460 research outputs found

    A Strategic Response Through Distance Learning: A Case of The Arab Open University

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    The Arab countries of the Middle East and North Africa face the challenge of providing educational opportunities to various sections of society to be able to meet the needs of the changing labor markets. Indeed, incessant efforts have been made by the governments of these countries to develop the education sector rapidly. However, they still have a long way to go before the avowed objective of spreading education far and wide in these countries is met. This paper makes an attempt to examine and analyze a strategic response in the form of distance learning to the changing labor market needs in the Arab world with special reference to the establishment of the AOU, Kuwait Branch. The paper suggests a suitable strategy for ensuring cooperation between labor markets and education sector in the Arab world

    Influence of limestone filler and of the size of the aggregates on DEF

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    This experimental study aims to determine the effect of limestone filler on concrete expansion due to delayed ettringite formation (DEF). Different mortars made with different sizes and percentages of limestone filler and Portland cement CEM I 52.5N are conserved in water. The expansion of the specimens is measured. Results show that DEF is not inhibited by limestone filler. The kinetics and the amplitude of the swelling depend on the size of the limestone filler. The volume fraction of aggregates changes only the kinetics: the relation between swelling and water uptake depends only on the size of the aggregates.Comment: 16 pages, 9 figures, 4 table

    Concurrent Transmissions for Multi-hop Bluetooth 5

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    Bluetooth is an omnipresent communication technology, available on billions of connected devices today.While it has been traditionally limited to peer-to-peer and star network topology, the recent Bluetooth 5 standard introduces new operating modes to allow for increased reliability and Bluetooth Mesh supports multi-hop networking based on message flooding.In this paper, we present BlueFlood.It adapts concurrent transmissions, as introduced by Glossy, to Bluetooth.The result is fast and efficient network-wide data dissemination in multi-hop Bluetooth networks.Moreover, we show that BlueFlood floods can be reliably received by off-the-shelf Bluetooth devices such as smart phones, opening new applications of concurrent transmissions and seamless integration with existing technologies. We present an in-depth experimental feasibility study of concurrent transmissions over Bluetooth PHY in a controlled environment.Further, we build a small-scale testbed where we evaluate BlueFlood in real-world settings of a residential environment.We show that\ua0BlueFlood achieves 99% end-to-end delivery ratio in multi-hop networks with a duty cycle of 0.13% for 1-second intervals

    Paxos Made Wireless: Consensus in the Air

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    Many applications in low-power wireless networks require complex coordination between their members. Swarms of robots or sensors and actuators in industrial closed-loop control need to coordinate within short periods of time to execute tasks. Failing to agree on a common decision can cause substantial consequences, like system failures and threats to human life. Such applications require consensus algorithms to enable coordination. While consensus has been studied for wired networks decades ago, with, for example, Paxos and Raft, it remains an open problem in multi-hop low-power wireless networks due to the limited resources available and the high cost of established solutions.This paper presents Wireless Paxos, a fault-tolerant, network-wide consensus primitive for low-power wireless networks. It is a new flavor of Paxos, the most-used consensus protocol today, and is specifically designed to tackle the challenges of low-power wireless networks. By building on top of concurrent transmissions, it provides low-latency, high reliability, and guarantees on the consensus. Our results show that Wireless Paxos requires only 289 ms to complete a consensus between 188 nodes in testbed experiments. Furthermore, we show that Wireless Paxos\ua0stays consistent even when injecting controlled failures

    Synchronous and Concurrent Transmissions for Consensus in Low-Power Wireless

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    With the emergence of the Internet of Things, autonomous vehicles and the Industry 4.0, the need for dependable yet adaptive network protocols is arising. Many of these applications build their operations on distributed consensus. For example, UAVs agree on maneuvers to execute, and industrial systems agree on set-points for actuators.Moreover, such scenarios imply a dynamic network topology due to mobility and interference, for example. Many applications are mission- and safety-critical, too.Failures could cost lives or precipitate economic losses.In this thesis, we design, implement and evaluate network protocols as a step towards enabling a low-power, adaptive and dependable ubiquitous networking that enables consensus in the Internet of Things. We make four main contributions:- We introduce Orchestra that addresses the challenge of bringing TSCH (Time Slotted Channel Hopping) to dynamic networks as envisioned in the Internet of Things. In Orchestra, nodes autonomously compute their local schedules and update automatically as the topology evolves without signaling overhead. Besides, it does not require a central or distributed scheduler. Instead, it relies on the existing network stack information to maintain the schedules.- We present A2 : Agreement in the Air, a system that brings distributed consensus to low-power multihop networks. A2 introduces Synchrotron, a synchronous transmissions kernel that builds a robust mesh by exploiting the capture effect, frequency hopping with parallel channels, and link-layer security. A2 builds on top of this layer and enables the two- and three-phase commit protocols, and services such as group membership, hopping sequence distribution, and re-keying.- We present Wireless Paxos, a fault-tolerant, network-wide consensus primitive for low-power wireless networks. It is a new variant of Paxos, a widely used consensus protocol, and is specifically designed to tackle the challenges of low-power wireless networks. By utilizing concurrent transmissions, it provides a dependable low-latency consensus.- We present BlueFlood, a protocol that adapts concurrent transmissions to Bluetooth. The result is fast and efficient data dissemination in multihop Bluetooth networks. Moreover, BlueFlood floods can be reliably received by off-the-shelf Bluetooth devices such as smartphones, opening new applications of concurrent transmissions and seamless integration with existing technologies

