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Was geschrieben ist, ist geschrieben – Legacy CICS-Anwendungen im neuen GewandStefan, Fred, Herrmann, Paul, Spruth, Wilhelm G. 01 February 2019 (has links)
Integrationsprojekte sind ein wichtiger Bestandteil einer anpassungsfähigen Informationstechnologie und für einen flexiblen Geschäftsbetrieb unumgänglich. Gerade im Großrechnerbereich besteht ein wachsender Bedarf an Modernisierungsmöglichkeiten für Altanwendungen. Dieser Artikel beleuchtet einen von IBM verfolgten Ansatz zur Modernisierung von Legacy-Anwendungen und diskutiert die nötigen Schritte, um Altanwendungen auf den neusten Stand zu bringen. Das Service Flow Feature (SFF) bietet einen interessanten Ansatz zur Modernisierung von Legacy CICS-Anwendungen (CICS: Customer Information Control System), weil bereits laufende Anwendungen weiterverwendet und in vorhandene Architekturen integriert werden können. Zudem werden bessere Modernisierungsmöglichkeiten bereitgestellt als lediglich die Anpassung der Oberfläche. Hinzu kommt, dass mehrere CICS-Anwendungen aggregiert werden können und die damit erzeugten Geschäftsprozesse über offene Schnittstellen erreichbar sind. Gleichzeitig findet eine Entkopplung der Präsentationslogik von der Anwendungslogik statt. Letzteres bietet dem Entwickler die Möglichkeit, modernere Methoden der Präsentationslogik wie z.B. mittels JSP zu implementieren. Über den Einsatz des CICS SFF in der Entwicklungsumgebung RDz besteht für Firmen kurz- bis mittelfristig die Chance, ihr Reservoire an Legacy CICS-Anwendungen mit relativ wenig Aufwand den modernen IT-Anforderungen anzupassen. / Integration projects are importent elements of a flexible information technology and essential for a flexible business concern. Current discussions show that even in the field of mainframe computing, an increasing need of modernisation possibilities for Legacy applications exist. This article highlights an IBM pursued method to modernize such applications and discusses the necessary steps to make them up-to-date again. The Service Flow Feature delivers an interesting modernization method for Legacy CICS (Customer Information Control System) applications because it reuses and integrates existing applications in available architectures. Furthermore it delivers more possibilities than only modernizing the user interface. In addition, it can aggregate multiple CICS applications, which forms business processes, that are accessible via open interfaces. At the same time, an uncoupling of the presentation logic from the application logic takes place.
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Comparing Mobile Applications' Energy ConsumptionWilke, Claas, Richly, Sebastian, Piechnick, Christian, Götz, Sebastian, Püschel, Georg, Aßmann, Uwe 17 January 2013 (has links)
As mobile devices are nowadays used regularly and everywhere, their energy consumption has become a central concern for their users. However, mobile applications often do not consider energy requirements and users have to install and try them to reveal information on their energy behavior. In this paper, we compare mobile applications from two domains and show that applications reveal different energy consumption while providing similar services. We define microbenchmarks for emailing and web browsing and evaluate applications from these domains. We show that non-functional features such as web page caching can but not have to have a positive influence on applications' energy consumption.
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Colloidal Semiconductor Nanoparticles as Functional Materials: Design, Assembly and ApplicationsLesnyak, Vladimir 29 January 2021 (has links)
This work summarizes results of about ten years of the author’s own research activities in the field of colloidal synthesis of semiconductor nanoparticles, their postsynthetic chemical modification, assembly, and applications. I attempted to provide a concise yet comprehensive overview presenting my own results as a part of the knowledge framework created in close collaboration with many colleagues from all over the world. This habilitation thesis consists of an introduction, explaining the motivation of the research accomplished, followed by a main part which briefly presents key achievements of the author with links to appropriate annexes, i.e. original published articles in peer review journals which are attached to this cumulative script, and completed by conclusions.
