Mobile web caching in a hostile environment

2003 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gail A. Kalbfleisch ◽  
Sridevi Movva ◽  
Terry W. Griffin ◽  
Nelson L. Passos
Author(s):  
Abhishek Rastogi ◽  
◽  
Shashank Vats ◽  
Shivam Pundir ◽  
Ramender Singh ◽  
...  

Webpages have become increasingly complex in recent years, with longer loading times to match. This paper uses tailored edge computing to address this issue. As is customary, A grip server interacts with cloud web servers in edge computing. In A footing server, on the other hand, is a personalised edge computing system. referred to as a foothold The Server in the Middle (ESM) collaborates with other servers. users' cell phonesThis research focuses on two strategies based on personalised edge computing: edge aided caching and edge aided reprioritizing. Edge-assisted caching decreases the time it takes for a page to load. Because an ESM saves the cached data on mobile devices, So far, we've got components. Edge helps in the reprioritization of forces on the internet. browser to show visual components earlier and lowers the amount of white space Time spent in front of a screen.In addition, the ESM uses HTTP/2 rather than HTTP/1.1. This decreases the number of interactions between a mobile device and, as a result, the ESM, allowing advanced functionalities to be used. such as priority and server push Edge-assisted caching has been implemented. built in a high-end PC for Google's web browser Chrome for Android is a mobile web browser. Edge aided in an experiment, according to the results. The time it took for a popular website to load was cut in half because to caching. 59 percent in a network that is extremely congested. Another experiment found that edge-assisted reprioritization cut the white screen time of a webpage with a lot of photo photos by 21%. edge computing, reprioritization, mobile device, index terms browsing the web, caching


Author(s):  
J.A. Panitz

The first few atomic layers of a solid can form a barrier between its interior and an often hostile environment. Although adsorption at the vacuum-solid interface has been studied in great detail, little is known about adsorption at the liquid-solid interface. Adsorption at a liquid-solid interface is of intrinsic interest, and is of technological importance because it provides a way to coat a surface with monolayer or multilayer structures. A pinhole free monolayer (with a reasonable dielectric constant) could lead to the development of nanoscale capacitors with unique characteristics and lithographic resists that surpass the resolution of their conventional counterparts. Chemically selective adsorption is of particular interest because it can be used to passivate a surface from external modification or change the wear and the lubrication properties of a surface to reflect new and useful properties. Immunochemical adsorption could be used to fabricate novel molecular electronic devices or to construct small, “smart”, unobtrusive sensors with the potential to detect a wide variety of preselected species at the molecular level. These might include a particular carcinogen in the environment, a specific type of explosive, a chemical agent, a virus, or even a tumor in the human body.


2011 ◽  
Vol 10 (5) ◽  
pp. 25
Author(s):  
Catherine Cooper Nellist
Keyword(s):  
Web Site ◽  

2014 ◽  
pp. 384-406
Author(s):  
Bob Moore

During the German occupation of the Netherlands between 1940 and 1945, around 75% of the country’s Jewish population were deported and killed, primarily in the extermination camps of Auschwitz and Sobibor. Much attention has been paid to the factors which explain this, but this article questions how any Jews managed to survive in an increasingly hostile environment where there were no ‘favorable factors’ to aid them. The analysis centers on the attitudes of the Jews towards acting illegally, their relationships with the rest of Dutch society, and the possible opportunities for escape and hiding. It also looks at the myriad problems associated with the day-to-day experiences of surviving underground


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