909 resultados para Database management -- Computer programs
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El presente TFC tiene dos objetivos principales: 1. Determinar el grado de adaptación de las metodologías ágiles al desarrollo de proyectos web puesta en contexto con la adaptación de las metodologías clásicas a este mismo entorno. 2. Realizar una clasificación de las metodologías de desarrollo de software según el grado de adaptación a los proyectos web.
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El nostre projecte, tracta de desenvolupar una aplicació que ha de proporcionar diverses utilitats de gestió per a un restaurant. Es gestionaran les reserves a través d'Internet, també es farà la gestió d'usuaris registrats i campanyes de publicitat per e-mail dirigides als mateixos. L'aplicació haurà de mantenir la base de dades dels clients registrats. El restaurant els hi farà arribar informació periòdica a traves de llistes de correu i campanyes puntuals que l'aplicació haurà de gestionar.La part privada de l'aplicació, ha de tractar l'accés de personal autoritzat. El personal autoritzat podrà fer el manteniment de diverses parts: els clients, les reserves, els menús, places disponibles,... També ha de permetre la gestió dels continguts de les llistes de correu i les campanyes de publicitat.La nostra aplicació, sobre la plataforma JEE, segueix el disseny en capes, concretament en les capes de presentació, negoci i dades. A la capa de presentació, s'han utilitzat les tecnologies de JSP, HTML i CSS intentant aconseguir una interfície gràfica que sigui entenedora i fàcil d'usar. Desitgem fer servir el patró Model Vista Controlador, per tal de separar la interfície d'usuari de la lògica de negoci, a tal efecte s'ha utilitzat el "framework" STRUTS. A la capa de negoci és on estarà el gruix de l'aplicació que s'executarà sobre un servidor d'aplicacions, que en el nostre cas serà el GlassFish.La capa de dades, fa servir el SGBD MySQL. Per interactuar amb la base de dades, s'ha fet servir el "framework", Hibernate, que ens permet tractar les taules de la base de dades com si fossin objectes Java ordinaris.
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El presente estudio se centra en la gestión de proyectos. Dentro de este ámbito el estudio girará entorno a las herramientas de gestión de proyectos que actualmente hay en el mercado destinadas a las grandes empresas.
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Gestió de projectes àgils quan es disposa d'equips distribuïts fisicament.
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Estudi comparatiu del mercat de les eines de gestió de projectes informàtics.
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El problema d'operacions (scheduling) és un procés de presa de decisions quejuga un paper molt important en organitzacions de manufactura i serveis, jaque té una aplicació a la producció, transport i distribució, i a la comunicaciói processament d'informació, entre d'altres. Consisteix en assignar d'unamanera apropiada els recursos disponibles per al processament de tasquesde manera que es puguin optimitzar els objectius de l’organització.Com cas particular de la programació d'operacions, hi ha la programacióde projectes (Project Scheduling), que és el procés de planificar, organitzari controlar activitats i recursos per aconseguir un objectiu concret, generalmentamb limitacions de temps, recursos o costos. Dins aquest grup essituen els problemes de programació de projectes (PSP), que és un nomgenèric que es dóna a tota una classe de problemes en els quals és necessàriala programació de manera òptima el temps, el cost i els recursos dels projectes.La finalitat d'aquest projecte és crear una plataforma RCPSP que puguillegir diferents formats d'entrada (fitxers del tipus :.rcp,.sch,.sm,.data,.pat),pre-processar-los, codificar-los a través de diferents modelitzacions (TaskRD,TimeRD...) per tal de poder-los passar a instàncies SMT i poder executar-losa través de la API de Yices. L'objectiu és trobar el temps d'inici percada activitat de manera que es minimitzi la longitud del makespan senseque es violin les restriccions.Cal dissenyar una aplicació en C++, que sigui escalable i que puguiaconseguir el resultat del problema en el temps més òptim possible
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La present memòria es centra en l'anàlisi comparatiu de les diferents eines de software per a la gestió de projectes dins del mercat.
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"CONF-770937. UC-13."
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Traffic Management system (TMS) comprises four major sub systems: The Network Database Management system for information to the passengers, Transit Facility Management System for service, planning, and scheduling vehicle and crews, Congestion Management System for traffic forecasting and planning, Safety Management System concerned with safety aspects of passengers and Environment. This work has opened a rather wide frame work of model structures for application on traffic. The facets of these theories are so wide that it seems impossible to present all necessary models in this work. However it could be deduced from the study that the best Traffic Management System is that whichis realistic in all aspects is easy to understand is easy to apply As it is practically difficult to device an ideal fool—proof model, the attempt here has been to make some progress-in that direction.
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Transportation Department, Washington, D.C.
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Transportation Department, Washington, D.C.
