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Table 2: MSC SystemInterface_SetUp

in Pattern-based Configuring of a Customized Resource Reservation Protocol with SDL
by Birgit Geppert, Frank Rößler
"... In PAGE 11: ... The calling user provides both with the connection setup request. The service primitives are listed in Table2 :. Thereby the flowspec parameter specifies the QoS requirements comprising the values: minimum packet interarrival time, maximum packet length and maximum end-to-end delay.... ..."

Table 1 : Present ESA Telemetry Services, Corresponding SLE Services and Their Relevance for

in Directorate of Thechnical and Operational Support
by Paolo Maldari, Wolfgang Hell
"... In PAGE 5: ... As such, INTEGRAL will be the first demonstration mission for this technology, which is also planned to be adopted for all future missions requiring inter-agency cross-support. Out of the set of Space Link Extension (SLE) services in figures 2 and 3 above, the services required for the INTEGRAL support are quoted in Table1 for the downlink and in Table 2 for the uplink. Figures 6 and 7 present the logical decomposition of the Space Link into downlink data streams, and the logical build-up of uplink data streams into the Forward Space Link.... ..."

Table 3: Sub-period Statistics Period All Ordinaries Index Equally weighted portfolio Growth Volatility Growth Volatility

in Growth Optimal Investment Strategy Efficacy: An application on long run Australian equity data
by B.F. Hunt
"... In PAGE 8: ... Table3 sets out estimates of the average growth and volatility of growth, for the two benchmark series, for the five equal sub-periods that make up the overall data set period. Casual analysis of the range of sub-period estimates suggests parameter instability.... ..."

Table I: IT Industry-Sector-wise break-up(% GROWTH )

in Efficient Distance Computation Between Natural Quadrics
by Mustafa S. Fawad, Mustafa Atika, Asad Ali Shaikh, Tabasum Abbasi, Muhammad Iqbal Bhatti, Mustafa S. Fawad, Muhammad Asad Khan, Yasir Irshad Abassi, Imran Baig, Hadi Ejaz Ahmed, Muhammad Hafeez, Zaigham Mahmood, M. A. Ansari, S. Tauseef Ur Rehman, Mustafa S. Fawad, Mustafa Atika

Table 7: Growth of demand curves for energy services (average annual growth rate)

in How to achieve the Kyoto Target in Belgium - modelling methodology and some results -
by Naamsestraat B- Leuven, Stef Proost, Denise Van Regemorter, Ces- Kuleuven

Table 3 Predicting the Proposition 209 Vote Democrats Non-Democrats

in Structural Shifts Deterministic Regime Switching in Aggregate Data Analysis
by Wendy K. Tam Cho

Table III, Comparison of Democratic Innovations

in Date
by Elliot David Shuford, Valley Wisdom Council, Marc A. Schlossberg 2004

Table 1: Examples of firm-sponsored open source projects

in Contrasting Community Building in Sponsored and Community Founded Open Source Projects
by Joel West, Siobhán O'Mahony 2005
"... In PAGE 3: ... Two of the earliest projects were founded in 1998 when Netscape formed the Mozilla project and when IBM released its Java compiler to create the Jikes project. Table1 provides examples of such firm-sponsored spinouts. The concept of sponsored projects could equally apply to public or non-profit sponsors.... ..."
Cited by 11

Table 1. Figure 2 shows the distribution of the number of clients measured by each of the 47 traceroute gateways. Most of the traceroute gateways measured hop-counts to more than 40,000 clients.

in Hop-Count Filtering: An Effective Defense Against Spoofed DDoS Traffic
by Cheng Jin, Haining Wang, Kang G. Shin
"... In PAGE 4: ...Sample Number Commercial sites 11 Educational sites 4 Non-profit sites 2 Foreign sites 18 .net sites 12 Table1 : Diversity of traceroute gateway locations. To obtain actual hop-count distributions, we use the raw traceroute data from 50 different traceroute gate- ways in [11].... ..."

Table 3: Productivity Growth Rates 1962-1998 (% per annum)

in Disclaimer
by R W M Johnson, R N Forbes, Publications Officer 2000
"... In PAGE 3: ...Contents Page Foreword ii The Rate of Return to New Zealand Research and Development Investment 1 Introduction 1 Building the Data Set 2 Table 1: Investment in R amp;D in New Zealand (1962-98 $m) 3 The Production Function Approach to the Rate of Return on R amp;D 4 Table 2: Real Estimates of R amp;D Stocks in New Zealand 1961-98 $82-83m 6 Productivity Performance 6 Figure 1: Components of National Productivity 7 Figure 2: TFP for Agriculture, Fishing and Forestry 7 Figure 3: TFP for Primary Processing, Manufacturing and Energy 8 Figure 4: TFP for Building, Transport and Services 8 Table3 : Productivity Growth Rates 1962-1998 (% per annum) 8 The Rate of Return to R amp;D 9 Table 4: Determinants of Total Factor Productivity 1962-98 9 Table 5: Rates of Return 10 Spillovers in Agriculture 10 Table 6: Sensitivity Analysis for Agriculture 11 Discussion 11 References 13 Technical Appendix: The Rate of Return to New Zealand Research and Development Investment 14 Definition of Capital Assets in Total Factor Productivity (TFP) 14 First look at rates of depreciation 14 Dropping non-significant variables 15 Distributed Lags in the R amp;D Stocks 15 The Cobb-Douglas specification: are factor shares approximated? 17 The Incentive to Invest in R amp;D 20 Glossary of Terms... In PAGE 11: ...8 62 67 72 77 82 87 92 97 Q/L index Q/K index TFP index The TFP indices for each of the 9 sectors are shown in Figures 2, 3, and 4. The rates of growth for each component in each sector are shown in Table3 . Agriculture is the best performer over the period concerned followed by Energy, Transport, Forestry and Processing.... ..."
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