89 research outputs found

    The State of the Electronic Identity Market: Technologies, Infrastructure, Services and Policies

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    Authenticating onto systems, connecting to mobile networks and providing identity data to access services is common ground for most EU citizens, however what is disruptive is that digital technologies fundamentally alter and upset the ways identity is managed, by people, companies and governments. Technological progress in cryptography, identity systems design, smart card design and mobile phone authentication have been developed as a convenient and reliable answer to the need for authentication. Yet, these advances ar enot sufficient to satisfy the needs across people's many spheres of activity: work, leisure, health, social activities nor have they been used to enable cross-border service implementation in the Single Digital Market, or to ensure trust in cross border eCommerce. The study findings assert that the potentially great added value of eID technologies in enabling the Digital Economy has not yet been fulfilled, and fresh efforts are needed to build identification and authentication systems that people can live with, trust and use. The study finds that usability, minimum disclosure and portability, essential features of future systems, are at the margin of the market and cross-country, cross-sector eID systems for business and public service are only in their infancy. This report joins up the dots, and provides significant exploratory evidence of the potential of eID for the Single Digital Market. A clear understanding of this market is crucial for policy action on identification and authentication, eSignature and interoperability.JRC.DDG.J.4-Information Societ

    IP and ATM integration: A New paradigm in multi-service internetworking

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    ATM is a widespread technology adopted by many to support advanced data communication, in particular efficient Internet services provision. The expected challenges of multimedia communication together with the increasing massive utilization of IP-based applications urgently require redesign of networking solutions in terms of both new functionalities and enhanced performance. However, the networking context is affected by so many changes, and to some extent chaotic growth, that any approach based on a structured and complex top-down architecture is unlikely to be applicable. Instead, an approach based on finding out the best match between realistic service requirements and the pragmatic, intelligent use of technical opportunities made available by the product market seems more appropriate. By following this approach, innovations and improvements can be introduced at different times, not necessarily complying with each other according to a coherent overall design. With the aim of pursuing feasible innovations in the different networking aspects, we look at both IP and ATM internetworking in order to investigating a few of the most crucial topics/ issues related to the IP and ATM integration perspective. This research would also address various means of internetworking the Internet Protocol (IP) and Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM) with an objective of identifying the best possible means of delivering Quality of Service (QoS) requirements for multi-service applications, exploiting the meritorious features that IP and ATM have to offer. Although IP and ATM often have been viewed as competitors, their complementary strengths and limitations from a natural alliance that combines the best aspects of both the technologies. For instance, one limitation of ATM networks has been the relatively large gap between the speed of the network paths and the control operations needed to configure those data paths to meet changing user needs. IP\u27s greatest strength, on the other hand, is the inherent flexibility and its capacity to adapt rapidly to changing conditions. These complementary strengths and limitations make it natural to combine IP with ATM to obtain the best that each has to offer. Over time many models and architectures have evolved for IP/ATM internetworking and they have impacted the fundamental thinking in internetworking IP and ATM. These technologies, architectures, models and implementations will be reviewed in greater detail in addressing possible issues in integrating these architectures s in a multi-service, enterprise network. The objective being to make recommendations as to the best means of interworking the two in exploiting the salient features of one another to provide a faster, reliable, scalable, robust, QoS aware network in the most economical manner. How IP will be carried over ATM when a commercial worldwide ATM network is deployed is not addressed and the details of such a network still remain in a state of flux to specify anything concrete. Our research findings culminated with a strong recommendation that the best model to adopt, in light of the impending integrated service requirements of future multi-service environments, is an ATM core with IP at the edges to realize the best of both technologies in delivering QoS guarantees in a seamless manner to any node in the enterprise

    Managing data on the World Wide Web : state of the art survey of innovative tools and techniques

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    Thesis (M.S.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Civil and Environmental Engineering, 1995.Includes bibliographical references (p. 96-102).by Prasanth Duvvur.M.S

