Development of a graphical user interface for a real-time power system simulator

1996 ◽  
Vol 36 (3) ◽  
pp. 203-210 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Rochefort ◽  
N. De Guise ◽  
L. Gingras
2009 ◽  
pp. 211-218
Author(s):  
Wenbing Zhao

For all e-collaboration systems, some degree of concurrency control is needed so that two people do not step on each other’s foot. The demand for good concurrency control is especially high for the tightly coupled, real-time e-collaboration systems. Such systems require quick responses to user’s actions, and typically require a WYSIWIS (what you see is what I see) graphical user interface (Ellis, Gibbs, & Rein, 1991). This requirement, together with the fact that users are often separated geographically across wide-area networks, favors a decentralized system design where the system state is replicated at each user’s site. This places further challenges on the design of concurrency control for these systems.


Author(s):  
Divyesh Patel ◽  
Arpita Shah ◽  
Hetal Shah

This paper aims to build up a model for an online remote gas and temperature checking device for worker’s safety in sewage pipelines. The device is WSN based microcontroller equipped with analog and digital sensor. The design included several units mainly: Arduino Microcontroller MQ-135, DHT11, Gas and Temperature Sensors, and the current regulator circuit. The sensors are connected with a microcontroller through an ADC for advanced flag change and information logging. An LCD show is likewise associated with the microcontroller to show the estimations. For examination and filing purposes, the information can be exchanged to a PC with a graphical UI program through a USB interface. The device displays toxic gas and workers real-time position, transmit information remotely via a graphical user interface to IBM bluemix provide adjacent help. By keeps observing, this model will prone to diminish mishaps and slowly spares an existence. The model has numerous points of interest when contrasted with other checking frameworks as far as its littler size, gigantic memory limits, on-gadget show, bring down cost and more noteworthy versatility.


Author(s):  
Andrew Bohm

Described here are instructions for building and using an inexpensive automated microscope (AMi) that has been specifically designed for viewing and imaging the contents of multi-well plates. The X, Y, Z translation stage is controlled through dedicated software (AMiGUI) that is being made freely available. Movements are controlled by an Arduino-based board running grbl, and the graphical user interface and image acquisition are controlled via a Raspberry Pi microcomputer running Python. Images can be written to the Raspberry Pi or to a remote disk. Plates with multiple sample wells at each row/column position are supported, and a script file for automated z-stack depth-of-field enhancement is written along with the images. The graphical user interface and real-time imaging also make it easy to manually inspect and capture images of individual samples.


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