| S. A. Akella, R. K. Balan, and N. Bansal, "Protocols for Low-Power," tech. rep., Carnegie Mellon University, 2001. |
....and reduce power usage [13] Using applicationspecific information, it becomes easier to identify or predict periods of zero workload (idle periods) with respect to the channel utilization in order to shut down the network interface. These idle periods can be forced by traffic shaping techniques [14] or application level buffering policies [15] or predicted [16] Our work targets the transport layer of the protocol stack, and deals with the energy efficiency of TCP, the reliable end to end communication protocol. Most of the optimizations reported in the literature attempt to enhance TCP ....
.... topic [21] showed that the energy characteristics of TCP significantly depend on the error correlations and, unlike throughput, on the particular TCP implementation (e.g. Tahoe, Reno, NewReno, Vegas) Since then, a number of suggestions have been documented to improve the energy efficiency of TCP [14], which include: The power constrained side of a TCP connection (the wireless terminal) can be made simpler, by transferring functionality such as timers and state to the other side [22] This optimization targets the processor energy expended in executing the TCP implementation. TCP can ....
[Article contains additional citation context not shown here]
S. A. Akella, R. K. Balan, and N. Bansal, "Protocols for Low-Power," tech. rep., Carnegie Mellon University, 2001.
No context found.
S. A. Akella, R. K. Balan, and N. Bansal, "Protocols for Low-Power," tech. rep., Carnegie Mellon University, 2001.
No context found.
S.A.Akella, R.K. Balan and N. Bansal, "Protocols for Low Power",tech rep. ,Carnegie Mellon University ,2001
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