In this paper, we describe the design considerations and implementation of a smart toy system, a technology for supporting the automatic recording and analysis for detecting developmental delays recognition when children play using the smart toy. To achieve this goal, we take advantage of the current commercial sensor features (reliability, low consumption, easy integration, etc.) to develop a series of sensor-based low-cost devices. Specifically, our prototype system consists of a tower of cubes augmented with wireless sensing capabilities and a mobile computing platform that collect the information sent from the cubes allowing the later analysis by childhood development professionals in order to verify a normal behaviour or to detect a potential disorder. This paper presents the requirements of the toy and discusses our choices in toy design, technology used, selected sensors, process to gather data from the sensors and generate information that will help in the decision-making and communication of the information to the collector system. In addition, we also describe the play activities the system supports.
The IETF P2PSIP WG is currently standardising a protocol for distributed multimedia services combining the media session functionality of SIP and the decentralised distribution and localisation of resources in peer-to-peer networks. The current P2PSIP scenarios only consider the infrastructure for the connectivity inside a single domain. This paper proposes an extension of the current work to a hierarchical multi-domain scenario: a two level hierarchical peer-to-peer overlay architecture for the interconnection of different P2PSIP domains. The purpose is the creation of a global decentralised multimedia services in enterprises, ISPs or community networks. We present a study of the Routing Performance and Routing State in the particular case of a two-level Distributed Hash Table Hierarchy that uses Kademlia. The study is supported by an analytical model and its validation by a peer-to-peer simulator.
Software defined networking (SDN) aims to provide simplified network design, operation, and management using a decoupled control plane. However, its centralized control and global network knowledge present scalability and reliability issues, which makes SDN deployment very challenging. In this paper, we propose and evaluate a hybrid switch with partial delegation of basic bridging and new cooperative mechanisms between controller and switches. This delegation offloads the SDN controllers while maintaining the capability to install forwarding rules on the switches. In this way, we take full advantage of hybrid switches in addition to using them as backwards compatible equipment, which interoperates with traditional switches.We validate this proposal by implementing a hybrid OpenFlow switch on an open source software switch as a proof of concept. Scalability and path setup delay are improved with respect to traditional centralized SDN solutions, because of the reduction in controller load and, in turn, because of the reduced traffic between switches and controller. Our cooperative mechanisms focus on recovering failures, obtaining the best performance of all approaches on higher loads, and providing a good trade‐off between controller based and traditional distributed approaches.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.