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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

Towards Integration of SOAP-Based Web Services and OGC Web Services

Shu, Shujing 21 May 2004 (has links)
Over the last several years, the Web Services model of Geographic Information Systems has been rapidly evolved and materialized. In this thesis project, I have reviewed the current status of integrating the general Web Services technology (SOAP, WSDL, and UDDI) and OpenGIS Consortium (OGC) Web services standards in developing distributed GIS computing. The overlap of the web service model and the technology stack between the SOAP-based Web Services and OGC Web Services indicates the feasibility of integration. OGC has named all core general Web Services Technologies (SOAP, WSDL, UDDI) in its envisioned OWS architecture. OGC has also started putting efforts for the integration by conducting experiments, which include a SOAP experiment and an UDDI experiment. However, these experiments only identified some very specific issues based on small number of testing interfaces and scenarios. There are leading GIS software vendors who have adopted both areas in their implementation. The ESRI ArcWeb Services is a good example, which implements OGC Web Services Interfaces using SOAP, WSDL, and UDDI. In my implementation experiment, Java Web Services Developer Pack is used to build a client of Microsoft TerraService. SOAP messages are constructed to retrieve DOQ images from the TerraService as the background to display ArcSDE feature data. Query functionalities on the feature data are implemented.
62

Aspects of the formation of the prices of manufactured commodities : a study of competition in industry with special reference to the British soap and detergents industry

Edwards, H. R. January 1957 (has links)
No description available.
63

Sociolinguistics of Swearing : A corpus-based investigation of male and female use of damn, darn, hell and heck in soap operas compared to real life

Mårtensson Vahlqvist, Sabine January 2013 (has links)
This essay will investigate male and female usage of four swear words: hell, heck, damn and darn. A minor part of the essay focuses on comparing real life speech (by using the Longman Corpus of Spoken American English) with scripted language in soap operas (the SOAP corpus). The main part of the essay focuses on a detailed investigation of the four swear words in the SOAP corpus to see how they are used considering gender. Preliminary hypotheses were both correct and incorrect. Even though it was true that women use the milder forms of swearing in the company of men, men however use the harsher forms in the company of women. Moreover, heck seems to be a very neutral swear word used by men and women equally. Hell was most frequently used by men, and darn was very frequent among women. Overall, there was very little female to female swearing, and the category with the highest instances of usage of three of the four swear words was in fact male to female.
64

Illustrated soap advertisements in <i>Myra's journal</i> 1875-1912 : hygiene, beauty and class in Victorian England

Duong, Kim 18 April 2008
The rapid emergence of the middle class in England during the nineteenth century affected many aspects of Victorian society. New social ideals required alterations to what had previously been perceived as correct values, and this era has become infamous for its repression. The new middle classes were especially insecure as to what constituted appropriate behaviour, and so sought guidance from authority figures. Middle class women found this guidance in magazines such as publisher Samuel Beeton's monthly magazine, Myra's Journal of Dress and Fashion. Advice was provided in Myras editorial column, Spinnings in Town, written by Myra Browne. The counsel was given through clever advertorial plugs written into the monthly column. Social ideals were also communicated in illustrated advertisements via their imagery.<p>Advertisements for commercially manufactured soap were especially significant in recommending proper middle class behaviours and responsibilities. Victorian soap advertisements and recommendations not only sold the product to the consumer, they also created an idea of what constituted middle class behaviour and sold that to the willing and eager female consumers. Beauty was a main nonmaterial commodity sold via soap advertisements to the middle classes, and quickly became integral to the creation and maintenance of the middle class female identity. Despite their intentions, acceptance of the concepts of appropriate and actual deportment were not always consistent. Even the purveyors themselves could become susceptible to censure due to the whims of the marketplace, ill health, or awkward social compromises. Such was the case with the house that Beeton built.
65

