28 research outputs found

    Agent Based Intrusion Detection and Response System for Wireless LANs

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    Wireless LAN technology, despite the numerous advantages it has over competing technologies, has not seen widespread deployment. A primary reason for markets not adopting this technology is its failure to provide adequate security. Data that is sent over wireless links can be compromised with utmost ease. In this project, we propose a distributed agent based intrusion detection and response system for wireless LANs that can detect unauthorized wireless elements like access points, wireless clients that are in promiscuous mode etc. The system reacts to intrusions by either notifying the concerned personnel, in case of rogue access points and promiscuous nodes, or by blocking unauthorized users from accessing the network resources

    Relationship between morphology and tensile properties of pig hair fibre

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    The surface and cross-sectional features of hair fibres from four different breeds of pigs has been evaluated using scanning electron microscopy. The cross-section of the pig hair is modelled into an ellipse and the elliptical features of the fibre are correlated with its tensile properties. Surface scales in pig hair are arranged in imbricate type, crenate pattern and spaced at a mean distance of 4.58±0.24μm. Overall mean eccentricity, flattening, focus, area and angular eccentricity of pig hair fibre is found to be 0.60±0.09, 0.25±0.07, 195.16±33.68μm, and 0.06±0.01mm2 and 38.24±6.61 ° respectively. The ellipticity parameters are positively correlated with tensile properties (tenacity, extensibility, initial modulus and work of rupture) of the fibre. The specific flexural rigidity is negatively correlated with the ellipticity of the fibre, suggesting that the elliptical fibres may be more flexible than the fibres with circular cross-section

    Towards better utilization of NEXRAD data in hydrology: An overview of hydro-NEXRAD

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    With a very modest investment in computer hardware and the open-source local data manger (LDM) software from UCAR\u27s Unidata Program Center, an individual researcher can receive a variety of NEXRAD Level III gridded rainfall products, and the unprocessed Level II data in real-time from most NEXRAD radars. Additionally, the National Climatic Data Center has vast archives of these products and Level II data. Still, significant obstacles remain in order to unlock the full potential of the data. One set of obstacles is related to effective management of multi-terabyte data sets: storing, compressing, and backing up. A second set of obstacles, for hydrologists and hydrometeorologists in particular, is that the NEXRAD Level III products are not well suited for application in hydrology. There is a strong need for the generation of high-quality products directly from the Level II data with well-documented steps that include quality control, removal of false echoes, rainfall estimation algorithms with variety of corrections, coordinate conversion and georeferencing, conversion to a convenient data format(s), and integration with GIS. For hydrologists it is imperative that these procedures are basin-centered as opposed to radar-centered. Thirdly, the amount of data present in a multi-year, multi-radar dataset is such that simple cataloging and indexing of the data is not sufficient. Rather, sophisticated metadata extraction and management techniques are required. The authors describe and discuss the Hydro-NEXRAD software system that addresses the above three challenges. With support from the National Science Foundation through its ITR program, the authors are developing a basin-centered framework for addressing all these issues in a comprehensive manner, tailored specifically for use of NEXRAD data in hydrology and hydrometeorology. Through a flexible web interface users can search a large metadata database base, managed by a relational database, for subsets of interest. Well-chosen and documented defaults are provided for the flow from unprocessed NEXRAD data to basin-centered rainfall estimates at a desired space-time resolution. In addition to the web interface, there are web services that provide access to scripts and compiled programs. © 2007 ASCE

    4.4 INTERACTIVE MODELING AND VISUALIZATION IN UNDERGRADUATE SURVEY COURSES

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    Over the past decade, the paradigm for undergraduate education has shifted in focus fro

    13.19 THE WEATHER VISUALIZER, JAVA TM, HABANERO TM, AND THE FUTURE

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    University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign has developed a web-based visualization tool known as The Weather Visualizer (DAS, 1997), which allows users t

    The quest to control next-generation transport networks: The role of GMPLS

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    GLOBECOM - IEEE Global Telecommunications Conference342
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