1,113 research outputs found
Service Discovery Suite for User-Centric Service Creation
Two emerging trends are impacting the CIT world: service
orientation and user centricity. The OPUCE project aims at
developing a platform to mix together both philosophies into an
environment where end-users are capable of building highly
personalized services integrating Information Technologies and
communication capabilities. Such a platform has the potential to
become an open marketplace in order for telco operators to
implement innovative business models, and as such imposes
specific requirements over the discovery mechanisms to help users
locate services fitting their needs. This paper presents the
discovery suite implemented in the OPUCE platform
Prospects of Mobile Search
Search faces (at least) two major challenges. One is to improve efficiency of retrieving relevant content for all digital formats (images, audio, video, 3D shapes, etc). The second is making relevant information retrievable in a range of platforms, particularly in high diffusion ones as mobiles. The two challenges are interrelated but distinct. This report aims at assessing the potential of future Mobile Search. Two broad groups of search-based applications can be identified. The first one is the adaptation and emulation of web search processes and services to the mobile environment. The second one is services exploiting the unique features of the mobile devices and the mobile environments. Examples of these context-aware services include location-based services or interfacing to the internet of things (RFID networks).
The report starts by providing an introduction to mobile search. It highlights differences and commonalities with search technologies on other platforms (Chapter 1). Chapter 2 is devoted to the supply side of mobile search markets. It describes mobile markets, presents key figures and gives an outline of main business models and players. Chapter 3 is dedicated to the demand side of the market. It studies users¿ acceptance and demand using the results on a case study in Sweden. Chapter 4 presents emerging trends in technology and markets that could shape mobile search. It is the author's view after discussing with many experts. One input to this discussion was the analysis of on forward-looking scenarios for mobile developed by the authors (Chapter 5). Experts were asked to evaluate these scenarios. Another input was a questionnaire to which 61 experts responded. Drivers, barriers and enablers for mobile search have been synthesised into SWOT analysis. The report concludes with some policy recommendations in view of the likely socio-economic implications of mobile search in Europe.JRC.DG.J.4-Information Societ
Incrementando as redes centradas à informaçãopara uma internet das coisas baseada em nomes
The way we use the Internet has been evolving since its origins. Nowadays,
users are more interested in accessing contents and services with high demands
in terms of bandwidth, security and mobility. This evolution has triggered
the emergence of novel networking architectures targeting current, as
well as future, utilisation demands. Information-Centric Networking (ICN) is a
prominent example of these novel architectures that moves away from the current
host-centric communications and centres its networking functions around
content.
Parallel to this, new utilisation scenarios in which smart devices interact with
one another, as well as with other networked elements, have emerged to constitute
what we know as the Internet of Things (IoT). IoT is expected to have
a significant impact on both the economy and society. However, fostering the
widespread adoption of IoT requires many challenges to be overcome. Despite
recent developments, several issues concerning the deployment of IPbased
IoT solutions on a large scale are still open.
The fact that IoT is focused on data and information rather than on point-topoint
communications suggests the adoption of solutions relying on ICN architectures.
In this context, this work explores the ground concepts of ICN
to develop a comprehensive vision of the principal requirements that should
be met by an IoT-oriented ICN architecture. This vision is complemented with
solutions to fundamental issues for the adoption of an ICN-based IoT. First,
to ensure the freshness of the information while retaining the advantages of
ICN’s in-network caching mechanisms. Second, to enable discovery functionalities
in both local and large-scale domains. The proposed mechanisms are
evaluated through both simulation and prototyping approaches, with results
showcasing the feasibility of their adoption. Moreover, the outcomes of this
work contribute to the development of new compelling concepts towards a
full-fledged Named Network of Things.A forma como usamos a Internet tem vindo a evoluir desde a sua criação.
Atualmente, os utilizadores estão mais interessados em aceder a conteúdos
e serviços, com elevados requisitos em termos de largura de banda, segurança
e mobilidade. Esta evolução desencadeou o desenvolvimento de novas
arquiteturas de rede, visando os atuais, bem como os futuros, requisitos de
utilização. As Redes Centradas à Informação (Information-Centric Networking
- ICN) são um exemplo proeminente destas novas arquiteturas que, em vez
de seguirem um modelo de comunicação centrado nos dispositivos terminais,
centram as suas funções de rede em torno do próprio conteúdo.
Paralelamente, novos cenários de utilização onde dispositivos inteligentes interagem
entre si, e com outros elementos de rede, têm vindo a aparecer e
constituem o que hoje conhecemos como a Internet das Coisas (Internet of
Things - IoT ). É esperado que a IoT tenha um impacto significativo na economia
e na sociedade. No entanto, promover a adoção em massa da IoT ainda
requer que muitos desafios sejam superados. Apesar dos desenvolvimentos
recentes, vários problemas relacionados com a adoção em larga escala de
soluções de IoT baseadas no protocolo IP estão em aberto.
