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The internet as a strategic business management tool14 August 2012 (has links)
M.Comm. / This study was conducted with the intent of understanding and evaluating the commercial use and possibilities that the Internet offers, as well as the strategic approach businesses should take when commencing with electronic commerce on the Internet. The potential value of Intranets and Extranets has also been examined briefly. The Internet is a very useful mechanism for marketing as well as sales of products or services on a domestic or international basis. Various other commercial possibilities and uses exist for the Internet, as well as for its derivatives — the Intranet and Extranet. In the fiercely competitive market of today, companies research, develop and invest resources in various methods and tools in the hope to gain competitive advantage over their rivals. The Internet, Intranet and Extranet, used in isolation or conjunction, pose an extremely attractive alternative to gaining competitive advantage in a specific sector or market niche.The success of the Internet as a business tool depends directly on the overall business strategy that is driving the approach. For optimum success the main business strategy must be aligned with the Information Technology Strategy, and especially include thorough consideration as well as planning when implementing the Internet or one of its derivatives as a business tool.
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Reliable and secure data transport in large scale wireless networks of embedded devicesNaik, Vinayak Shashikant, January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Ohio State University, 2006. / Title from first page of PDF file. Includes bibliographical references (p. 105-111).
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Wide-area route control for online servicesValancius, Vytautas 04 May 2012 (has links)
Accelerated by on-demand computing, the number and diversity of the
Internet services is increasing. Such online services often have unique
requirements for the underlying wide-area network: For instance, online
gaming service might benefit from low delay and jitter paths to client,
while online data backup service might benefit from cheaper paths.
Unfortunately, today's Internet does not accommodate fine-grained,
service-specific wide-area route control. In this dissertation, I achieve
the following goals: 1) improve the access to the routes, 2) quantify
the benefits of fine-grained route control, and 3) evaluate the
efficiency of current payment schemes for the wide-area routes.
* Improving access to wide-area route control. Online services
face significant technological and procedural hurdles in
accessing the routes: Each service in need to control the Internet
routes, has to obtain own equipment, Internet numbered resources, and
establish contracts with upstream ISPs. In this dissertation, I propose
and describe implementation and deployment of a secure and scalable
system which provides on-demand access to the Internet routes. In
setting such as cloud data center, the system can support multiple
online services, providing each service with an illusion of direct
connectivity to the neighboring Internet networks, which, for all
practical purposes, allows services to participate fully in the
Internet routing.
* Quantifying the benefits of fine-grained route control. Even
if online services are presented with wide-area route choice, it is not
clear how much tangible benefit such choice provides. Most modern Online
Service Providers (OSP) rely primarily on the content routing to
improve network performance between the clients and the replicas. In
this dissertation, I quantify the potential benefit the OSPs can gain if
they perform a joint network and content routing. Among other findings,
I find that by performing joint content and network routing, OSPs can
achieve 22% larger latency reduction than can be obtained by content
routing alone.
* Modeling and evaluating the efficiency of the current payment
schemes for wide-area routes. Finally, increasing diversity and
sophistication of the online services participating in the Internet
routing poses a challenge to payment models used in today's
Internet. Service providers today charge business customers a blended
rate: a single, "average" price for unit of bandwidth, without regard
to cost or value of individual customer's flows. In my dissertation, I
set to understand how efficient this payment model is and if more
granular payment model, accounting for the cost and value of different
flows could increase the ISP profit and the consumer surplus. I develop
an econometric demand and cost model and map three real-world ISP data
sets to it. I find that ISPs can indeed improve the economic efficiency
with just a few pricing tiers.
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Characterisation of end-to-end performance for web-based file server respositories /Mascarenhas da Veiga Alves, Manoel Eduardo. January 2001 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.Eng.Sc.)--University of Adelaide, Dept. of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, 2001. / Bibliography: leaves 128-135.
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Scheduling algorithms for resilient packet ring networks with video transport applications /Zhu, Jian, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M. App. Sc.)--Carleton University, 2005. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 71-76). Also available in electronic format on the Internet.
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Microsoft Windows Server 2003 : security enhancements and new features /Montehermoso, Ronald Centeno. January 2004 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.S. in Information Technology Management)--Naval Postgraduate School, Sept. 2004. / Thesis Advisor(s): Douglas E. Brinkley. Includes bibliographical references (p. 111-118). Also available online.
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Characterisation of end-to-end performance for web-based file server respositoriesMascarenhas da Veiga Alves, Manoel Eduardo. January 2001 (has links) (PDF)
Bibliography: leaves 128-135. Investigates the behaviour of TCP bulk file transfer application sessions in a broadband access environment. Introduces some concepts for evaluating network behaviour: a path instability parameter for analyzing different TCP connections; a minimum RTT delay and a minimum typical path for estimating path characteristics between a client and application servers.
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AN EVOLUTIONARY APPROACHTO A COMMUNICATIONS INFRASTRUCTURE FOR INTEGRATED VOICE, VIDEO AND HIGH SPEED DATA FROM RANGETO DESKTOP USING ATMSmith, Quentin D. 10 1900 (has links)
International Telemetering Conference Proceedings / October 25-28, 1993 / Riviera Hotel and Convention Center, Las Vegas, Nevada / As technology progresses we are faced with ever increasing volumes and rates of raw
and processed telemetry data along with digitized high resolution video and the less
demanding areas of video conferencing, voice communications and general
LAN-based data communications. The distribution of all this data has traditionally
been accomplished by solutions designed to each particular data type. With the advent
of Asynchronous Transfer Modes or ATM, a single technology now exists for
providing an integrated solution to distributing these diverse data types. This allows
an integrated set of switches, transmission equipment and fiber optics to provide
multi-session connection speeds of 622 Megabits per second.
ATM allows for the integration of many of the most widely used and emerging low,
medium and high speed communications standards. These include SONET, FDDI,
Broadband ISDN, Cell Relay, DS-3, Token Ring and Ethernet LANs. However, ATM
is also very well suited to handle unique data formats and speeds, as is often the case
with telemetry data. Additionally, ATM is the only data communications technology
in recent times to be embraced by both the computer and telecommunications
industries. Thus, ATM is a single solution for connectivity within a test center, across
a test range, or between ranges.
ATM can be implemented in an evolutionary manner as the needs develop. This
means the rate of capital investment can be gradual and older technologies can be
replaced slowly as they become the communications bottlenecks. However, success of
this evolution requires some planning now.
This paper provides an overview of ATM, its application to test ranges and telemetry
distribution. A road map is laid out which can guide the evolutionary changeover from
today's technologies to a full ATM communications infrastructure. Special
applications such as the support of high performance multimedia workstations are
presented.
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Performance analysis of resilient packet rings with single transit buffer /Yuan, Fengjie, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M.App.Sc.) - Carleton University, 2002. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 59-63). Also available in electronic format on the Internet.
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Spider III: A multi-agent-based distributed computing systemRuan, Jianhua, Yuh, Han-Shen, Wang, Koping 01 January 2002 (has links)
The project, Spider III, presents architecture and protocol of a multi-agent-based internet distributed computing system, which provides a convenient development and execution environment for transparent task distribution, load balancing, and fault tolerance. Spider is an on going distribution computing project in the Department of Computer Science, California State University San Bernardino. It was first proposed as an object-oriented distributed system by Han-Sheng Yuh in his master's thesis in 1997. It has been further developed by Koping Wang in his master's project, of where he made large contribution and implemented the Spider II System.
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