913 resultados para Ad Hoc Outreach Committee
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Includes bibliographical references.
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CIS Microfiche Accession Numbers: CIS 89 H261-4
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Shipping list no.: 92-0684-P.
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Shipping list no.: 93-0204-P.
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Shipping list no.: 93-0487-P.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Pt. 1 of a 3 pt. work. Pt. 2 has title: The quality of urban life.
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"Serial no. 96-52."
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Hearings held May 5-June 11, 1964.
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"United States Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Pacific Southwest Region"--Cover.
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Hearings held on S. 3418, 3633, 3116, 2810, and 2542.
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Abstract - Mobile devices in the near future will need to collaborate to fulfill their function. Collaboration will be done by communication. We use a real world example of robotic soccer to come up with the necessary structures required for robotic communication. A review of related work is done and it is found no examples come close to providing a RANET. The robotic ad hoc network (RANET) we suggest uses existing structures pulled from the areas of wireless networks, peer to peer and software life-cycle management. Gaps are found in the existing structures so we describe how to extend some structures to satisfy the design. The RANET design supports robot cooperation by exchanging messages, discovering needed skills that other robots on the network may possess and the transfer of these skills. The network is built on top of a Bluetooth wireless network and uses JXTA to communicate and transfer skills. OSGi bundles form the skills that can be transferred. To test the nal design a reference implementation is done. Deficiencies in some third party software is found, specifically JXTA and JamVM and GNU Classpath. Lastly we look at how to fix the deciencies by porting the JXTA C implementation to the target robotic platform and potentially eliminating the TCP/IP layer, using UDP instead of TCP or using an adaptive TCP/IP stack. We also propose a future areas of investigation; how to seed the configuration for the Personal area network (PAN) Bluetooth protocol extension so a Bluetooth TCP/IP link is more quickly formed and using the STP to allow multi-hop messaging and transfer of skills.