Spelling suggestions: "subject:"anline data processing."" "subject:"bnline data processing.""
31 |
An on line production planning system / Online production planning systemMichels, William Charles January 1972 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Sloan School of Management; and, (M.S.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering, 1972. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 108-110). / by William Charles Michels. / M.S.
|
32 |
It's All in the Rhetoric: Using Affective Design to Change Users' Perceptions of Online HelpStultz, Robert C. 01 January 2003 (has links) (PDF)
This thesis investigates the role of affective design in online help systems. The thesis begins with a discussion of the current research related to online help systems and the rhetorical nature of technical communication. The thesis then provides a heuristic evaluation of two versions of procedural discourse for Microsoft Word 2000. Based on an analysis of the heuristic evaluation, five recommendations are given for improving the affective design of online help systems. The thesis concludes with a proposed usability test and consideration of a related area of study.
|
33 |
Assessment of direct methods in power system transient stability analysis for on-line applicationsLlamas, Armando January 1992 (has links)
The advent of synchronized phasor measurements allows the problem of real time prediction of instability and control to be considered. The use of direct methods for these on-line applications is assessed.
The classical representation of a power system allows the use of two reference frames: Center of angle and one machine as reference. Formulae allowing transition between the two reference frames are derived. It is shown that the transient energy in both formulations is the same, and that line resistances do not dampen system oscillations.
Examples illustrating the mathematical characterization of the region of attraction, exit point, closest u.e.p. and controlling u.e.p. methods are presented.
Half-dimensional systems (reduced-order systems) are discussed. The general expression for the gradient system which accounts for transfer conductances is derived without making use of the infinite bus assumption. Examples illustrating the following items are presented: a) Effect of the linear ray approximation on the potential energy (inability to accurately locate the u.e.p.’s); b) Comparison of Kakimoto’s and Athay’s approach for PEBS crossing detection; c) BCU method and; d) One·parameter transversality condition.
It is illustrated that if the assumption of the one-parameter transversality condition is not satisfied, the PEBS and BCU methods may give incorrect results for multi-swing stability. A procedure to determine if the u.e.p. found by the BCU method lies on the stability boundary of the original system is given. This procedure improves the BCU method for off~line applications when there is time for a hybrid approach (direct and conventional), but it does not improve it for on-line applications due to the following: a) It is time consuming and b) If it finds that the u.e.p. does not belong to the stability boundary it provides no information concerning the stability/instability of the system. / Ph. D. / incomplete_metadata
|
34 |
Developing distributed applications with distributed heterogenous databasesDixon, Eric Richard 19 May 2010 (has links)
This report identifies how Tuxedo fits into the scheme of distributed database processing. Tuxedo is an On-Line Transaction Processing (OLTP) system. Tuxedo was studied because it is the oldest and most widely used transaction processing system on UNIX. That means that it is established, extensively tested, and has the most tools available to extend its capabilities. The disadvantage of Tuxedo is that newer UNIX OLTP systems are often based on more advanced technology. For this reason, other OLTPs were examined to compare their additional capabilities with those offered by Tuxedo.
As discussed in Sections I and II, Tuxedo is modeled according to the X/Open's Distributed Transaction Processing (DTP) model. The DTP model includes three pieces: Application Programs (APs), Transaction Monitors (TMs), and Resource Managers (RMs). Tuxedo provides a TM in the model and uses the XA specification to communicate with RMs (e.g. Informix). Tuxedo's TX specification, which defines communications between the APs and TMs is also being considered by X/Open as the standard interface between APs and TMs. There is currently no standard interface between those two pieces. Tuxedo conforms to all X/Open's current standards related to the model.
Like the other major OLTPs for UNIX, Tuxedo is based on the client/server model. Tuxedo expands that support to include both synchronous and asynchronous service calls. Tuxedo calls that extension the enhanced client/server model. Tuxedo also expands their OLTP support to allow distributed transactions to include databases on IBM compatible Personal Computers (PCs) and proprietary mainframe (Host) systems. Tuxedo calls this extension Enterprise Transaction Processing (ETP). The name enterprise comes from the fact that since Tuxedo supports database transactions supporting UNIX, PCs. and Host computers, transactions can span the computer systems of entire businesses, or enterprises.
Tuxedo is not as robust as the distributed database system model presented by Date. Tuxedo requires programmer participation in providing the capabilities that Date says the distributed database manager should provide. The coordinating process is the process which is coordinating a global transaction. According to Date's model, agents exist on remote sites participating in the transaction in order to handle the calls to the local resource manager. In Tuxedo, the programmer must provide that agent code in the form of services.
Tuxedo does provide location transparency, but not in the form Date describes. Date describes location transparency as controlled by a global catalog. In Tuxedo, location transparency is provided by the location of servers as specified in the Tuxedo configuration file. Tuxedo also does not provide replication transparency as specified by Date. In Tuxedo, the programmer must write services which maintain replicated records.
