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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
61

Computer Support for Co-present Collaborative Creativity : Framework and guideline for design and introduction of computer support in co-present collaborative creativity

Husevåg, Jannicke January 2005 (has links)
<p>This thesis is a study of how to design and introduce computer support in co-present collaborative creativity. Creativity is an important skill in today’s knowledge based society. There has been an increased focus on computer support for creativity, but a shift from individual to collaborative creativity demands a new set of frameworks and requirements for designing suitable tools. Evolving technologies in the merge of computer support for cooperateive work (CSCW), ubiquitous computing and mobile technologies have shown promising results and relevance in collaborative and creative work. This thesis is a study of how such technologies can support co-present collaborative creativity. The objective is to identify elements and structures constituting co-present collaborative creativity in order to define a set of requirements and implications for designing computer based tools. The contributions of the thesis is: 1. A conceptual framework describing elements, stuctures and general patterns in co-present collaborative creativity 2. A guideline describing requirements and implications for the design and introduction of computer based tools, including a description of which tasks can be supported and scenarios showing how. The thesis is both theoretically and empirically based. The theoretical base includes theoretical views and research within the creative domain and related work in the field of computer support for creative work. The empirical evaluation includes a case study of Oasen, an idea laboratory at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU). The framework and the guideline presented as the results of the thesis are generalized based on a comparison of empirical results with findings in related work.</p>
62

Consistent Lookup during Churn in Distributed Hash Tables

Johnsen, Stein Eldar January 2005 (has links)
<p>This thesis was written by Stein Eldar Johnsen beginning 15th August 2003 and delivered by 1st September 2005 with Svein Erik Bratsberg as mentor. The main topics are consistency and distributed hash tables. One unsolved problem with distributed hash tables is consistent lookup. Various DHTs can show acceptable consistency ratings, but no DHT can show no lookup inconsistency during churn. We chose to use a structural prevention strategy to remove inconsistent lookup on the basis that inconsistent lookups are a result of inconsistency in routing tables. We define consistent lookup as a lookup that returns a correct membership state from some time during lookup. Churn and especially unplanned membership changes may cause series of inconsistency problems if not handled carefully. The combination of a planned membership change (e.g. join) and an unplanned membership change (e.g. node crash causing a node to leave) can cause problems needing careful repairing in the systems routing tables. Table changes are necessary done in an order that guarantees a consistent view over index ownership, and makes the possibility of consistent termination at any point during execution. Other novel solutions include fail-fast disconnected-detection, locking membership protocols and pre-join knowledge propagation. All these solutions are shown to improve consistency through analysis, and are easily adapted for ring geometry DHTs. Accord was design to test many of the proposals made in the analysis. We built a distributed hash table infrastructure (with no hash table functionality), that used membership protocols based on the analysis results. The two main membership protocols were based on a 2-level 2-phase commit protocol for join, and simple 2-phase commit with distributed operations from a single coordinator for the leave protocol. The solutions proposed in this thesis are fit for all ring geometry DHTs, and some may be adapted for tree geometry DHTs, and some for all DHTs. All of Chord, Bamboo andPastry are good DHTs that can be used for testing the proposals, where all or most solutions are shown to be possible. Future work includes more testing, simulations and analysis of adaptations for different geometries.</p>
63

Enabling a Ubiquitous Location Based Service on Campus

Karlsen, Bjarte Stien January 2005 (has links)
<p>This thesis have looked at two subjects that are a necessary part of a Location Based Service. Guidelines on how to make a Location Model of the campus has been suggested. The proposed model enhanced already existing suggestions and provides support for different queries. Testing was done with Ekahau WLAN positioning technology to obtain location information. The results of the testing showed that the technology was suitable to provide a services that required accuracy at room-level. Services that required a finer grained location estimate where not feasible.</p>
64

Implications on System Integration and Standardisation within Complex and Heterogeneous Organisational Domains : Difficulties and Critical Success Factors in Open Industry Standards Development

Gustad, Håvard January 2006 (has links)
<p>Numerous standardisation and integration initiatives within the use of information and communication technologies (ICT) seem to fail due to lack of acknowledging the socio-technical negotiation that goes into standardisation work. This thesis addresses the implication of open standards development within organisational use of ICT. A standardisation initiative for data transmission, the PRODML project, within the domain of the Oil & Gas industry is investigated. This initiative strives to increase interoperability between organisations as it focus on removing the use of proprietary standards. By using Actor-Network Theory, this thesis try to articulate how such standards emerge, and the critical factors that can lead to their success. It emphasis the need to consider the importance of aligning interests in standards development, and the importance of creating the right initial alliance, building an installed base, for increased credibility and public acceptance.</p>
65

Women and Open Source Software Development

Onsøien, Magni January 2006 (has links)
<p>The Open Source community seems to suffer from a lack of female developers. In this thesis I have looked at different initiatives to increase the female participation. According to other studies the percentage of female open software developers is about 1.5%. My analysis of some mailing lists for open source projects shows that this number seems to be accurate. Open source is no longer a marginalised part of the IT market, but has become a mainstream and common alternative. Broader participation will probably increase the quality of the software.</p>
66

Towards Handheld Mobile Devices in the Hospital : Suggestions for Usability Guidelines

Jøssund, Laila January 2006 (has links)
<p>The project behind this thesis empirically explored the possibility of mobile handheld devices and use situations of the hospital arena by building prototypes and have them evaluated by real users in realistic settings. The main aspects of discussion are: what characterizes work that is suitable in this context; how well does the technology support the user’s work ―input of data, output of data, navigation, ease of handling, and general usability of device; and what the ideal mobile device in a hospital would be.</p>
67

