1999
DOI: 10.1016/s0169-7552(98)00297-9
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Managing application level quality of service through TOMTEN

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Cited by 4 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…By this, it is understood that there is no explicit mapping between application-level user requirements and the QoS provided by the network. What happens, instead, is that the user specifies, usually through a graphical user interface, his/her desired presentation quality [7], [8]. This is typically provided through the means of sliders or radio buttons via which the user would specify, for example, the desired playback frame rate, spatial resolution, as well as the acceptable synchronization delay between the audio and video streams.…”
Section: Background and Motivationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…By this, it is understood that there is no explicit mapping between application-level user requirements and the QoS provided by the network. What happens, instead, is that the user specifies, usually through a graphical user interface, his/her desired presentation quality [7], [8]. This is typically provided through the means of sliders or radio buttons via which the user would specify, for example, the desired playback frame rate, spatial resolution, as well as the acceptable synchronization delay between the audio and video streams.…”
Section: Background and Motivationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We used Java's specific features to dynamically and remotely load code as the foundation for code mobility. The application requests were transparently intercepted at the client using transparent capture utility, referred to as boomerang, that we developed [33]. Boomerang intercepts all networkrelated system calls from an application and provides stubs to hand over the connections to the MCE.…”
Section: Prototype Implementationmentioning
confidence: 99%