    Air Traffic Management Abbreviation Compendium

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    As in all fields of work, an unmanageable number of abbreviations are used today in aviation for terms, definitions, commands, standards and technical descriptions. This applies in general to the areas of aeronautical communication, navigation and surveillance, cockpit and air traffic control working positions, passenger and cargo transport, and all other areas of flight planning, organization and guidance. In addition, many abbreviations are used more than once or have different meanings in different languages. In order to obtain an overview of the most common abbreviations used in air traffic management, organizations like EUROCONTROL, FAA, DWD and DLR have published lists of abbreviations in the past, which have also been enclosed in this document. In addition, abbreviations from some larger international projects related to aviation have been included to provide users with a directory as complete as possible. This means that the second edition of the Air Traffic Management Abbreviation Compendium includes now around 16,500 abbreviations and acronyms from the field of aviation

    East Lancashire Research 2008

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    East Lancashire Research 200

    An infrastructure for context-dependent RDF data replication on mobile devices

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    Der im Rahmen dieser Arbeit vorgestellte Ansatz beschreibt die Erstellung einer technischen Infrastruktur, die selektiv RDF-Daten in AbhĂ€ngigkeit der InformationsbedĂŒrfnisse und den unterschiedlichen Kontexten mobiler Nutzer auf ein mobiles EndgerĂ€t repliziert und diese somit in intelligenter Art und Weise unterstĂŒtzt. Eine ZusammenfĂŒhrung kontextspezifischer Konzepte und semantischer Technologien stellt einen wesentlichen Bestandteil zur Verbesserung der mobilen Informationssuche dar und erhöht gleichzeitig die PrĂ€zision mobiler Informationsgewinnungsprozesse. Trotz des vorhandenen Potentials einer proaktiven, kontextabhĂ€ngigen Replizierung von RDF-Daten, gestaltet sich die Verarbeitung auf mobilen EndgerĂ€ten schwierig. Die GrĂŒnde dafĂŒr liegen in den technischen und netzwerkspezifischen BeschrĂ€nkungen, in der fehlenden Verarbeitungs- und VerwaltungsfunktionalitĂ€t von ontologiebasierten Beschreibungsverfahren sowie in der UnzulĂ€nglichkeit bestehender ReplikationsansĂ€tze, sich an verĂ€ndernde InformationsbedĂŒrfnisse sowie an unterschiedliche technische, umgebungsspezifische und infrastrukturbezogene Eigenheiten anzupassen. VerstĂ€rkt wird diese Problematik durch das Fehlen ausdrucksstarker Beschreibungsverfahren zur ReprĂ€sentation kontextspezifischer Daten. Existierende AnsĂ€tze leiden dementsprechend unter der Verwendung proprietĂ€rer Datenformate, dem Einsatz serverabhĂ€ngiger Applikationsinfrastrukturen sowie dem Unvermögen, kontextspezifische Daten auszutauschen. Dies Ă€ußert sich in Studien, welche die BerĂŒcksichtigung der InformationsbedĂŒrfnisse mobiler Nutzer als unzureichend einstuft und einen Großteil der benötigten Informationen als kontextrelevant auszeichnet. Obgleich Fortschritte bei der Adaption von semantischen Technologien und Beschreibungsverfahren zur kontextabhĂ€ngigen Verarbeitung zu erkennen sind, bleibt eine auf semantische Technologien basierende, proaktive Replizierung von RDF-Daten auf mobile EndgerĂ€te ein offenes Forschungsfeld. Die vorliegende Arbeit diskutiert Möglichkeiten zur Erweiterung der mobilen, kontextspezifischen Datenverarbeitung durch semantische Technologien und beinhaltet eine vergleichende Studie zur LeistungsfĂ€higkeit aktueller mobiler RDF-Frameworks. Kernpunkt ist die formale Beschreibung eines abstrakten Modells zur effizienten Akquise, ReprĂ€sentation, Verwaltung und Verarbeitung von Kontextinformationen unter BerĂŒcksichtigung der technischen Gegebenheiten mobiler Informationssysteme. ErgĂ€nzt wird es durch die formale Spezifikation eines nebenlĂ€ufigen, transaktionsbasierten Verarbeitungsmodells, welches VollstĂ€ndigkeits- und Konsistenzbedingungen auf Daten- und Prozessebene berĂŒcksichtigt. Der praktische Nutzen des vorliegenden Ansatzes wird anhand typischer InformationsbedĂŒrfnisse eines Wissensarbeiters demonstriert. Der Ansatz reduziert AbhĂ€ngigkeiten zu externen Systemen und ermöglicht Nutzern, unabhĂ€ngig von zeitlichen, örtlichen und netzwerkspezifischen Gegebenheiten, auf die fĂŒr sie relevanten Daten zuzugreifen und diese zu verarbeiten. Durch die