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Table 5. Inventory of Equipment Found in Cabinets in a Co-location Hosting Facility

in Energy Needs In An Internet Economy: A Closer Look At Data Centers
by Jennifer D. Mitchell-jackson, Daniel M. Kammen Date, Jonathan G. Koomey Date, Kate Blake Date, Jennifer Mitchell-jackson 2001
"... In PAGE 30: ... One third of these severs were 2U servers. While the data in Table5 give a sense of the types of equipment in this space, I did not try to estimate power consumption based on this information because the energy demands vary depending on the internal configuration of the equipment. While servers generally use less power per unit area than routers, one 4U server may require significantly more power ... ..."
Cited by 17

Table 2: Survey of CSCW contributions from 1998 to 2004 in the Time/Space matrix Co-located Remote

in Research proposal: Designing technological support for information flow during shift change
by Charlotte Tang 2006
"... In PAGE 5: ...ixed mode of communications in these dimensions (Dix et al., 1998; Tang et al., 2005). Thus far, most work had been done to develop groupware to support distributed collaboration as indicated in the survey conducted by Schmidt et al. (1998) on the contributions made to the Computer-Supported Cooperative Work (CSCW) conferences from 1986 to 1996 (Table 1) as well as our own survey on the same conference publications from 1998 to 2004 ( Table2 ). These surveys, despite not being exhaustive, do cover the primary conference and give evidence of the under-exploration in the general area of co-located collaboration and the specific area of asynchronous co-located collaboration.... ..."
Cited by 1

TABLE III DETERMINING CO-LOCATED ROUTERS

in A Measurement Study of Internet Bottlenecks
by Ningning Hu Li, Li (erran Li, Zhuoqing Morley Mao, Peter Steenkiste, Jia Wang 2005
Cited by 4

Table 2 shows energy savings with co-location for seven SPECjvm98 benchmarks. For a 16K, direct mapped cache, average energy reduction of 21.36% (averaged over seven benchmarks) is observed. Figure 1 shows the absolute en-

in Energy Optimization Using Object Co-Location in Java
by S. Tomar, N. Vijaykrishnan, M. Kandemir, R. Shetty, M. J. Irwin
"... In PAGE 4: ... Table2 : Percentage energy reduction with the co- location scheme as compared to similar con gura- tion without co-location. For the three cache sizes of 16K, 32K, and 64K, values are shown for block sizes 32, 64, and 128, in that order.... ..."

Table. In Proc. of the International Workshop on

in Rapid Parser Development: A Machine Learning Approach for Korean
by Ulf Hermjakob 2000
Cited by 9

TABLE V AS CO-LOCATION INFORMATION OF EUROPEAN EPS EP # Co-located ASs Location

in Towards Capturing Representative AS-Level Internet Topologies
by Hyunseok Chang, Ramesh Govindan, Sugih Jamin, Scott J. Shenker, Walter Willinger 2002
Cited by 89

Table 4. Co-location patterns of the root Co-location RootofQuadTree

in Zonal Co-location Pattern Discovery with Dynamic Parameters
by Mete Celik, James M. Kang, Shashi Shekhar
"... In PAGE 4: ... Zone 1 and its buffer has no pattern. Table4 gives the patterns of the root node which is the unions of the patterns and instances of the child nodes of the root that are given in Table 3. Table 2.... ..."

TABLE V AS CO-LOCATION INFORMATION OF EUROPEAN EPS EP # Co-located ASs Location

in Towards Capturing Representative AS-Level Internet Topologies
by Hyunseok Chang, Ramesh Govindan, Sugih Jamin, Scott J. Shenker, Walter Willinger

Table 1. Languages of communication in Vienna; self-reported (cf. Statistik Austria 2001)

in INTERNET EDITION AVAILABLE AT: HTTP://WWW.UNIVIE.AC.AT/ANGLISTIK/VIEWS.HTM CONTENTS LETTER FROM THE EDITORS..................................................................... 1
by Stefan Dollinger, Ursula Lutzky
"... In PAGE 15: ... For lt;Ee gt;, as a common vowel, this is less surprising than for lt;Ff gt;, which we have in initial, word-medial, as well as word-final positions in our text. For lt;Ff gt;, we get the following distribution in table 1: Table1 . Distribution of lt;Ff gt; position of lt;Ff gt; absolute count word-internal 7 word-final 3 word-initial 8 These 10, i.... In PAGE 80: ... The English-speaking groups, on the other hand, draw their pupils from the group of approximately 20 000 English speakers in Vienna (cp. Table1 ).15 That this is a much more heterogeneous conglomerate becomes already apparent when considering a few basic factors: many English speakers come to Vienna because of work commitments; they often stay for limited time periods; they represent many different nationalities and are often bi- or multilingual in various languages.... ..."

Table 5: Test pattern generation IDDQ statistics (standard cell) VLSI. In Proceedings of International Test Conference, pages 938{947. IEEE, 1990. [SM90] Thomas Storey and Wojciech Maly. CMOS bridging fault detection. In Proceedings of International Test Conference, pages 842{ 851. IEEE, 1990.

in Test Pattern Generation for Realistic Bridge Faults in CMOS ICs
by Joel Ferguson, Tracy Larrabee 1991
"... In PAGE 6: ... Possible solutions are to em- ploy IDDQ testing [Ack83], apply more accurate circuit simulation of faults, detect the bridge as a delay fault, or redesign the cells so that a discrepancy is guaran- teed for at least one input combination for each cell. In Table5 we show the results of our system generating IDDQ test patterns for same set of bridging faults that produced the results in Table 4. We also plan on integrating the testing for breaks on the interconnection lines, and the testing for defects within the cells to Carafe and Nemesis.... ..."
Cited by 41
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