1,961 research outputs found
Space enabled smart Africa (SESA)
Urbanization in Africa is growing at a rapid pace and so is the population growth. Cities in Africa are struggling to cope with the demand that urban migration brings. For example, Africa has over 60% of her population located in the urban areas. These urban locations are sprawling slums due to the massive influx of people and inadequate housing systems. The United Nations, through the Sustainable Development Goals called for a sustainable cities and communities. This project is focus on using the smart city approach to tackle these urbanization issues. With the advancement in satellite application systems, smart cities can be enabled through space technology to address these urbanization and other issues affecting the African region. Integrating space technology, such as communication, Earth observation, and satellite aided position timing & navigation application systems and small satellite technology, to the smart city paradigm could provide sustainable ways in which problems like digital division, over population, natural disaster, etc. could be managed and eradicated
Survival in the e-conomy: 2nd Australian information warfare & security conference 2001
This is an international conference for academics and industry specialists in information warfare, security, and other related fields. The conference has drawn participants from national and international organisations
Campus Communications Systems: Converging Technologies
This book is a rewrite of Campus Telecommunications Systems: Managing Change, a book that was written by ACUTA in 1995. In the past decade, our industry has experienced a thousand-fold increase in data rates as we migrated from 10 megabit links (10 million bits per second) to 10 gigabit links (10 billion bits per second), we have seen the National Telecommunications Policy completely revamped; we have seen the combination of voice, data, and video onto one network; and we have seen many of our service providers merge into larger corporations able to offer more diverse services. When this book was last written, A CUT A meant telecommunications, convergence was a mathematical term, triple play was a baseball term, and terms such as iPod, DoS, and QoS did not exist. This book is designed to be a communications primer to be used by new entrants into the field of communications in higher education and by veteran communications professionals who want additional information in areas other than their field of expertise. There are reference books and text books available on every topic discussed in this book if a more in-depth explanation is desired. Individual chapters were authored by communications professionals from various member campuses. This allowed the authors to share their years of experience (more years than many of us would care to admit to) with the community at large.
Foreword Walt Magnussen, Ph.D.
Preface Ron Kovac, Ph.D.
1 The Technology Landscape: Historical Overview . Walt Magnussen, Ph.D.
2 Emerging Trends and Technologies . Joanne Kossuth
3 Network Security . Beth Chancellor
4 Security and Disaster Planning and Management Marjorie Windelberg, Ph.D.
5 Student Services in a University Setting . Walt Magnussen, Ph.D.
6 Administrative Services David E. O\u27Neill
7 The Business Side of Information Technology George Denbow
8 The Role of Consultants . David C. Metz
Glossary Michelle Narcavag
A Wearable Platform for Patient Monitoring during Mass Casualty Incidents
Based on physiological data, intelligent algorithms can assist with the classification and recognition of the most severely impaired victims. This dissertation presents a new sensorbased triage platform with the main proposal to join different sensor and communications technologies into a portable device. This new device must be able to assist the rescue units along with the tactical planning of the operation. This dissertation discusses the implementation and the evaluation of the platform
A Wearable Platform for Patient Monitoring during Mass Casualty Incidents
Based on physiological data, intelligent algorithms can assist with the classification and recognition of the most severely impaired victims. This book presents a new sensorbased triage platform with the main proposal to join different sensor and communications technologies into a portable device. This new device must be able to assist the rescue units along with the tactical planning of the operation. This work discusses the implementation and the evaluation of the platform
Towards Ubiquitous Semantic Metaverse: Challenges, Approaches, and Opportunities
In recent years, ubiquitous semantic Metaverse has been studied to
revolutionize immersive cyber-virtual experiences for augmented reality (AR)
and virtual reality (VR) users, which leverages advanced semantic understanding
and representation to enable seamless, context-aware interactions within
mixed-reality environments. This survey focuses on the intelligence and
spatio-temporal characteristics of four fundamental system components in
ubiquitous semantic Metaverse, i.e., artificial intelligence (AI),
spatio-temporal data representation (STDR), semantic Internet of Things (SIoT),
and semantic-enhanced digital twin (SDT). We thoroughly survey the
representative techniques of the four fundamental system components that enable
intelligent, personalized, and context-aware interactions with typical use
cases of the ubiquitous semantic Metaverse, such as remote education, work and
collaboration, entertainment and socialization, healthcare, and e-commerce
marketing. Furthermore, we outline the opportunities for constructing the
future ubiquitous semantic Metaverse, including scalability and
interoperability, privacy and security, performance measurement and
standardization, as well as ethical considerations and responsible AI.
Addressing those challenges is important for creating a robust, secure, and
ethically sound system environment that offers engaging immersive experiences
for the users and AR/VR applications.Comment: 18 pages, 7 figures, 3 table
Public Libraries and the Internet 2006
Examines the capability of public libraries to provide and sustain public access Internet services and resources that meet community needs, including serving as the first choice for content, resources, services, and technology infrastructure
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