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Metal-Organic Frameworks in Germany: From Synthesis to FunctionEvans, Jack. D., Garai, Bikash, Reinsch, Helge, Li, Weijin, Disegna, Stefano, Bon, Volodymyr, Senkovska, Irena, Fischer, Roland A., Kaskel, Stefan, Janiak, Christoph, Stock, Norbert, Volkmer, Dirk 11 April 2022 (has links)
Metal–organic frameworks (MOFs) are constructed from a combination of inorganic and organic units to produce materials which display high porosity, among other unique and exciting properties. MOFs have shown promise in many wide ranging applications, such as catalysis and gas separations. In this review, we highlight MOF research conducted by Germany-based research groups. Specifically, we feature approaches for the synthesis of new MOFs, high-throughput MOF production, advanced characterization methods and examples of advanced functions and properties.:1. Introduction
2. Chemistry and materials
3. Towards an industrial scale
4. Advanced characterization
5. Advanced function
6. Conclusion
Acknowledgements
References
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Image-to-Geometry Registration on Mobile Devices – Concepts, Challenges and ApplicationsKröhnert, Melanie, Kehl, Christian, Litschke, Herbert, Buckley, Simon J. 21 February 2019 (has links)
Registering natural photos to existing 3D surface models, particularly on low-power mobile devices, gathers increasing attention to a variety of application domains. The paper discusses up-to-date computation insights of the technique, condensing available literature and knowledge obtained from experiments across multiple research groups. Challenges like
smartphone camera calibration or the sensor-based estimation of location and orientation are current research subjects, for which new data and experimental results are presented. Moreover, computing-related, practical challenges (e.g. device variability) are detailed to increase the technological understanding and reasoning on the limits of mobile devices. An overview of running projects utilising image-to-geometry registration methods shows the potential for mobile devices to, amongst others, improve flood hazard mitigation and hydrocarbon exploration with crowdsourced data.
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The Dresden Database Systems GroupLehner, Wolfgang 13 June 2023 (has links)
The Dresden Database Systems Group focuses on the advancement of data management techniques from a system level as well as information management perspective. With more than 15 PhD students the research group is involved in a variety of larger research projects ranging from activities to exploit modern hardware for scalable storage engines to advancing statistical methods for large-scale time series management. The group is visible at an international level as well as actively involved in cooperations with national and regional research partners
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Using Variability Management in Mobile Application Test ModelingPüschel, Georg, Seidl, Christoph, Schlegel, Thomas, Aßmann, Uwe 22 May 2014 (has links)
Mobile applications are developed to run on fast-evolving platforms, such as Android or iOS. Respective mobile devices are heterogeneous concerning hardware (e.g., sensors, displays, communication interfaces) and software, especially operating system functions. Software vendors cope with platform evolution and various hardware configurations by abstracting from these variable assets. However, they cannot be sure about their assumptions on the inner conformance of all device parts and that the application runs reliably on each of them—in consequence, comprehensive testing is required. Thereby, in testing, variability becomes tedious due to the large number of test cases required to validate behavior on all possible device configurations. In this paper, we provide remedy to this problem by combining model-based testing with variability concepts from Software Product Line engineering. For this purpose, we use feature-based test modeling to generate test cases from variable operational models for individual application configurations and versions. Furthermore, we illustrate our concepts using the commercial mobile application “runtastic” as example application.
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Feature-based configuration management of reconfigurable cloud applicationsSchroeter, Julia 03 July 2014 (has links) (PDF)
A recent trend in software industry is to provide enterprise applications in the cloud that are accessible everywhere and on any device. As the market is highly competitive, customer orientation plays an important role. Companies therefore start providing applications as a service, which are directly configurable by customers in an online self-service portal. However, customer configurations are usually deployed in separated application instances. Thus, each instance is provisioned manually and must be maintained separately. Due to the induced redundancy in software and hardware components, resources are not optimally utilized. A multi-tenant aware application architecture eliminates redundancy, as a single application instance serves multiple customers renting the application. The combination of a configuration self-service portal with a multi-tenant aware application architecture allows serving customers just-in-time by automating the deployment process. Furthermore, self-service portals improve application scalability in terms of functionality, as customers can adapt application configurations on themselves according to their changing demands. However, the configurability of current multi-tenant aware applications is rather limited. Solutions implementing variability are mainly developed for a single business case and cannot be directly transferred to other application scenarios.
The goal of this thesis is to provide a generic framework for handling application variability, automating configuration and reconfiguration processes essential for self-service portals, while exploiting the advantages of multi-tenancy. A promising solution to achieve this goal is the application of software product line methods. In software product line research, feature models are in wide use to express variability of software intense systems on an abstract level, as features are a common notion in software engineering and prominent in matching customer requirements against product functionality.
