347 research outputs found

    Estudi bibliomètric any 2014. Campus del Baix Llobregat: EETAC i ESAB

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    En el present informe s’analitza la producció científica de les dues escoles del Campus del Baix Llobregat, l’Escola d’Enginyeria de Telecomunicació i Aerospacial de Castelldefels (EETAC) i l’Escola Superior d’Agricultura de Barcelona (ESAB) durant el 2014.Postprint (author’s final draft

    Diversity gains of multiport mobile terminals in multipath for talk positions on both sides of the head

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    The paper studies the over-the-air (OTA) performance of a mobile terminal. A practical two-port mobile terminal model on the left side and the right side of the head for both standard cheek position and standard tilt position is used to study the diversity gains. The diversity gain has been determined by measurements in a reverberation chamber as well as by simulations using the far field patterns from CST Microwave Studio, and then exposing these patterns to rich isotropic multipath (RIMP) environment in a ray-based simulation tool

    Information Interface - Volume 30, Issue 4 - August/September 2002

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    News and information about Himmelfarb Health Sciences Library of interest to users

    ACUTA Journal of Telecommunications in Higher Education

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    In This Issue The Coming Voice-over-lP Revolution Report from the FCC CAC The USA Patriot Act in 2005: What Technology Leaders Need to Know Universal Service Funding in a Changing Telecommunications World Taking a Flier on Tower Lighting The Higher-Ed Spyware Threat VolP and Wireless Communications Challenge 911 System Leveling the Playing Field lnstitutional Excellence Award: The University of Texas at Austin Bill D. Monis Award: Jeanne Jansenius ACUTA Legislative & Regulatory Affairs Committee Works for You President\u27s Message From the Executive Director Here\u27s My Advic

    Double-Stream Differential Chaos Shift Keying Communications Exploiting Chaotic Shape Forming Filter and Sequence Mapping

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    ACKNOWLEDGMENT This research have been supported in part by the Scientific and Technological Innovation Leading Talents Program of Shaanxi Province, China Postdoctoral Science Foundation Funded Project (2020M673349), Open Research Fund from Shaanxi Key Laboratory of Complex System Control and Intelligent Information Processing (2020CP02)Peer reviewedPostprin

    The IPTS Report No. 81, February 2004

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    A numerical-analytical iterative method for solving an electrical oscillator equation

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    The Hunt for Privacy Harms After \u3ci\u3eSpokeo\u3c/i\u3e

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    In recent years, due both to hacks that have leaked the personal information of hundreds of millions of people and to concerns about government surveillance, Americans have become more aware of the harms that can accompany the widespread collection of personal data. However, the law has not yet fully developed to recognize the concrete privacy harms that can result from what otherwise seems like ordinary economic activity involving the widespread aggregation and compilation of data. This Note examines cases in which lower federal courts have applied the Supreme Court’s directions for testing the concreteness of alleged intangible privacy injuries, and in particular how that inquiry has affected plaintiffs’ suits under statutes that implicate privacy concerns. This Note proposes that, in probing the concreteness of these alleged privacy harms, the courts, through the doctrine of standing, are engaging in work that could serve to revitalize the judiciary’s long-dormant analysis of the nature of privacy harms. It suggests that courts should look beyond the four traditional privacy torts to find standing for plaintiffs who bring claims against entities that collect and misuse personal information. This Note urges courts to make use of a nexus approach to identify overlapping privacy concerns sufficient for standing, which would allow the federal judiciary to more adequately address emerging privacy harms

    The Internet and the Project of Communications Law

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    The internet offers the potential for economic growth stemming from online human communications, but recent industry and government actions have disfavored these possibilities by treating the internet like a content-delivery supply chain. This article recommends that the internet be at the center of communications policy and that laws affecting internet access be evaluated in terms of whether they further U.S. economic growth by facilitating increased emergent online diversity. It criticizes the nearly exclusive focus of communications policy on the private economic success of infrastructure and “application” providers, and suggests that communications policy be focused on facilitating communications themselves
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