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The process group approach to reliable distributed computing

by Kenneth P. Birman - Communications of the ACM , 1993
"... The difficulty of developing reliable distributed softwme is an impediment to applying distributed computing technology in many settings. Expeti _ with the Isis system suggests that a structured approach based on virtually synchronous _ groups yields systems that are substantially easier to develop, ..."
Abstract - Cited by 572 (19 self) - Add to MetaCart
The difficulty of developing reliable distributed softwme is an impediment to applying distributed computing technology in many settings. Expeti _ with the Isis system suggests that a structured approach based on virtually synchronous _ groups yields systems that are substantially easier to develop

ANALYSIS OF WIRELESS SENSOR NETWORKS FOR HABITAT MONITORING

by Joseph Polastre, Robert Szewczyk, Alan Mainwaring, David Culler, John Anderson , 2004
"... We provide an in-depth study of applying wireless sensor networks (WSNs) to real-world habitat monitoring. A set of system design requirements were developed that cover the hardware design of the nodes, the sensor network software, protective enclosures, and system architecture to meet the require ..."
Abstract - Cited by 1490 (19 self) - Add to MetaCart
We provide an in-depth study of applying wireless sensor networks (WSNs) to real-world habitat monitoring. A set of system design requirements were developed that cover the hardware design of the nodes, the sensor network software, protective enclosures, and system architecture to meet

The anatomy of the Grid: Enabling scalable virtual organizations.

by Ian Foster , • , Carl Kesselman , Steven Tuecke - The International Journal of High Performance Computing Applications , 2001
"... Abstract "Grid" computing has emerged as an important new field, distinguished from conventional distributed computing by its focus on large-scale resource sharing, innovative applications, and, in some cases, high-performance orientation. In this article, we define this new field. First, ..."
Abstract - Cited by 2673 (86 self) - Add to MetaCart
access, resource discovery, and other challenges. It is this class of problem that is addressed by Grid technologies. Next, we present an extensible and open Grid architecture, in which protocols, services, application programming interfaces, and software development kits are categorized according

Evolution in open source software: A case study

by Michael W. Godfrey, Qiang Tu - In Proc. of the 2000 IEEE Intl. Conference on Software Maintenance, ICSM ’00 , 2000
"... Most studies of software evolution have been performed on systems developed within a single company using traditional management techniques. With the widespread availability of several large software systems that have been developed using an “open source ” development approach, we now have a chance ..."
Abstract - Cited by 228 (20 self) - Add to MetaCart
Most studies of software evolution have been performed on systems developed within a single company using traditional management techniques. With the widespread availability of several large software systems that have been developed using an “open source ” development approach, we now have a chance

Model-integrated development of embedded software

by Gabor Karsai, Janos Sztipanovits, Akos Ledeczi, Ted Bapty - Proceedings of the IEEE , 2003
"... Proceedings of the IEEE January 2003 The paper describes a model-integrated approach for embedded software development that is based on domain-specific, multiple view models used in all phases of the development process. Models explicitly represent the embedded software and the environment it operat ..."
Abstract - Cited by 164 (33 self) - Add to MetaCart
Proceedings of the IEEE January 2003 The paper describes a model-integrated approach for embedded software development that is based on domain-specific, multiple view models used in all phases of the development process. Models explicitly represent the embedded software and the environment

Viewpoints: A Framework for Integrating Multiple Perspectives in System Development

by Finkelsetin Kramer Nuseibeh, A. Finkelsetin, A. Finkelstein, J. Kramer, J. Kramer, B. Nuseibeh, B. Nuseibeh, L. Finkelstein, L. Finkelstein, M. Goedicke, M. Goedicke - International Journal of Software Engineering and Knowledge Engineering , 1992
"... This paper outlines a framework which supports the use of multiple perspectives in system development, and provides a means for developing and applying systems design methods. The framework uses "viewpoints" to partition the system specification, the development method and the formal repre ..."
Abstract - Cited by 232 (46 self) - Add to MetaCart
representations used to express the system specifications. This VOSE (viewpoint-oriented systems engineering) framework can be used to support the design of heterogeneous and composite systems. We illustrate the use of the framework with a small example drawn from composite system development and give an account

Automated Consistency Checking of Requirements Specifications

by Constance L. Heitmeyer, Ralph D. Jeffords, Bruce G. Labaw , 1996
"... This paper describes a formal analysis technique, called consistency checking, for automatic detection of errors, such as type errors, nondeterminism, missing cases, and circular definitions, in requirements specifications. The technique is designed to analyze requirements specifications expressed i ..."
Abstract - Cited by 270 (33 self) - Add to MetaCart
This paper describes a formal analysis technique, called consistency checking, for automatic detection of errors, such as type errors, nondeterminism, missing cases, and circular definitions, in requirements specifications. The technique is designed to analyze requirements specifications expressed

Toward reference models for requirements traceability

by Bala Ramesh, Matthias Jarke - IEEE Trans. Softw. Eng. 2001
"... Requirements traceability is intended to ensure continued alignment between stakeholder requirements and system evolution. To be useful, traces must be organized according to some modeling framework. Indeed, several such frameworks have been proposed, mostly based on theoretical considerations or an ..."
Abstract - Cited by 272 (5 self) - Add to MetaCart
or analysis of other literature. This paper, in contrast, follows an empirical approach. Focus groups and interviews conducted in 26 major software development organizations demonstrate a wide range of traceability practices with distinct low-end and high-end users of traceability. From these observations

Integrating software into

by Emily Li - PRA,” 14th International Symposium on Software Reliability Engineering (ISSRE 2003 , 2003
"... Version 09-07-2009 Objectives: The course introduces a process approach to innovation, product development, manufacturing, and service applications. Models, modeling tools, solution approaches, and methodologies for analysis and improvement of processes, including the product development and manufac ..."
Abstract - Cited by 4 (0 self) - Add to MetaCart
Version 09-07-2009 Objectives: The course introduces a process approach to innovation, product development, manufacturing, and service applications. Models, modeling tools, solution approaches, and methodologies for analysis and improvement of processes, including the product development

MBT: A Memory-Based Part of Speech Tagger-Generator

by Walter Daelemans , Jakub Zavrel, Peter Berck, Steven Gillis - PROC. OF FOURTH WORKSHOP ON VERY LARGE CORPORA , 1996
"... We introduce a memory-based approach to part of speech tagging. Memory-based learning is a form of supervised learning based on similarity-based reasoning. The part of speech tag of a word in a particular context is extrapolated from the most similar cases held in memory. Supervised learning approac ..."
Abstract - Cited by 236 (56 self) - Add to MetaCart
-based tagging shares this advantage with other statistical or machine learning approaches. Additional advantages specific to a memory-based approach include (i) the relatively small tagged corpus size sufficient for training, (ii) incremental learning, (iii) explanation capabilities, (iv) flexible integration
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