Computer and Information Science: Proceedings.9780769526133 Computer and information science; proceedings. IEEE/ACIS conference on Computer and Information...(5th) Component-based Software...(2006: Honolulu, Hawaii For the city and county of Honolulu, see City & County of Honolulu. “Honolulu” redirects here. For other uses, see Honolulu (disambiguation). Honolulu is the capital as well as the most populous community of the State of Hawaii, United States. ) Ed. by Naohiro Ishii et al. Computer Society Press 2006 512 pages $227.00 Paperback QA76.9 Consists of 69 papers from the July 2006 computer conference and ten papers from the workshop on component-based software engineering Component-based software engineering (CBSE) (also known as Component-Based Development (CBD) or Software Componentry) is a branch of the software engineering discipline, with emphasis on decomposition of the engineered systems into functional or logical components . The contributors describe recent developments in parallel and distributed computing (1) The use of multiple computers networked throughout a wide geographical area, or the world via the Internet, in order to solve a single problem. See grid computing. (2) The use of multiple computers in an enterprise rather than one centralized system. , software metrics Software measurements. Using numerical ratings to measure the complexity and reliability of source code, the length and quality of the development process and the performance of the application when completed. , communication networks, data mining, image processing image processing Set of computational techniques for analyzing, enhancing, compressing, and reconstructing images. Its main components are importing, in which an image is captured through scanning or digital photography; analysis and manipulation of the image, accomplished , information management systems, and mobile computing. Topics include topology discovery for coexisting IPv6 and IPv4 networks, mining association rules from data with missing values, raising local density for object reconstruction using auxiliary points, and solving distributed mutual exclusion using cooperating mobile agents. No subject index is provided. ([c]20062005 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR) |
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