Date also describes five problems faced by distributed database managers. The first problem is query processing. Tuxedo provides capabilities to fetch records from databases, but does not provide the capabilities to do joins across distributed databases. The second problem is update propagation. Tuxedo does not provide for replication transparency. Tuxedo does provide enough capabilities for programmers to reliably maintain replicated records. The third problem is concurrency control, which is supported by Tuxedo. The fourth problem is the commit protocol. Tuxedo's commit protocol is the two-phase commit protocol. The fifth problem is the global catalog. Tuxedo does not have a global catalog.
The other comparison presented in the paper was between Tuxedo and the other major UNIX OL TPs: Transarc's Encina, Top End, and CICS. Tuxedo is the oldest and has the largest market share. This gives 38 Tuxedo the advantage of being the most thoroughly tested and the most stable. Tuxedo also has the most tools available to extend its capabilities. The disadvantage Tuxedo has is that since it is the oldest, it is based on the oldest technology.
Transarc's Encina is the most advanced UNIX OLTP. Encina is based on DCB and supports multithreading. However, Encina has been slow to market and has had stability problems because of its advanced features. Also, since Encina is based on DCB, its success is tied to the success of DCB. Top End is less advanced than Encina, but more advanced than Tuxedo. It is also much more stable than Encina. However. Top End is only now being ported from the NCR machines on which it was originally built. CICS is not yet commercially available. CICS is good for companies with CICS code to port to UNIX and CICS programmers who are already experts. The disadvantage to CICS is that companies which work with UNIX already and do not use CICS will find the interface less natural than Tuxedo, which originated under UNIX. / Master of Science
|
35 |
On-line real-time information system in manufacturing -- key to survive?.January 1990 (has links)
by Leung, Brain Shui-kei, Ng, Timmy Kwok-wai. / Thesis (M.B.A.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 1990. / Bibliography: leaves 72-73. / ABSTRACT --- p.ii / TABLE OF CONTENTS --- p.iii / LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS --- p.vi / LIST OF TABLES --- p.vii / ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS --- p.viii / Chapter / Chapter I. --- INTRODUCTION --- p.1 / Research Methodology --- p.4 / Chapter II. --- FACTORY-FLOOR COMPUTERIZATION OF ELECTRONICS MANUFACTURING INDUSTRY IN HONG KONG --- p.5 / An Overview of the Worldwide Electronics Manufacturing Industry --- p.5 / Electronics Manufacturing Industry in Hong Kong --- p.11 / Production Control Problems in Electronics Manufacturing Firms in Hong Kong --- p.13 / The Survey --- p.15 / The Solution: On-Line Real-Time Information System --- p.24 / Chapter III. --- A STUDY OF THE APPLICABILITY OF THE SUGGESTED ON-LINE REAL-TIME INFORMATION SYSTEM TO A MEDIUM SIZED ELECTRONICS MANUFACTURING FIRM IN HONG KONG / The Company --- p.29 / A Study of the Existing Production Controlling System --- p.30 / Problems with the Existing Production Controlling System --- p.31 / """OLRTIS""" --- p.35 / The Design of OLRTIS --- p.36 / Implementation of the Proposed OLRTIS --- p.47 / Cost / Benefits Analysis --- p.49 / Chapter IV. --- PRACTICAL CONSIDERATION --- p.56 / Top Management Attitude --- p.56 / Training of Staff and Workers --- p.57 / Acceptance/Resistance of the New System --- p.57 / "Garbage In, Garbage Out" --- p.59 / Impact of the New System on Management Organization --- p.59 / Human Resources --- p.60 / Chapter V. --- CONCLUSION --- p.61 / APPENDIXES --- p.63 / BIBLIOGRAPHY --- p.72
|
36 |
A prototype to illustrate interaction with a personnel databaseRashid, Haroon January 2010 (has links)
Digitized by Kansas Correctional Industries
|
37 |
Quality of service support for progressive video transmission over InternetKim, Minjung 01 December 2003 (has links)
No description available.
|
38 |
Towards automatic understanding and integration of web databases for developing large-scale unified access systemsHe, Hai. January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--State University of New York at Binghamton, Computer Science Department, 2006. / Includes bibliographical references.
|
39 |
We the undersigned: anonymous dissent and the struggle for personal identity in online petitionsRiley, Will 12 February 2009 (has links)
Anonymous signatures pose a significant threat to the legitimacy of the online petition as a persuasive form of political communication. While anonymous signatures address some privacy concerns for online petitioners, they often fail to identify petitioners as numerically distinct and socially relevant persons, Since anonymous signatures often fail to personally identify online petitioners, they often fail to provide sufficient reason for targeted political authorities to review and respond to their grievances. To recover the personal rhetoric of the online petition in a way that strikes a balance between the publicity and privacy concerns of petitioners, we should reformat online petitions as pseudonymous social networks of personal testimony between petitioners and targeted political authorities. To this end, the pseudonymous signatures of online petitions should incorporate social frames, co-authored complaints and demands, multimedia voice, and revisable support.
|
40 |
A framework of an effective online help system to support nurses using a nursing information systemQiu, Yiyu. January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (M.Info.Tech.-Res.)--University of Wollongong, 2007. / Typescript. Includes bibliographical references.
|
Page generated in 0.1087 seconds