This thesis introduces a framework for feature-based configuration management of reconfigurable cloud applications. The contribution is three-fold. First, a development strategy for flexible multi-tenant aware applications is proposed, capable of integrating customer configurations at application runtime. Second, a generic method for defining concern-specific configuration perspectives is contributed. Perspectives can be tailored for certain application scopes and facilitate the handling of numerous configuration options. Third, a novel method is proposed to model and automate structured configuration processes that adapt to varying stakeholders and reduce configuration redundancies. Therefore, configuration processes are modeled as workflows and adapted by applying rewrite rules triggered by stakeholder events. The applicability of the proposed concepts is evaluated in different case studies in the industrial and academic context.
Summarizing, the introduced framework for feature-based configuration management is a foundation for automating configuration and reconfiguration processes of multi-tenant aware cloud applications, while enabling application scalability in terms of functionality.
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Feature-based configuration management of reconfigurable cloud applicationsSchroeter, Julia 11 April 2014 (has links)
A recent trend in software industry is to provide enterprise applications in the cloud that are accessible everywhere and on any device. As the market is highly competitive, customer orientation plays an important role. Companies therefore start providing applications as a service, which are directly configurable by customers in an online self-service portal. However, customer configurations are usually deployed in separated application instances. Thus, each instance is provisioned manually and must be maintained separately. Due to the induced redundancy in software and hardware components, resources are not optimally utilized. A multi-tenant aware application architecture eliminates redundancy, as a single application instance serves multiple customers renting the application. The combination of a configuration self-service portal with a multi-tenant aware application architecture allows serving customers just-in-time by automating the deployment process. Furthermore, self-service portals improve application scalability in terms of functionality, as customers can adapt application configurations on themselves according to their changing demands. However, the configurability of current multi-tenant aware applications is rather limited. Solutions implementing variability are mainly developed for a single business case and cannot be directly transferred to other application scenarios.
The goal of this thesis is to provide a generic framework for handling application variability, automating configuration and reconfiguration processes essential for self-service portals, while exploiting the advantages of multi-tenancy. A promising solution to achieve this goal is the application of software product line methods. In software product line research, feature models are in wide use to express variability of software intense systems on an abstract level, as features are a common notion in software engineering and prominent in matching customer requirements against product functionality.
This thesis introduces a framework for feature-based configuration management of reconfigurable cloud applications. The contribution is three-fold. First, a development strategy for flexible multi-tenant aware applications is proposed, capable of integrating customer configurations at application runtime. Second, a generic method for defining concern-specific configuration perspectives is contributed. Perspectives can be tailored for certain application scopes and facilitate the handling of numerous configuration options. Third, a novel method is proposed to model and automate structured configuration processes that adapt to varying stakeholders and reduce configuration redundancies. Therefore, configuration processes are modeled as workflows and adapted by applying rewrite rules triggered by stakeholder events. The applicability of the proposed concepts is evaluated in different case studies in the industrial and academic context.
Summarizing, the introduced framework for feature-based configuration management is a foundation for automating configuration and reconfiguration processes of multi-tenant aware cloud applications, while enabling application scalability in terms of functionality.
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GeNeMe ´04 - Virtuelle Organisation und Neue Medien 200423 May 2016 (has links) (PDF)
Aus dem Vorwort:
"Bereits zum siebten Mal findet der Workshop „GeNeMe - Gemeinschaften in Neuen Medien“ mit einer Vielzahl interessanter Beiträge in folgenden Rubriken statt:
• Praxis, Visionen, Trends und Chancen von GeNeMe (eingeladene Vorträge),
• Konzepte, Geschäfts- und Betreibermodelle von GeNeMe,
• E-Learning in GeNeMe,
• Anwendungen und Praxisbeispiele von GeNeMe und
• Soziologische, psychologische, personalwirtschaftliche, didaktische und rechtliche Aspekte von GeNeMe.
Aufgrund der Bedeutung des Themas, der Resonanz auf den Call-for-Proposal und der Beschränkungen, die bez. des zeitlichen Rahmens des Workshops bestanden, konnten trotz hoher Qualität leider nur etwa die Hälfte der eingereichten Beiträge Berücksichtigung finden.
Das Interesse am Thema GeNeMe ist sowohl in der Forschung wie auch in der Praxis weiterhin sehr groß. Dies zeigt die Breite der zur Diskussion gestellten Themen und eingereichten Beiträge."
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