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With the proliferation of multimedia data and ever-growing requests for multimedia applications, there is an increasing need for efficient and effective indexing, storage and retrieval of multimedia data, such as graphics, images, animation, video, audio and text. Due to the special characteristics of the multimedia data, the Multimedia Database management Systems (MMDBMSs) have emerged and attracted great research attention in recent years. Though much research effort has been devoted to this area, it is still far from maturity and there exist many open issues. In this dissertation, with the focus of addressing three of the essential challenges in developing the MMDBMS, namely, semantic gap, perception subjectivity and data organization, a systematic and integrated framework is proposed with video database and image database serving as the testbed. In particular, the framework addresses these challenges separately yet coherently from three main aspects of a MMDBMS: multimedia data representation, indexing and retrieval. In terms of multimedia data representation, the key to address the semantic gap issue is to intelligently and automatically model the mid-level representation and/or semi-semantic descriptors besides the extraction of the low-level media features. The data organization challenge is mainly addressed by the aspect of media indexing where various levels of indexing are required to support the diverse query requirements. In particular, the focus of this study is to facilitate the high-level video indexing by proposing a multimodal event mining framework associated with temporal knowledge discovery approaches. With respect to the perception subjectivity issue, advanced techniques are proposed to support users' interaction and to effectively model users' perception from the feedback at both the image-level and object-level.
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In his discussion - Database As A Tool For Hospitality Management - William O'Brien, Assistant Professor, School of Hospitality Management at Florida International University, O’Brien offers at the outset, “Database systems offer sweeping possibilities for better management of information in the hospitality industry. The author discusses what such systems are capable of accomplishing.” The author opens with a bit of background on database system development, which also lends an impression as to the complexion of the rest of the article; uh, it’s a shade technical. “In early 1981, Ashton-Tate introduced dBase 11. It was the first microcomputer database management processor to offer relational capabilities and a user-friendly query system combined with a fast, convenient report writer,” O’Brien informs. “When 16-bit microcomputers such as the IBM PC series were introduced late the following year, more powerful database products followed: dBase 111, Friday!, and Framework. The effect on the entire business community, and the hospitality industry in particular, has been remarkable”, he further offers with his informed outlook. Professor O’Brien offers a few anecdotal situations to illustrate how much a comprehensive data-base system means to a hospitality operation, especially when billing is involved. Although attitudes about computer systems, as well as the systems themselves have changed since this article was written, there is pertinent, fundamental information to be gleaned. In regards to the digression of the personal touch when a customer is engaged with a computer system, O’Brien says, “A modern data processing system should not force an employee to treat valued customers as numbers…” He also cautions, “Any computer system that decreases the availability of the personal touch is simply unacceptable.” In a system’s ability to process information, O’Brien suggests that in the past businesses were so enamored with just having an automated system that they failed to take full advantage of its capabilities. O’Brien says that a lot of savings, in time and money, went un-noticed and/or under-appreciated. Today, everyone has an integrated system, and the wise business manager is the business manager who takes full advantage of all his resources. O’Brien invokes the 80/20 rule, and offers, “…the last 20 percent of results costs 80 percent of the effort. But times have changed. Everyone is automating data management, so that last 20 percent that could be ignored a short time ago represents a significant competitive differential.” The evolution of data systems takes center stage for much of the article; pitfalls also emerge.
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The World Wide Web (WWW) is useful for distributing scientific data. Most existing web data resources organize their information either in structured flat files or relational databases with basic retrieval capabilities. For databases with one or a few simple relations, these approaches are successful, but they can be cumbersome when there is a data model involving multiple relations between complex data. We believe that knowledge-based resources offer a solution in these cases. Knowledge bases have explicit declarations of the concepts in the domain, along with the relations between them. They are usually organized hierarchically, and provide a global data model with a controlled vocabulary, We have created the OWEB architecture for building online scientific data resources using knowledge bases. OWEB provides a shell for structuring data, providing secure and shared access, and creating computational modules for processing and displaying data. In this paper, we describe the translation of the online immunological database MHCPEP into an OWEB system called MHCWeb. This effort involved building a conceptual model for the data, creating a controlled terminology for the legal values for different types of data, and then translating the original data into the new structure. The 0 WEB environment allows for flexible access to the data by both users and computer programs.
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While multimedia data, image data in particular, is an integral part of most websites and web documents, our quest for information so far is still restricted to text based search. To explore the World Wide Web more effectively, especially its rich repository of truly multimedia information, we are facing a number of challenging problems. Firstly, we face the ambiguous and highly subjective nature of defining image semantics and similarity. Secondly, multimedia data could come from highly diversified sources, as a result of automatic image capturing and generation processes. Finally, multimedia information exists in decentralised sources over the Web, making it difficult to use conventional content-based image retrieval (CBIR) techniques for effective and efficient search. In this special issue, we present a collection of five papers on visual and multimedia information management and retrieval topics, addressing some aspects of these challenges. These papers have been selected from the conference proceedings (Kluwer Academic Publishers, ISBN: 1-4020- 7060-8) of the Sixth IFIP 2.6 Working Conference on Visual Database Systems (VDB6), held in Brisbane, Australia, on 29–31 May 2002.