Green Communication: An Emerging Telecommunication Technology-Its Research Challenges, Techniques and Applications

Author(s):  
Sasi Kiran Sajja ◽  
Padmavathy N.
2018 ◽  
Vol 73 (3) ◽  
pp. 215-229 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wendy S. Grolnick ◽  
David J. Schonfeld ◽  
Merritt Schreiber ◽  
Judith Cohen ◽  
Valerie Cole ◽  
...  
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2016 ◽  
Vol 24 (1) ◽  
pp. 101
Author(s):  
Shijiang ZUO ◽  
Niwen HUANG ◽  
Fang WANG ◽  
Pan CAI

2017 ◽  
Vol MCSP2017 (01) ◽  
pp. 38-41
Author(s):  
Hari Shankar Sahu ◽  
Rupanita Das

Now a days telecommunication technology leads to a rapid growth of number of users, these number of users nothing but number of nodes in MANET.A wireless ad hoc network is a decentralized type of wireless network. The mobility of nodes effect on the performance of the network. Due to mobility of nodes the link breaks number of times which effect on the packet delivery. Therefore to analyze the performance, packet delivery fraction (PDF)can be used. This paper describe the packet delivery fraction of on demand routing protocol AODV and DSR on different terrain areas using GLOMOSIM.


Author(s):  
Michele Micheletti ◽  
Didem Oral

Typically, political consumerism is portrayed in straightforward, unproblematic ways. This chapter discusses how and why political consumerism—and particularly boycotts—can be confusing and problematic. Theoretically it focuses on moral dilemmas within political consumerism and the key role of overriding moral claims in the motivations for and actions of political consumer causes. An ideal type model, constructed for analyzing unproblematic and problematic political consumerism, is applied to cases of more unproblematic political consumerism (e.g., the Nestlé, Nike, and South African boycotts) and more problematic political consumerism (e.g., the Disney boycott and the movement against Israeli settlements in the occupied Palestine territories). The chapter also addresses why other forms of political consumerism (buycotts and discursive actions) seem less vulnerable to moral dilemmas as well as the research challenges in studying more problematic cases of political consumerism.


Author(s):  
Walter Mattli ◽  
Miles Kellerman

Advances in telecommunication technology in the nineteenth century encouraged greater centralization of liquidity on single, dominant exchanges in most major industrialized countries. Electronic trading, in contrast, has precipitated increased market fragmentation, creating a host of new regulatory dilemmas. In an attempt to understand this phenomenon, this chapter proposes a two-stage process of market structural development in response to electronic trading. This process is then examined in equities and foreign exchange markets. Despite significant differences between these two asset classes, they have exhibited a remarkably similar pattern of disintermediation followed by reintermediation. This analysis is followed by a survey of recent regulatory approaches to mitigate the negative externalities associated with electronic trading. It concludes with a brief discussion on the future of market fragmentation and centralization in global capital markets.


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