5,930,476 research outputs found
Multi-band antenna for different wireless applications
A small multi-band compact antenna is presented. The antenna is designed on Roger RT/duroid 5880 with dielectric constant 2.2, multi-band operations is achieved by inserting a slot on the top patch. The antenna has wide impedance bandwidth at 1.2, 1.6, 2.4 and 2.6 GHz with Gain 4.2, 1, 5 and 2 dBi respectively. The bandwidth before adding the shorting wall and the slot was 3.72%, whereas after adding the shorting wall and the slot the bandwidth get wider to 31.9% at the centre of 1.4 GHz. The radiation pattern has acceptable response with low cross polarization at both E-plane and H-plane. The overall dimension of the ground plane is 70 X 70 X 1.5 m
Comprehension of Ads-supported and Paid Android Applications: Are They Different?
The Android market is a place where developers offer paid and-or free apps to
users. Free apps are interesting to users because they can try them immediately
without incurring a monetary cost. However, free apps often have limited
features and-or contain ads when compared to their paid counterparts. Thus,
users may eventually need to pay to get additional features and-or remove ads.
While paid apps have clear market values, their ads-supported versions are not
entirely free because ads have an impact on performance.
In this paper, first, we perform an exploratory study about ads-supported and
paid apps to understand their differences in terms of implementation and
development process. We analyze 40 Android apps and we observe that (i)
ads-supported apps are preferred by users although paid apps have a better
rating, (ii) developers do not usually offer a paid app without a corresponding
free version, (iii) ads-supported apps usually have more releases and are
released more often than their corresponding paid versions, (iv) there is no a
clear strategy about the way developers set prices of paid apps, (v) paid apps
do not usually include more functionalities than their corresponding
ads-supported versions, (vi) developers do not always remove ad networks in
paid versions of their ads-supported apps, and (vii) paid apps require less
permissions than ads-supported apps. Second, we carry out an experimental study
to compare the performance of ads-supported and paid apps and we propose four
equations to estimate the cost of ads-supported apps. We obtain that (i)
ads-supported apps use more resources than their corresponding paid versions
with statistically significant differences and (ii) paid apps could be
considered a most cost-effective choice for users because their cost can be
amortized in a short period of time, depending on their usage.Comment: Accepted for publication in the proceedings of the IEEE International
Conference on Program Comprehension 201
Geodesign in Pampulha cultural and heritage urban area: Visualization tools to orchestrate urban growth and dynamic transformations
This paper discusses the role of visualization in Geodesign methodology consideringits applications in the case study of the region of Pampulha in Belo Horizonte,Minas Gerais, Brazil. In order to consider the opinion of the participants, their effortswere recorded in different steps of the process, at different stages of Geodesign iterations,and different possibilities of visualization were tested. The methodology of Geodesignwas applied in different applications and with different tools. The goal was to determinewhether different techniques and tools used in the process of Geodesign contributed toimproved understanding of data and problem context, and to derive guidelines for improvedGeodesign techniques and tools
Evaluating application vulnerability to soft errors in multi-level cache hierarchy
As the capacity of cache increases dramatically with new processors, soft errors originating in cache has become a major reliability concern for high performance processors. This paper presents application specific soft error vulnerability analysis in order to understand an application's responses to soft errors from different levels of caches. Based on a high-performance processor simulator called Graphite, we have implemented a fault injection framework that can selectively inject bit flips to different levels of caches. We simulated a wide range of relevant bit error patterns and measured the applications' vulnerabilities to bit errors. Our experimental results have shown the various vulnerabilities of applications to bit errors from different levels of caches; the results have also indicated the probabilities of different behaviors from the applications
Silicon photonics biosensing: different packaging platforms and applications
We present two different platforms integrating silicon photonic biosensors. One is based on integration with reaction tubes to be compatible with traditional lab approaches. The other uses through-chip fluidics in order to achieve better mixing of the analyte
- …