Information Systems Inefficiencies and Changing Work Routines

Grip, Dana Richardson January 2006 (has links)
<p>This thesis focuses on the effect of nursing staff's redundant work routines on error and quality of care in one Critical Access Hospital in rural Wisconsin, USA. Methods were based on participatory design and an ethnographic approach, and included individual interviews and observation-based interviews. Introduction of a computerized information system was scheduled for the case study site and this thesis makes pre-implementation suggestions regarding staff training, interface features desired by the future users, and removal or restructuring of certain redundancies. The contribution of this thesis to information systems research is a classification system for determining the degree of redundancy (productive, gray-zone, and unproductive) present in the task chains of specific work routines, and a second classification system for determining to what extent modifying or removing an unproductive redundancy returns value. The degree to which an unproductive redundancy may be modified or removed is weighted against the difficulty of changing the work routines associated with that redundancy as well as the expected impact on other routines.</p>
68

Software safety issues in the maritime industry, and challenges related to human computer interfaces. Theoretical background and results of a survey among equipment suppliers, yards and classification societies in four European countries.

Turkerud, Stina Ramdahl January 2007 (has links)
<p>This thesis concerns the safety in user interfaces. In particular it concerns the user interfaces in systems in which safety is critical. I have studied such systems in the maritime industry, where we for instance may find them on the bridges of ships. Computer systems get more and more important in the daily routines of humans, and it is important that this does not go unnoticed. Designers of computer systems need to take human factors into consideration when designing their systems. These considerations might be especially important in complex systems, as these are often safety critical. The bridges on ships are likely to include complex systems for the operator to handle, as they often involve multiple screens, or other factors that increase the complexity of a system. Such factors might include being able to pay attention to several incidents at once. When dealing with complex systems, it is important that the operator knows how to handle the system, and also how to react when an incident occurs. These are factors that need to be considered by the designer when making the system and theories on how to do this are described in the thesis. I have also described standards which consider this, like the ISO 11064 standard, or the Atomos regulation and the ISO 17894 which considers this for the maritime industry in particular. Parts of the industry have made an effort to develop tools to be used to improve the safety. I have studied some of these efforts and presented them in the thesis. Furthermore, I have developed a survey to study how the individual members and different parts of the industry feel and behave towards safety. The survey gave an insight into reality of how safety is being handled in the industry as a whole. In particular it pointed to the main problem of the maritime industry, that the industry is very heterogeneous, and also that the different parts of the industry are in competition with each other. Most of the respondents had not heard about the Atomos regulation or the ISO 17894 standards, efforts that could have been used as a tool to improve the level of safety. The questionnaire also showed that while most of the respondents are satisfied with the level of safety in their organization, they are not satisfied with the level of safety in the overall industry. The thesis consists of six parts. Part I deals with the introduction and general theory from research methods and psychology. Part II deals with usability and related standards. These include ISO 11064, theory on usability and a description of an accident due to poorly designed user interface. Part III describes relevant background from the maritime industry, which involves the ISO 17894 standard, the Atomos regulation and e-navigation, an example of a newly made effort. Part IV gives a description of the development of my questionnaire, and also provides the results and conclusions made from them. Part V provides the conclusions and suggestions for future work, while part VI contains appendices.</p>
69

An Examination of Issues with Exception Handling Mechanisms

Tellefsen, Christian January 2007 (has links)
<p>Exception handling suffers from a fluke in its evolution. Some time in the 1970's, a researcher called Goodenough introduced the exception handling mechanism, known today as the tcode{try...catch} construct. At about the same time, two fellows called Parnas and Würges published a paper about "undesired events". This paper appears forgotten. The funny thing is, Parnas and Würges effectively described how to emph{use} exception handling mechanisms. There is a need to respond to this undesired event. Exception handling suffers from lack of design guidelines and a number of inconsistencies with the object-oriented paradigm, among other things. The thesis' main contribution is creating a library of exception challenges and the evaluation of safety facades, an approach that introduce an architecture and guidelines for designing exception handling. Through qualitative evaluation, this thesis shows how safety facades form an interesting new approach to exception handling.</p>
70

Software Quality in the Trenches : Two Case Studies of Quality Assurance Practices in Free/Libre and Open Source Software (FLOSS)

Vestbø, Tor Arne January 2007 (has links)
<p>When proponents of open source software are asked to explain the success of their movement they typically point to the quality of the software produced, which is in turn attributed to the rather unconventional development model of releasing unfinished versions of the software and having users look over the code and report and fix bugs. This thesis investigates the open source quality assurance model from a knowledge management perspective – based on the assumption that debugging involves a high degree of knowledge work. By doing interpretive case studies of two open source projects – using direct observation, e-mail archives, and bug-trackers as data sources – I present descriptive accounts of the day to day quality practices in open source development. The analysis shows that conceptualizing and classifying bugs is a complex process involving sense-making and subjective considerations; that the peer-review process in open source projects has a lot in common with traditional field-testing; and that communication tools and mediums are used interchangeably, but with certain preferences depending on subject matter. I conclude that perhaps the success of the open source development model is not due to its novelty compared to traditional software engineering, but because open source developers have recognized that debugging is a knowledge-intensive process. Keywords: Open Source, Software Quality, Knowledge Management</p>

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