90,534 research outputs found
A framework for accessible m-government implementation
The great popularity and rapid diffusion of mobile technologies at worldwide level has also been recognised by the public sector, leading to the creation of m-government. A major challenge for m-government is accessibility – the provision of an equal service to all citizens irrespective of their psychical, mental or technical capabilities. This paper sketches the profiles of six citizen groups: Visually Impaired, Hearing Impaired, Motor Impaired, Speech Impaired, Cognitive Impaired and Elderly. M-government examples that target the aforementioned groups are discussed and a framework for accessible m-government implementation with reference to the W3C Mobile Web Best Practices is proposed
Hymn to the heroes of Malta
Ä abra ta’ poeżiji u proża li tinkludi: Alla fil-ħolqien ta’ Ä użè Agius Bonello – Is-sena u l-bniedem ta’ Ä użè Ellul-Mercer – Li tiżra’ taħsad ta’ Vic. Apap – Huwa ta’ Gino Muscat-Azzopardi – Å»ewÄ¡ friefet ta’ Vincent Caruana – IÄ‹-Ä‹agħka ta’ Ä użè Borg – Warda midbiela ta’ C. Gauci – It-tfajla tas-sulfarini ta’ Albert M. Cassola – L-aħħar traduzzjoni ta’ May Butcher qabel ma mietet – Hymn to the heroes of Malta.N/
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Guest Speaker: Dr. Vincent Racaniello The Gerald M. Scherba Lecture
Guest Speaker: Dr. Vincent Racaniello
The Gerald M. Scherba Lecture
Communicating Scienc
Energy Harvesting Cooperative Networks: Is the Max-Min Criterion Still Diversity-Optimal?
This paper considers a general energy harvesting cooperative network with M
source-destination (SD) pairs and one relay, where the relay schedules only m
user pairs for transmissions. For the special case of m = 1, the addressed
scheduling problem is equivalent to relay selection for the scenario with one
SD pair and M relays. In conventional cooperative networks, the max-min
selection criterion has been recognized as a diversity-optimal strategy for
relay selection and user scheduling. The main contribution of this paper is to
show that the use of the max-min criterion will result in loss of diversity
gains in energy harvesting cooperative networks. Particularly when only a
single user is scheduled, analytical results are developed to demonstrate that
the diversity gain achieved by the max-min criterion is only (M+1)/2, much less
than the maximal diversity gain M. The max-min criterion suffers this diversity
loss because it does not reflect the fact that the source-relay channels are
more important than the relay-destination channels in energy harvesting
networks. Motivated by this fact, a few user scheduling approaches tailored to
energy harvesting networks are developed and their performance is analyzed.
Simulation results are provided to demonstrate the accuracy of the developed
analytical results and facilitate the performance comparison.Comment: 30 pages, 7 figure
Vincent Gover, Composition
Mottenquartett (2016); This is a Letter to the World (2015) / Text by Emily Dickinson; Stiller Freund (2012) / Text by R. M. Rilke; Two Songs / Text by Vincent Gover; from Troilus & Cressida: a musical comedy/history/tragedy (2015) / Text by Sara Romersberger; Alexander\u27s Song ; Ulysses\u27 Trio (PartI) ; The Light-Bearer (2016) / Text by Issac Young; *Note: [untitled chamber work] not performe
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