462,970 research outputs found
Intelligent Coordination and Automation for Smart Home Accessories
Smarthome accessories are rapidly becoming more popular. Although many companies are making devices to take advantage of this market, most of the created smart devices are actually unintelligent. Currently, these smart home devices require meticulous, tedious configuration to get any sort of enhanced usability over their analog counterparts. We propose building a general model using machine learning and data science to automatically learn a user\u27s smart accessory usage to predict their configuration. We have identified the requirements, collected data, recognized the risks, implemented the system, and have met the goals we set out to accomplish
Device-Centric Monitoring for Mobile Device Management
The ubiquity of computing devices has led to an increased need to ensure not
only that the applications deployed on them are correct with respect to their
specifications, but also that the devices are used in an appropriate manner,
especially in situations where the device is provided by a party other than the
actual user. Much work which has been done on runtime verification for mobile
devices and operating systems is mostly application-centric, resulting in
global, device-centric properties (e.g. the user may not send more than 100
messages per day across all applications) being difficult or impossible to
verify. In this paper we present a device-centric approach to runtime verify
the device behaviour against a device policy with the different applications
acting as independent components contributing to the overall behaviour of the
device. We also present an implementation for Android devices, and evaluate it
on a number of device-centric policies, reporting the empirical results
obtained.Comment: In Proceedings FESCA 2016, arXiv:1603.0837
Intelligent Energy Optimization for User Intelligible Goals in Smart Home Environments
Intelligent management of energy consumption is one of the key issues for future energy distribution systems, smart buildings, and consumer appliances. The problem can be tackled both from the point of view of the utility provider, with the intelligence embedded in the smart grid, or from the point of view of the consumer, thanks to suitable local energy management systems (EMS). Conserving energy, however, should respect the user requirements regarding the desired state of the environment, therefore an EMS should constantly and intelligently find the balance between user requirements and energy saving. The paper proposes a solution to this problem, based on explicit high-level modeling of user intentions and automatic control of device states through the solution and optimization of a constrained Boolean satisfiability problem. The proposed approach has been integrated into a smart environment framework, and promising preliminary results are reporte
Network Neutrality: A Research Guide
The conclusion in a research handbook should emphasise the complexity of the problem than trying to claim a one-size-fits-all solution. I have categorised net neutrality into positive and negative (content discrimination) net neutrality indicating the latter as potentially harmful. Blocking content without informing customers appropriately is wrong: if it says ‘Internet service’, it should offer an open Internet (alongside walled gardens if that is expressly advertised as such). The issue of uncontrolled Internet flows versus engineered solutions is central to the question of a ‘free’ versus regulated Internet. A consumer- and citizen-orientated intervention depends on passing regulations to prevent unregulated nontransparent controls exerted over traffic via DPI equipment, whether imposed by ISPs for financial advantage or by governments eager to use this new technology to filter, censor and enforce copyright against their citizens. Unraveling the previous ISP limited liability regime risks removing the efficiency of that approach in permitting the free flow of information for economic and social advantage. These conclusions support a light-touch regulatory regime involving reporting requirements and co-regulation with, as far as is possible, market-based solutions. Solutions may be international as well as local, and international coordination of best practice and knowledge will enable national regulators to keep up with the technology ‘arms race’
PLACES'10: The 3rd Workshop on Programmng Language Approaches to concurrency and Communication-Centric Software
Paphos, Cyprus. March 201
Using Social Networks as a Catalyst for Change in Global Higher Education Marketing and Recruiting.
Higher education institutes (HEIs) throughout the world are
recognising the potential of using social networking as an outreach method for their marketing and recruiting campaigns and can serve as a catalyst for strategic change within the education sector. This study researched 90 universities in Asia, Africa and Europe to their use of social networking for educational recruiting and marketing. Results showed that HEIs in certain geographic areas do use it, but results are inconsistent among the globe. The innovative functionality provided by social networking has challenged HEI officials who may be inexperienced at utilising the full potential of these sites to better serve the school and its stakeholders. However, it is important that HEIs integrate the use of social media into their marketing programmes in order to better reach their intended audiences and provide for a more successful education experience for students
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