O facto da IoT estar focada em dados e informação, em vez de comunicações
ponto-a-ponto, sugere a adoção de soluções baseadas em arquiteturas
ICN. Neste sentido, este trabalho explora os conceitos base destas soluções
para desenvolver uma visão completa dos principais requisitos que devem ser
satisfeitos por uma solução IoT baseada na arquitetura de rede ICN. Esta visão
é complementada com soluções para problemas cruciais para a adoção
de uma IoT baseada em ICN. Em primeiro lugar, assegurar que a informação
seja atualizada e, ao mesmo tempo, manter as vantagens do armazenamento
intrínseco em elementos de rede das arquiteturas ICN. Em segundo lugar,
permitir as funcionalidades de descoberta não só em domínios locais, mas
também em domínios de larga-escala. Os mecanismos propostos são avaliados
através de simulações e prototipagem, com os resultados a demonstrarem
a viabilidade da sua adoção. Para além disso, os resultados deste
trabalho contribuem para o desenvolvimento de conceitos sólidos em direção
a uma verdadeira Internet das Coisas baseada em Nomes.Programa Doutoral em Telecomunicaçõe
CHORUS Deliverable 2.1: State of the Art on Multimedia Search Engines
Based on the information provided by European projects and national initiatives related to multimedia search as well as domains experts that participated in the CHORUS Think-thanks and workshops, this document reports on the state of the art related to multimedia content search from, a technical, and socio-economic perspective.
The technical perspective includes an up to date view on content based indexing and retrieval technologies, multimedia search in the context of mobile devices and peer-to-peer networks, and an overview of current evaluation and benchmark inititiatives to measure the performance of multimedia search engines.
From a socio-economic perspective we inventorize the impact and legal consequences of these technical advances and point out future directions of research
Peer-to-peer, multi-agent interaction adapted to a web architecture
The Internet and Web have brought in a new era of information sharing and opened
up countless opportunities for people to rethink and redefine communication. With
the development of network-related technologies, a Client/Server architecture has become
dominant in the application layer of the Internet. Nowadays network nodes
are behind firewalls and Network Address Translations, and the centralised design of
the Client/Server architecture limits communication between users on the client side.
Achieving the conflicting goals of data privacy and data openness is difficult and in
many cases the difficulty is compounded by the differing solutions adopted by different
organisations and companies. Building a more decentralised or distributed environment
for people to freely share their knowledge has become a pressing challenge
and we need to understand how to adapt the pervasive Client/Server architecture to this
more fluid environment.
This thesis describes a novel framework by which network nodes or humans can interact
and share knowledge with each other through formal service-choreography specifications
in a decentralised manner. The platform allows peers to publish, discover
and (un)subscribe to those specifications in the form of Interaction Models (IMs). Peer
groups can be dynamically formed and disbanded based on the interaction logs of
peers. IMs are published in HTML documents as normal Web pages indexable by
search engines and associated with lightweight annotations which semantically enhance
the embedded IM elements and at the same time make IM publications comply
with the Linked Data principles. The execution of IMs is decentralised on each peer via
conventional Web browsers, potentially giving the system access to a very large user
community. In this thesis, after developing a proof-of-concept implementation, we
carry out case studies of the resulting functionality and evaluate the implementation
across several metrics.
An increasing number of service providers have began to look for customers proactively,
and we believe that in the near future we will not search for services but rather
services will find us through our peer communities. Our approaches show how a
peer-to-peer architecture for this purpose can be obtained on top of a conventional
Client/Server Web infrastructure
NoSQL Data Stores In Publish/Subscribe-Based RESTful Web Services
In the era of mobile cloud computing, the consumption of virtualized software and Web-based services from super-back-end infrastructure using smartphones and tablets is gaining much research attention from both the industry and academia. Nowadays, these mobile devices generate and access multimedia data hosted in social media and other sources in order to enhance the users’ multimedia experience. However, multimedia data is unstructured which can lead to challenges with data synchronization between these mobile devices and the cloud computing back-end. The issue with data synchronization is further fueled by the fact that mobile devices can experience intermittent connectivity losses due to unstable wireless bandwidths. While previous works proposed Simple Object Access Protocol (SOAP) -based middleware for the Web services’ synchronization, this approach is not efficient in a mobile environment because the SOAP protocol is verbose. Thus, the Representational State Transfer (REST) standard has been proposed recently to model the Web services since it is lightweight.
This thesis proposes a novel approach for implementing a REST-based mobile Web Service for multimedia file sharing that utilizes a channel-based publish/subscribe communication scheme to synchronize smartphone or tablet-hosted NoSQL databases with a cloud-hosted NoSQL database. This thesis evaluates the synchronicity and the scalability of a prototype system that was implemented according to this approach. Also, this thesis assesses the overhead of the middleware component of the system
ICE-B 2010:proceedings of the International Conference on e-Business
The International Conference on e-Business, ICE-B 2010, aims at bringing together researchers and practitioners who are interested in e-Business technology and its current applications. The mentioned technology relates not only to more low-level technological issues, such as technology platforms and web services, but also to some higher-level issues, such as context awareness and enterprise models, and also the peculiarities of different possible applications of such technology. These are all areas of theoretical and practical importance within the broad scope of e-Business, whose growing importance can be seen from the increasing interest of the IT research community. The areas of the current conference are: (i) e-Business applications; (ii) Enterprise engineering; (iii) Mobility; (iv) Business collaboration and e-Services; (v) Technology platforms. Contributions vary from research-driven to being more practical oriented, reflecting innovative results in the mentioned areas. ICE-B 2010 received 66 submissions, of which 9% were accepted as full papers. Additionally, 27% were presented as short papers and 17% as posters. All papers presented at the conference venue were included in the SciTePress Digital Library. Revised best papers are published by Springer-Verlag in a CCIS Series book
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