A cache framework for nomadic clients of web services

Elbashir, Kamaleldin 15 September 2009
This research explores the problems associated with caching of SOAP Web Service request/response pairs, and presents a domain independent framework enabling transparent caching of Web Service requests for mobile clients. The framework intercepts method calls intended for the web service and proceeds by buffering and caching of the outgoing method call and the inbound responses. This enables a mobile application to seamlessly use Web Services by masking fluctuations in network conditions. This framework addresses two main issues, firstly how to enrich the WS standards to enable caching and secondly how to maintain consistency for state dependent Web Service request/response pairs.
66

Illustrated soap advertisements in <i>Myra's journal</i> 1875-1912 : hygiene, beauty and class in Victorian England

Duong, Kim 18 April 2008 (has links)
The rapid emergence of the middle class in England during the nineteenth century affected many aspects of Victorian society. New social ideals required alterations to what had previously been perceived as correct values, and this era has become infamous for its repression. The new middle classes were especially insecure as to what constituted appropriate behaviour, and so sought guidance from authority figures. Middle class women found this guidance in magazines such as publisher Samuel Beeton's monthly magazine, Myra's Journal of Dress and Fashion. Advice was provided in Myras editorial column, Spinnings in Town, written by Myra Browne. The counsel was given through clever advertorial plugs written into the monthly column. Social ideals were also communicated in illustrated advertisements via their imagery.<p>Advertisements for commercially manufactured soap were especially significant in recommending proper middle class behaviours and responsibilities. Victorian soap advertisements and recommendations not only sold the product to the consumer, they also created an idea of what constituted middle class behaviour and sold that to the willing and eager female consumers. Beauty was a main nonmaterial commodity sold via soap advertisements to the middle classes, and quickly became integral to the creation and maintenance of the middle class female identity. Despite their intentions, acceptance of the concepts of appropriate and actual deportment were not always consistent. Even the purveyors themselves could become susceptible to censure due to the whims of the marketplace, ill health, or awkward social compromises. Such was the case with the house that Beeton built.
67

A cache framework for nomadic clients of web services

Elbashir, Kamaleldin 15 September 2009 (has links)
This research explores the problems associated with caching of SOAP Web Service request/response pairs, and presents a domain independent framework enabling transparent caching of Web Service requests for mobile clients. The framework intercepts method calls intended for the web service and proceeds by buffering and caching of the outgoing method call and the inbound responses. This enables a mobile application to seamlessly use Web Services by masking fluctuations in network conditions. This framework addresses two main issues, firstly how to enrich the WS standards to enable caching and secondly how to maintain consistency for state dependent Web Service request/response pairs.
68

Nätverksfördröjningar vid tillämpning av SOAP

Björk, Stefan January 2002 (has links)
<p>Denna studie undersöker om, och isåfall hur, nätverksfördröjningar uppstår då små SOAP-meddelanden skickas över TCP/IP. För att utföra detta skapades ett litet nätverk och i det genomfördes mätning av svarstider för två olika SOAP-implementationer, Apache SOAP och Microsoft SOAP Toolkit. Resultaten från mätningarna analyserades och visade att det uppstår nätverksfördröjningar då små SOAP-meddelanden skickas över TCP/IP. Både Apache SOAP och Microsoft SOAP Toolkit uppvisade olika strategier i nätverkskommunikationen vilket påverkade svarstider. För Apache SOAP uppstod fördröjningar vid varje SOAP-anrop, oberoende av storleken på meddelandet som returnerades, medan Microsoft SOAP Toolkit undvek nätverksfördröjningar då meddelandet som returnerades var tillräckligt stort.</p>
69

Techniken von Web Services

Hübsch, Chris 02 July 2003 (has links) (PDF)
Workshop Mensch-Computer-Vernetzung Übersicht über die technischen Grundlagen von Web Services Abgrenzung zu anderen RPC-Mechanismen Beispiele für Beschreibungssprachen
70

An investigation of the collodial behavior of soap-starch systems with special reference to viscosity effects and starch differentiation

Heald, Alfred M., January 1939 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Institute of Paper Chemistry, 1939. / Bibliography: leaves 75-78.

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