scholarly journals Semantic Soundness for Language Interoperability

2021 ◽  
Vol 339 ◽  
pp. 1-1
Author(s):  
Amal Ahmed
2012 ◽  
pp. 819-846 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pruet Boonma ◽  
Junichi Suzuki

Due to stringent constraints in memory footprint, processing efficiency and power consumption, traditional wireless sensor networks (WSNs) face two key issues: (1) a lack of interoperability with access networks and (2) a lack of flexibility to customize non-functional properties such as event filtering, data aggregation and routing. In order to address these issues, this chapter investigates interoperable publish/subscribe middleware for WSNs. The proposed middleware, called TinyDDS, enables the interoperability between WSNs and access networks by providing programming language interoperability and protocol interoperability based on the standard Data Distribution Service (DDS) specification. Moreover, TinyDDS provides a pluggable framework that allows WSN applications to have fine-grained control over application-level and middleware-level non-functional properties. Simulation and empirical evaluation results demonstrate that TinyDDS is lightweight and efficient on the TinyOS and SunSPOT platforms. The results also show that TinyDDS simplifies the development of publish/subscribe WSN applications.


1997 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anthony Gargaro ◽  
Gary Smith ◽  
Ronald J. Theriault ◽  
Richard A. Volz ◽  
Raymond Waldrop

2007 ◽  
Vol 6 (8) ◽  
pp. 95 ◽  
Author(s):  
Torbjörn Ekman ◽  
Peter Mechlenborg ◽  
Ulrik Pagh Schultz

2010 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 13-29
Author(s):  
Renato Iannella

The move toward Policy-Oriented Web is destined to provide support for policy expression and management in the core web layers. One of the most promising areas that can drive this new technology adoption is e-Society communities. With so much user-generated content being shared by these social networks, there is the real danger that the implicit sharing rules that communities have developed over time will be lost in translation in the new digital communities. This will lead to a corresponding loss in confidence in e-Society sites. The Policy-Oriented Web attempts to turn the implicit into the explicit with a common framework for policy language interoperability and awareness. This paper reports on the policy driving factors from the Social Networks experiences using real-world use cases and scenarios. In particular, the key functions of policy-awareness—for privacy, rights, and identity—will be the driving force that enables the e-Society to appreciate new interoperable policy regimes.


Author(s):  
Pruet Boonma ◽  
Junichi Suzuki

Due to stringent constraints in memory footprint, processing efficiency and power consumption, traditional wireless sensor networks (WSNs) face two key issues: (1) a lack of interoperability with access networks and (2) a lack of flexibility to customize non-functional properties such as event filtering, data aggregation and routing. In order to address these issues, this chapter investigates interoperable publish/subscribe middleware for WSNs. The proposed middleware, called TinyDDS, enables the interoperability between WSNs and access networks by providing programming language interoperability and protocol interoperability based on the standard Data Distribution Service (DDS) specification. Moreover, TinyDDS provides a pluggable framework that allows WSN applications to have fine-grained control over application-level and middleware-level non-functional properties. Simulation and empirical evaluation results demonstrate that TinyDDS is lightweight and efficient on the TinyOS and SunSPOT platforms. The results also show that TinyDDS simplifies the development of publish/subscribe WSN applications.


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