| Shankar Narayanaswamy et al., "Application and Network Support for InfoPad," IEEE Personal Communications, Vol. 3, No. 2, pp. 4-17, April 1996. |
....about current status of power consumption in the system, including remaining battery capacity. These functions serve as a hardware software basis for multiple packages, such as Wildboar [21] which supplies a user with power management utilities that can be used in his scripts and applications. [15] discussed a system designed around the InfoPad portable terminal, a network I O device with no computation power, relying on network servers to run major processes. Local computing is not possible here, even when it is less powercostly. For many years, process migration and delegation have been ....
Shankar Narayanaswamy et al., "Application and Network Support for InfoPad," IEEE Personal Communications, Vol. 3, No. 2, pp. 4-17, April 1996.
....that it is an all software implementation also provides additional flexibility to integrate with other functionalities. For example, by integrating with wired REther, it provides a complete end to end solution to the network performance guarantee problem in the LAN environment. The Infopad project [13] at the University of California, Berkeley aims at providing a network terminal to a mobile user through a small hand held wireless device. The wired backbone is a high speed network with wireless picocells. Each picocell runs several entities that cooperate to give the applications (called type ....
Shankar Narayanaswamy, Srinivasan Seshan, Eric Brewer, Robert Brodersen, Frederick, Burghardt, Andrew Burstein, Yuan-Chi Chang, Armando Fox, Jeffrey M. Gilbert, Richard Han, Randy H. Katz, Allan C. Long, David G. Messerschmitt, Jan Rabaey; "Application and Network Support for InfoPad" IEEE Personal Communications Magazine, Mar 1996.
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