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Coordinated power, energy, and temperature managementHanson, Heather Lynn, 1969- 28 August 2008 (has links)
Power and thermal effects have emerged as serious problems for computing systems by limiting performance, degrading reliability, and imposing a high cost in energy resources. A fundamental problem with power and thermal management is the difficulty of reducing power and heat output without sacrificing performance, which creates a complex web of inter-related constraints and requirements. Meeting these multiple, potentially conflicting objectives simultaneously is a difficult challenge, exacerbated by shifting environmental conditions and variable workloads, yet essential for future generations of high-performance systems. We propose a comprehensive, goal-oriented management framework that sorts priorities and balances conflicting goals, named PET for performance, power, energy, and temperature. The approach provides a level of indirection between macro objectives, such as reducing operating cost or increasing performance, and micro directives, including voltage and frequency settings and other power-management choices. Goal-driven decisions reflect relevant run-time conditions, rather than pre-defined policies, and a concise specification for desired outcome provides an opportunity to customize operation to conserve or spend power resources as situations warrant, delivering performance on demand. We demonstrate the feasibility and benefit of the PET approach with a prototype implementation developed in software, executing on an instrumented Pentium M system. First, we present a detailed characterization of the system response to power management mechanisms to identify the timescales and magnitude of expected response to management decisions. Second, we illustrate PET operation with realistic workloads and usage scenarios, demonstrating that the prototype achieves the desired ranges of operation with dynamic run-time control. / text
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Robust design of selectively compliant flexure-based precision mechanismsPatil, Chinmaya Baburao, 1978- 29 August 2008 (has links)
Not available / text
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THE STABILITY OF A GABION STRAIGHT DROP STRUCTURE.Ehlers, Brian E. January 1984 (has links)
No description available.
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Development of a business case for the press tool industry using reconfigurable manufacturing systems principles.Phuluwa, Humbulani Simon January 2014 (has links)
M. Tech. Industrial Engineering / Today's business and manufacturing companies are encountering many challenges to compete effectively and efficiently in a competitive environment. The aim of this study was to develop a business case for the press tool manufacturing industry using reconfigurable manufacturing system principles in Gauteng Province, South Africa. The intention of this study was to revitalise the press tool industry, in order to promote local production of the press tool machines.
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Delay-sensitive branch predictors for future technologiesJiménez, Daniel Angel, 1969- 04 May 2011 (has links)
Not available / text
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On the feasibility of developing a description language for modular robotWu, Qiong, 吳[Qiong] January 2004 (has links)
published_or_final_version / abstract / toc / Industrial and Manufacturing Systems Engineering / Master / Master of Philosophy
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SUBCRITICAL AND SUPERCRITICAL AIRFOILS FOR GIVEN PRESSURE DISTRIBUTIONSHassan Eissa, Ahmed Abdelatif January 1981 (has links)
An effective method, based on hodograph theory, has been developed for the aerodynamic design of subcritical and shock-free supercritical airfoil sections. In addition to the free-stream conditions, the input to the design procedure includes a prescription of the subsonic part of a target pressure distribution and, for supercritical airfoils, of a presumed stream function on the sonic line. A computer program carries out a number of sequential steps that result in an airfoil with a pressure distribution close to that desired at little computational cost. Thus, the airfoil designer can alter the input if design goals are not met and quickly produce another candidate airfoil. This is aided by appropriate graphic display of the airfoil and its pressure distribution.
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Hybrid analog-digital pseudo-random noise generationHampton, Robert Lee Thomas, 1939- January 1964 (has links)
No description available.
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Optimum design and error analysis of digital integratorsBurt, Roger William, 1932- January 1963 (has links)
No description available.
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The logic design of a PDP-9 controlled parallel computerWokhlu, Roop Krishen, 1940- January 1968 (has links)
No description available.
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