Inicio Nosotros Búsquedas
Buscar en nuestra Base de Datos:     
Autor: Estrin, Deborah (Comienzo)
2 registros cumplieron la condición especificada en la base de información bciucla. ()
Registro 1 de 2, Base de información bciucla
Publicación seriada
Referencias AnalíticasReferencias Analíticas
Autor: Estrin, Deborah destrin@cs.ucla.edu
Oprima aquí para enviar un correo electrónico a esta dirección ; Heidemann, John ; Govindan, Ramesh ramesh@usc.edu
Oprima aquí para enviar un correo electrónico a esta dirección
Título: Embedding the Internet: introduction
Páginas/Colación: pp. 38-41
Communications of the ACM Vol. 43, no. 5 May 2000
Información de existenciaInformación de existencia

Resumen
This article focuses on various future prospects of the Internet

This article focuses on various future prospects of the Internet. The future networked computing systems will achieve a degree of sophistication and functionality that will make today's Internet appear primitive in comparison. It is indicated that technological advances will enable ubiquitous networked computing in one's day-to-day lives. In future, the application of computing technologies in settings where they are unusual today such as device and appliance networking in the home; faithful capture of scientific experiments in the laboratory and automated full-time monitoring of patient health. The Web already provides a standard interface that can be leveraged to integrate data harvested from these embedded systems. According to the article, most of these future visions are predicted on predictable advances in chip fabrication and radio and sensor design. It is concluded that regardless of which of these complementary visions of a future ubiquitous computing universe emerges first, and when they reveal themselves, it is expected that computing, communications, and the world at large will be changed profoundly by the impending revolution in embedded Internet devices.

Registro 2 de 2, Base de información bciucla
Publicación seriada
Referencias AnalíticasReferencias Analíticas
Autor: Szewczyk, Robert szewczyk@cs.berkeley.edu
Oprima aquí para enviar un correo electrónico a esta dirección ; Estrin, Deborah destrin@cs.ucla.edu
Oprima aquí para enviar un correo electrónico a esta dirección; Osterweil, Eric eoster@cens.uclaedu
Oprima aquí para enviar un correo electrónico a esta dirección; Polastre, Joseph polastre@cs.berkeley.edu
Oprima aquí para enviar un correo electrónico a esta dirección; Hamilton, Michael amm@intel-research.net
Oprima aquí para enviar un correo electrónico a esta dirección; Mainwaring, Alan director@jamesreserve.edu
Oprima aquí para enviar un correo electrónico a esta dirección
Título: Habitat Monitoring With Sensor Networks
Páginas/Colación: pp34-40.; 28 cm.; il
Communications of the ACM Vol. 47, no. 6 June 2004
Información de existenciaInformación de existencia

Resumen
Historically, the study of microclimate and habitat utilization have been largely observational, with climatic and behavioral variables being extrapolated from a few or even individual measurement sites. Today, densely deployed sensor networks are being scaled to the size of the organisms under study, sampling phenomena at frequencies the organisms encounter, and dispersed in patterns that capture the full range of environmental exposures to provide the fine-grain information needed for accurate modeling and prediction. Few themes permeate basic and applied ecological research to such an extent as the relationship of microclimate and ecological patterns, processes, physiology, and biological diversity. Microclimate can be defined as the climate close to surfaces, upon and beneath soils, under snow, in water, on living things, or even on individual animals. Organisms do not experience the average climate but a specific microclimate on a scale proportional to their size. The ecologist who relies on extrapolations from a few measurements at sites removed from the actual location of the study species risks failing to accurately measure the degree of microenvironmental variance that organisms experience.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

UCLA - Biblioteca de Ciencias y Tecnologia Felix Morales Bueno

Generados por el servidor 'bibcyt.ucla.edu.ve' (3.147.70.250)
Adaptive Server Anywhere (07.00.0000)
ODBC
Sesión="" Sesión anterior=""
ejecutando Back-end Alejandría BE 7.0.7b0 ** * *
3.147.70.250 (NTM) bajo el ambiente Apache/2.2.4 (Win32) PHP/5.2.2.
usando una conexión ODBC (RowCount) al manejador de bases de datos..
Versión de la base de información bciucla: 7.0.0 (con listas invertidas [2.0])

Cliente: 3.147.70.250
Salida con Javascript


** Back-end Alejandría BE 7.0.7b0 *