lokale Verarbeitung kontextbezogener Daten wird sowohl die PrivatssphĂ€re des Nutzers gewahrt als auch sicherheitsrelevanten Aspekten Rechnung getragen.This work describes an infrastructure for the selective RDF data replication to mobile devices while considering current and future information needs of mobile users and the different contexts they are operating in. It presents a novel approach in synthesizing context-aware computing concepts with semantic technologies and distributed transaction management concepts for intelligently assisting mobile users while enhancing mobile information seeking behavior and increasing the precision of mobile information retrieval processes. Despite the huge potential of a proactive, context-dependent replication of RDF data, such data can not be efficiently processed on mobile devices due to (i) technical limitations and network-related constraints, (ii) missing processing and management capabilities of ontology-based description frameworks, (iii) the inability of traditional data replication strategies to adapt to changing user information needs and to consider technical, environmental, and infrastructural restrictions of mobile operating systems, and (iv) the dynamic and emergent nature of context, which requires flexible and extensible description frameworks that allow for elaborating on the semantics of contextual constellations as well as on the relationships that exist between them. As a consequence, existing approaches suffer from the deployment of proprietary data formats, server-dependent application infrastructures, and the inability to share and exchange contextual information across system borders. Moreover, results of recently conducted studies reveal that mobile users find their information needs inadequately addressed, where a large share can be attributed as context or context-relevant. Although progress has been made in applying semantic technologies, concepts, and languages to the domain of context-aware computing, a synthesis of those fields for the proactive provision of RDF data replicas on mobile devices remains an open research issue. This work discusses possible fields where context-aware computing can be enhanced using technologies, languages, and concepts from the Semantic Web and contains a comparative study about the performance of current mobile RDF frameworks in replication-specific tasks. The main contribution of this thesis is a formal description of an abstract model that allows for an efficient acquisition, representation, management, and processing of contextual information while taking into account the peculiarities and operating environments of mobile information systems. It is complemented by a formal specification of a concurrently operating transaction-based processing model that considers completeness and consistency requirements on data and process level. We demonstrate the practicability of the presented approach trough a prototypical implementation of context and data providers that satisfy typical information needs of a mobile knowledge worker. As a consequence, dependencies to external systems are reduced and users are equipped with relevant information that adheres to their information needs anywhere and at any time, independent of any network-related constraints. Since context-relevant data are processed directly on a mobile device, security and privacy issues are preserved

    NASA Capability Roadmaps Executive Summary

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    This document is the result of eight months of hard work and dedication from NASA, industry, other government agencies, and academic experts from across the nation. It provides a summary of the capabilities necessary to execute the Vision for Space Exploration and the key architecture decisions that drive the direction for those capabilities. This report is being provided to the Exploration Systems Architecture Study (ESAS) team for consideration in development of an architecture approach and investment strategy to support NASA future mission, programs and budget requests. In addition, it will be an excellent reference for NASA's strategic planning. A more detailed set of roadmaps at the technology and sub-capability levels are available on CD. These detailed products include key driving assumptions, capability maturation assessments, and technology and capability development roadmaps

    Journal of Telecommunications and Information Technology, 2006, nr 2

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