    A comparison of the reclining women in Pompei house murals with the Greek Hetaira: an analytical study of archeaology and art

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    The Greek symposium – or drinking together – was characterised by the appearance among the men of a kind of woman called Hetaira, distinguished from the women of the age in general and other women allowed into symposia in particular by specific conditions. They attended in order to entertain the men, and their literary and artistic status was generally accepted as is clear from the pottery drawings on drinking vessels and from literary sources that cite them directly.In some Pompeii houses dating from 50 BC to 79 AD – the Lovers House and the Sofas House, for example – images of ladies reclining among drinking men in a way similar to the Greek symposia were found on the walls, even though there are no sources that indicate for sure the existence of this Greek habit in Roman society. Rather references are to the Roman convivium – or living together – which differed in its nature and composition from the Greek symposium and was restricted to men and all-male banquets; it is not clear whether any women attended.In this paper, assuming that the murals depict a real phenomenon, an attempt is made to work out who those Roman women were. By tracing literary sources (the texts are concerned with the presentation of the women of Rome and the presentation of the differences between them in an attempt to arrive at a term that may apply and fit with the women of Pompeii's houses) and analyze the surrounding environment for those paintings,then architecturally ( by explaining the house plans in which the paintings were found and the locations of those paintings in specific rooms of the house)and artistically (by linking those paintings to other paintings in the house or similar homes - as well as to some of the engravings found in homes) to find out why the status of these women was distinguished from the women of their time. On the couches and the participation of men in the pleasure and pleasure of the majlis from drinking and conversations in a position that society refused to show its women artistically in a position almost equal to that of a man in his majlis. By comparing them with the Hetaira women the many similarities with them will be clarified and the difference that distinguishes them from the Hetaira women in particular and the women of their era in general will be highlighted

    Thermochemistry and Kinetics of the Thermal Degradation of 2-Methoxyethanol as Possible Biofuel Additives

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    Oxygenated organic compounds derived from biomass (biofuel) are a promising alternative renewable energy resource. Alcohols are widely used as biofuels, but studies on bifunctional alcohols are still limited. This work investigates the unimolecular thermal degradation of 2-methoxyethanol (2ME) using DFT/BMK and ab initio (CBS-QB3 and G3) methods. Enthalpies of the formation of 2ME and its decomposition species have been calculated. Conventional transition state theory has been used to estimate the rate constant of the pyrolysis of 2ME over a temperature range of 298–2000 K. Production of methoxyethene via 1,3-H atom transfer represents the most kinetically favored path in the course of 2ME pyrolysis at room temperature and requires less energy than the weakest C α − C β simple bond fission. Thermodynamically, the most preferred channel is methane and glycoladhyde formation. A ninefold frequency factor gives a superiority of the C α − C β bond breaking over the C γ − O β bond fission despite comparable activation energies of these two processes. © 2019, The Author(s).Scopu

    Direct Optofluidic Measurement of the Lipid Permeability of Fluoroquinolones.

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    Quantifying drug permeability across lipid membranes is crucial for drug development. In addition, reduced membrane permeability is a leading cause of antibiotic resistance in bacteria, and hence there is a need for new technologies that can quantify antibiotic transport across biological membranes. We recently developed an optofluidic assay that directly determines the permeability coefficient of autofluorescent drug molecules across lipid membranes. Using ultraviolet fluorescence microscopy, we directly track drug accumulation in giant lipid vesicles as they traverse a microfluidic device while exposed to the drug. Importantly, our measurement does not require the knowledge of the octanol partition coefficient of the drug - we directly determine the permeability coefficient for the specific drug-lipid system. In this work, we report measurements on a range of fluoroquinolone antibiotics and find that their pH dependent lipid permeability can span over two orders of magnitude. We describe various technical improvements for our assay, and provide a new graphical user interface for data analysis to make the technology easier to use for the wider community.The work was supported by an ERC Consolidator grant “DesignerPores” awarded to UFK. JC acknowledges support from the BBSRC. MS was supported by the Friedrich Naumann Foundation for Freedom and the Swiss- European Mobility Programme. KAN was supported by the Erasmus Plus student exchange programme. SHA is supported by a Herchel Smith Postdoctoral Fellowship. SP acknowledges support from the Leverhulme Trust through an Early Career Fellowship (ECF-2013-444).This is the final version of the article. It first appeared from Nature Publishing Group at http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/srep32824

    Paxos Made Wireless: Consensus in the Air

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    Many applications in low-power wireless networks require complex coordination between their members. Swarms of robots or sensors and actuators in industrial closed-loop control need to coordinate within short periods of time to execute tasks. Failing to agree on a common decision can cause substantial consequences, like system failures and threats to human life. Such applications require consensus algorithms to enable coordination. While consensus has been studied for wired networks decades ago, with, for example, Paxos and Raft, it remains an open problem in multi-hop low-power wireless networks due to the limited resources available and the high cost of established solutions.This paper presents Wireless Paxos, a fault-tolerant, network-wide consensus primitive for low-power wireless networks. It is a new flavor of Paxos, the most-used consensus protocol today, and is specifically designed to tackle the challenges of low-power wireless networks. By building on top of concurrent transmissions, it provides low-latency, high reliability, and guarantees on the consensus. Our results show that Wireless Paxos requires only 289 ms to complete a consensus between 188 nodes in testbed experiments. Furthermore, we show that Wireless Paxos\ua0stays consistent even when injecting controlled failures
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