GE and PUB look towards technical collaboration

2016 ◽  
Vol 2016 (7) ◽  
pp. 4
Author(s):  
J V N Lakshmi

Unmanned Aerial Vehicles usage has significantly improved in all the sectors. Various industries are using drones as a platform for development with eco- nomic investment. Drastic advancement in design, flexibility, equipment and technical improvements has a great impact in creating airborne domain of IoT. Hence, drones have become a part of farming industry. Indian agriculture economy concentrates more on producing rice as this is considered as a staple food in various states. For increasing the production of rice sensors are equipped in the fields to track the water supply and humidity components. Whereas, identifying weeds, early stages of disease detection, recognizing failed crops, spraying fertilizers and continuous monitoring from bleats, locust and other dangerous insects are some of the technical collaboration with UAVs with respect farming sector. However, use of UAVs in real time environment involves many security and privacy challenges. In order to preserve UAVs from external vulnerabilities and hacking the collaborative environment requires a tough security model. In this proposed article a framework is implemented applying FIBOR security model on UAVs to suppress the threats from data hackers and protect the data in cloud from attackers. This proposed model enabled with drone technology provides a secured framework and also improves the crop yield by 15% by adapting a controlled network environment.


Author(s):  
Bhuvan Unhelkar ◽  
Abbass Ghanbary ◽  
Houman Younessi

This chapter discusses the role of information system architectures in Collaborate Business Process Engineering (CBPE). Thus, in this chapter, there is an extension of the discussion on Service-oriented Architecture (SOA) from chapters 2 and 4, and its importance and relevance to CBPE. The SOA based architecture is extended and applied in a collaborative business environment. The technical platform of Service Oriented Architecture (SOA) provides an ideal mechanism to start building collaborative business processes, as it facilitates technical collaboration of different environments - as discussed in this chapter.


1998 ◽  
Vol 113 (2) ◽  
pp. 105-115 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jean Debord ◽  
Thierry Dantoine ◽  
Jean-Claude Bollinger ◽  
Michael H Abraham ◽  
Bernard Verneuil ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Mirko Pečarič

Citizens' interactions are at the center of open governments. When the latter use open structures and open processes to foster (technical) collaboration, citizens' wellbeing can be improved by observing what citizens (do not) publicly write about or search for. This chapter tries to compare the wellbeing and quality of life (the older terms are public value or solidarity) with public goods inside and outside of public services. This relationship can be achieved when people debate and governments listen to diverse alternatives. To test this relationship, the Google Trends application was used. Trends show that satisfied people do not write about effective, efficient, legal, and ethical things, so a temporary conclusion needed for further investigation is that the government's success in a certain field is present when people do not talk (on a large scale) about matters or topics in that field. Governments should, therefore, listen to or read what people (do not) say or write.


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