513 research outputs found
Tag recognition from panoramic scans of industrial facilities
CAD-based digital twins are commonly used by operators of process industry facilities to combine 3D models with external information and documentation. However, often a suitable model does not exist, and the plant operators must instead resort to laser scans with panoramic photos, which provide little to no metadata or information about their contents. Reading of equipment tags or other useful text from these scans could hugely increase their usefulness, as that information could be used to connect equipment to its documentation and other data. In this thesis, the feasibility of such extraction as a special case of deep learning text detection and recognition is studied.
This work contrasts practical requirements of industry with the theory and research behind text detection and recognition, with experiments conducted to confirm the feasibility of a potential application. It is found that the task is feasible from both business domain and deep learning perspectives. In practice, off-the-shelf text detection models generalize very well to the problem but integrating text recognition to build an end-to-end solution is found to require further work. End-to-end text recognition models appear promising in research, but rather uncommon in practical applications. Recent laser scans including color imagery are found suitable for the task and using them for recognition is found feasible; however, the usefulness of older scans remains unclear due to their poor quality. Deploying a successful practical solution is thus possible with modern scans but acquiring such scans may require collaboration with facility operators
Microservice API Evolution in Practice: A Study on Strategies and Challenges
Nowadays, many companies design and develop their software systems as a set
of loosely coupled microservices that communicate via their Application
Programming Interfaces (APIs). While the loose coupling improves
maintainability, scalability, and fault tolerance, it poses new challenges to
the API evolution process. Related works identified communication and
integration as major API evolution challenges but did not provide the
underlying reasons and research directions to mitigate them. In this paper, we
aim to identify microservice API evolution strategies and challenges in
practice and gain a broader perspective of their relationships. We conducted 17
semi-structured interviews with developers, architects, and managers in 11
companies and analyzed the interviews with open coding used in grounded theory.
In total, we identified six strategies and six challenges for REpresentational
State Transfer (REST) and event-driven communication via message brokers. The
strategies mainly focus on API backward compatibility, versioning, and close
collaboration between teams. The challenges include change impact analysis
efforts, ineffective communication of changes, and consumer reliance on
outdated versions, leading to API design degradation. We defined two important
problems in microservice API evolution resulting from the challenges and their
coping strategies: tight organizational coupling and consumer lock-in. To
mitigate these two problems, we propose automating the change impact analysis
and investigating effective communication of changes as open research
directions
Technological Change and the Design of Plant Variety Protection Regimes
In this paper, we examine the potential for plant variety protection ( PVP ) regimes—that is, sui generis, industry-specific intellectual property regimes—to become compromised as a result of technological change. In particular, we analyze the shift in plant breeding from phenotypic selection to genotypic selection, and consider the impact of that shift on existing plant variety protection. We also lay out an alternative structure for plant intellectual property protection based on unfair competition, a model that differs radically in some respects from current PVP schemes. We offer our model as a starting point for debate on adaptations that might improve PVP schemes, whether those adaptations be systemic or (more likely) incremental changes to existing rules and practices
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This thesis was submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy and awarded by Brunel University
Sixth Goddard Conference on Mass Storage Systems and Technologies Held in Cooperation with the Fifteenth IEEE Symposium on Mass Storage Systems
This document contains copies of those technical papers received in time for publication prior to the Sixth Goddard Conference on Mass Storage Systems and Technologies which is being held in cooperation with the Fifteenth IEEE Symposium on Mass Storage Systems at the University of Maryland-University College Inn and Conference Center March 23-26, 1998. As one of an ongoing series, this Conference continues to provide a forum for discussion of issues relevant to the management of large volumes of data. The Conference encourages all interested organizations to discuss long term mass storage requirements and experiences in fielding solutions. Emphasis is on current and future practical solutions addressing issues in data management, storage systems and media, data acquisition, long term retention of data, and data distribution. This year's discussion topics include architecture, tape optimization, new technology, performance, standards, site reports, vendor solutions. Tutorials will be available on shared file systems, file system backups, data mining, and the dynamics of obsolescence
National Agricultural Library: Digital Curation Plan
This report presents the observations, findings, and recommendations of the Agricultural Data Curation team at the University of Maryland’s College of Information Studies on digital curation and preservation at the National Agricultural Library (NAL). Through sustained engagement at the library involving the PI, postdoctoral fellows, and Masters fellows, we developed these recommendations for NAL to build an integrated and sustained digital preservation infrastructure which takes advantage of its position as one of the United States’ National Libraries and positions it to lead the USDA and agricultural community in providing next-generation information services.National Agricultural Librar
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