scholarly journals Commercial Building Energy Baseline Modeling Software: Performance Metrics and Method Testing with Open Source Models and Implications for Proprietary Software Testing

2013 ◽  
Author(s):  
Phillip N. Price ◽  
Jessica Granderson ◽  
Michael Sohn ◽  
Nathan Addy ◽  
David Jump
Author(s):  
Nicholas Long ◽  
Katherine Fleming ◽  
Chris CaraDonna ◽  
Cory Mosiman

Author(s):  
Alexander Boll ◽  
Florian Brokhausen ◽  
Tiago Amorim ◽  
Timo Kehrer ◽  
Andreas Vogelsang

AbstractSimulink is an example of a successful application of the paradigm of model-based development into industrial practice. Numerous companies create and maintain Simulink projects for modeling software-intensive embedded systems, aiming at early validation and automated code generation. However, Simulink projects are not as easily available as code-based ones, which profit from large publicly accessible open-source repositories, thus curbing empirical research. In this paper, we investigate a set of 1734 freely available Simulink models from 194 projects and analyze their suitability for empirical research. We analyze the projects considering (1) their development context, (2) their complexity in terms of size and organization within projects, and (3) their evolution over time. Our results show that there are both limitations and potentials for empirical research. On the one hand, some application domains dominate the development context, and there is a large number of models that can be considered toy examples of limited practical relevance. These often stem from an academic context, consist of only a few Simulink blocks, and are no longer (or have never been) under active development or maintenance. On the other hand, we found that a subset of the analyzed models is of considerable size and complexity. There are models comprising several thousands of blocks, some of them highly modularized by hierarchically organized Simulink subsystems. Likewise, some of the models expose an active maintenance span of several years, which indicates that they are used as primary development artifacts throughout a project’s lifecycle. According to a discussion of our results with a domain expert, many models can be considered mature enough for quality analysis purposes, and they expose characteristics that can be considered representative for industry-scale models. Thus, we are confident that a subset of the models is suitable for empirical research. More generally, using a publicly available model corpus or a dedicated subset enables researchers to replicate findings, publish subsequent studies, and use them for validation purposes. We publish our dataset for the sake of replicating our results and fostering future empirical research.


2021 ◽  
Vol 54 ◽  
pp. 43-54
Author(s):  
Mahlatse Shekgola ◽  
Jan Maluleka ◽  
Antonio Rodrigues

The South African cabinet adopted policy recommendations from the Government Information Technology Officer's Council pertaining to Free and Open-Source Software (FOSS). Even though the South African Cabinet has shown support for the use of FOSS through the enactment of a policy, the adoption of open source software in electronic records management seems to be slow. Proprietary software continues to be adopted and used by most public institutions, including local and provincial municipalities in South Africa. Therefore, this study aimed to investigate factors that may influence the adoption and use of FOSS for electronic records management by South African municipalities. The study adopted a qualitative research approach to collect data from 10 purposively selected municipalities in Gauteng. Data were analysed and presented thematically to address the research question. The findings of this study suggest that municipalities in Gauteng are not adopting FOSS for electronic records management as expected. This study established that top management support, reliability, affordability of the software, inadequate capability, contracts with proprietary software providers, organisational culture and organisational support are some of the factors that contributed to the low uptake when it comes to the adoption of Free and Open-Source Software by the municipalities.


2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. e40810212664
Author(s):  
Marina Nascimento Alves Vieira ◽  
Camila Nascimento Alves ◽  
Vyviane dos Santos Ferreira ◽  
Cleisianne Nazaré Leite Barbosa

O objetivo da pesquisa apresentada neste artigo foi realizar a modelagem de propriedades geológico-geotécnicas no subsolo de um bairro no município de Belém do Pará a partir de sondagem à percussão, usando como ferramenta a geoestatística. Para alcançar o objetivo realizou-se a catalogação do acervo técnico contendo 101 boletins de sondagem à percussão. Criou-se um banco de dados contendo os dados de coordenadas geográficas, tipo de solo, profundidade das camadas do solo, nível do lençol freático e Índice de Resistência à Penetração (NSPT), conforme a norma NBR 6484/2001. Os dados foram analisados em ambiente SIG (Sistema de Informação Geográfica) com softwares Open Source, como SGEMS (Standford Geoestatistical Modeling Software) para análise geoestatística e o software Qgis para análises cartográficas. Distinguiu-se duas zonas díspares na região de estudo, denominadas de Zona A e Zona B. A Zona A é considerada uma região com os maiores índices de resistência dos solos e a Zona B uma região com menores índices de resistência, conforme demonstrado nos mapas. Na região ocorrem argilas orgânicas de baixa resistência nas proximidades das áreas de várzea, onde no passado eram localizados os igarapés. No entanto, esses locais foram retificados durante o processo de urbanização. E, atualmente, localizam-se as regiões de baixa resistência descritas nos resultados desta pesquisa.


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