• Documents
  • Authors
  • Tables
  • Log in
  • Sign up
  • MetaCart
  • Donate

CiteSeerX logo

Tools

Sorted by:
Try your query at:
Semantic Scholar Scholar Academic
Google Bing DBLP
Results 11 - 20 of 17,727
Next 10 →

Table 1: Power State and Transition Values: All accesses incur the 60ns Active access time, additional

in Power Aware Page Allocation
by Alvin R. Lebeck, Xiaobo Fan, Heng Zeng, Carla S. Ellis 2000
"... In PAGE 9: ... Thus, the execution-driven simulator was developed to address the need for a more detailed processor#2Fmemory model and more memory- intensive benchmarks. Table1 shows the parameter values we use to determine energy consumption and DRAM access delay. These values were obtained from the Rambus Direct RDRAM manual #5B40#5D and from an EE Times article #5B26#5D on Rambus.... In PAGE 10: ... consumed in the two states. The total energy consumption depends on the time for the transition to complete, also shown in Table1 #5B26, 40#5D. 5.... In PAGE 11: ... The processor executes Compaq Alpha binaries. Our PADRAM memory model uses the values from Table1 , but includes further details, such as multiple banks per chip, open page and close page policies, and various interleaving strategies for mapping physical addresses to speci#0Cc chips and banks within chips. This simulator provides a more accurate model of timing at all levels of the memory hierarchy, including contention at each level and within each PADRAM device and transitions from higher to lower power states.... ..."

Table 3.1 Pipeline Application and Approval Dates for Open Access

in Price Dynamics, 4650,
by See Also Impulse

Table 1: Open access EPON parameters Table 2: Traffic matrix

in Achieving Open Access in Ethernet PON (EPON)
by Amitabha Banerjee, Biswanath Mukherjee, Glen Kramer
"... In PAGE 2: ...ig. 2, we show a flowchart for our algorithm which meets Dual SLA demands. Due to constraints of space, we are unable to describe the algorithm in any greater detail here. We simulate an EPON system with specifications in Table1 for the three different categories of SLAs described above.... ..."

Table 4: Openness of OSS communities

in Toward an Understanding of the Motivation of Open Source Software Developers
by Yunwen Ye, Kouichi Kishida 2003
"... In PAGE 9: ... Although all OSS communities are open to certain forms of participation and access, the different control structure inherent in each OSS community due to considerations of system quality [13] creates different degrees of openness that allows the legitimate participation and access of community members. Table4 shows the possible combinations of openness in two dimensions: product (row) and process (column). In the product dimension, open release means that only formally released versions are accessible to all community members; and open development means that all interim developing versions are accessible.... ..."
Cited by 17

Table 1 Session types by item viewed - daily average figures (5% trimmed mean)

in POSTPRINT Published Journal of Academic Librarianship 33(4), 446-453, 2007.
by David Nicholas, Paul Huntington, Hamid R. Jamali
"... In PAGE 12: ... Importantly, the NAR study also provided an opportunity to discover what actually happened to abstract use once all subscription controls on the viewing of full- text articles were released as a result of the journal moving to an open access (OA) model. Table1 shows the before OA and after OA article and abstract viewing figures. Not surprisingly, as result of moving to an OA model, the early signs were of a shift from abstract only sessions to a greater use of articles.... In PAGE 13: ...Take in Table1 Session types by item viewed - daily average figures (5% trimmed mean) for November 2004 to March 2005 (NAR). The views and perceptions of scholars Users of NAR were sent a questionnaire to find out what they thought of their journal having moved to an open access model.... ..."

Table 8: quot;Exit quot; Process for Polish

in Bank-Led Restructuring in Poland - Bankruptcy and Its Alternatives
by Cheryl W. Gray, Arnold Holle, Arnold Holle Corporate Govcrriarce
"... In PAGE 26: ...that more than one half were rejected (in most cases because the petitions were incomplete or assets insufficient to cover costs). Although most petitions and opened cases concerned small private firms, a significant number involved state enterprises ( Table8 ), either filed directly as bankruptcies or transformed from state enterprise liquidations or court conciliations. Given the poor treatment of secured creditors under priority rules and the requirement for creditors to deposit money for costs up front, it is not surprising that about two-thirds of all cases appear to be filed by the debtor.... In PAGE 31: ...eportedly been quite common. Creditors have means to influence the process. Nevertheless, they may prefer Article 19 liquidation to bankruptcy because the costs of realizing collateral are lower and because liquidation affords an opportunity to neutralize the superpriority of state claims. The Process in Action Liquidation under Article 19 has been widely used in Poland since 1990, with almost 1400 firms having entered the process and about 57 percent of these having completed it or been moved inlto bankruptcy ( Table8 ). Data on 853 cases filed in 1990- 1992 indicate that about three-fourtlhs of the cases are relatively small firms (under 200 employees), and only 9 percent are relatively large (over 500 employees).... ..."

Table 7: Operators for the robot-box domain.

in Downward refinement and the efficiency of hierarchical problem solving
by Fahiem Bacchus, Qiang Yang 1994
Cited by 5

Table 2. Weight comparison of the model and test article.

in Crash Simulation of a Vertical Drop Test of a B737 Fuselage Section with
by Overhead Bins And, Karen E. Jackson, Edwin L. Fasanella 2001
"... In PAGE 11: ...odeled. It is assumed that the doors of the bins cannot open during the impact test. B737 Fuselage Section Model Execution One check of the integrity of the finite element model is to compare the mass of the individual components with the corresponding weights of the test article. A weight comparison of the test article and model is shown in Table2 . The total weight of the model is 4.... ..."
Cited by 2

Table 3 - Strictly Electronic European Journals in Geography with a Committee of Readers, Offering Access to the Articles

in unknown title
by unknown authors

Table 4 - Peer Reviewed Electronic Journals in Geography, Offering a Free Access to the Articles

in unknown title
by unknown authors
Next 10 →
Results 11 - 20 of 17,727
Powered by: Apache Solr
  • About CiteSeerX
  • Submit and Index Documents
  • Privacy Policy
  • Help
  • Data
  • Source
  • Contact Us

Developed at and hosted by The College of Information Sciences and Technology

© 2007-2016 The Pennsylvania State University