological challenges of adapting energy systems to the addition of more renewables are intricately interrelated with the ways in which markets incentivize their development and deployment. Households with own onsite distributed generation augmented by electrical and thermal storage capacities (prosumers), can adjust energy use based on the current needs of the electricity grid. Heat pumps, as an established technology for enhancing energy efficiency, are increasingly seen as having potential for shifting electricity use and contributing to Demand Response (DR).
Using a model developed and validated with monitoring data of a household in a plus-energy neighborhood in southern Germany, the technical and financial viability of utilizing household heat pumps to provide power in the market for Frequency Restoration Reserve (FRR) are studied. The research aims to evaluate the flexible electrical load offered by a cluster of buildings whose heat pumps are activated depending on selected rule-based participation strategies.
Given the prevailing prices for FRR in Germany, the modelled cluster was unable to reduce overall electricity costs and thus was unable to show that DR participation as a cluster with the heat pumps is financially viable. Five strategies that differed in the respective contractual requirements that would need to be agreed upon between the cluster manager and the aggregator were studied. The relatively high degree of flexibility necessary for the heat pumps to participate in FRR activations could be provided to varying extents in all strategies, but the minimum running time of the heat pumps turned out to be the primary limiting physical (and financial) factor. The frequency, price and duration of the activation calls from the FRR are also vital to compensate the increase of the heat pumps’ energy use. With respect to thermal comfort and self-sufficiency constraints, the buildings were only able to accept up to 34% of the activation calls while remaining within set comfort parameters. This, however, also depends on the characteristics of the buildings. Finally, a sensitivity analysis showed that if the FRR market changed and the energy prices were more advantageous, the proposed approaches could become financially viable. This work suggests the need for further study of the role of heat pumps in flexibility markets and research questions concerning the aggregation of local clusters of such flexible technologies.Comisión Europea 69596
Tracking Chart 2002 Adidas Group, Indonesia 01003307A
This document is part of a digital collection provided by the Martin P. Catherwood Library, ILR School, Cornell University, pertaining to the effects of globalization on the workplace worldwide. Special emphasis is placed on labor rights, working conditions, labor market changes, and union organizing.FLA_2002_AdidasGroup_TC_Indonesia_01003307A.pdf: 19 downloads, before Oct. 1, 2020
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