Results 231 to 240 of about 147,938 (267)
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Autonomous mobile networks

29th Annual IEEE International Conference on Local Computer Networks, 2004
Summary form only given, as follows. Autonomous mobile networks are distributed ad-hoc networks of nodes that can sense, actuate, compute and communicate with each other using point-to-point multi-hop communication. The nodes in such networks include static sensors, mobile sensors, robots, and humans.
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Mobile Agents in the Mobile Telephone Network Management

Telecommunication Systems, 2001
zbMATH Open Web Interface contents unavailable due to conflicting licenses.
Igor Brusic   +2 more
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Mobile networking in the Internet

Mobile Networks and Applications, 1998
Computers capable of attaching to the Internet from many places are likely to grow in popularity until they dominate the population of the Internet. Consequently, protocol research has shifted into high gear to develop appropriate network protocols for supporting mobility.
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Network dynamics of mobile social networks

2014 IEEE International Conference on Communications (ICC), 2014
With the rapid development of smartphones and mobile Internet technology, we witness an overwhelming growth of mobile social networks (MSN), which is a type of social network, forming virtual communities among people with similar interests or commonalities. In MSNs, users play a crucial role for their development, deployment and success.
Guofeng Zhao 0001   +4 more
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Network mobility support in PMIPv6 network

Proceedings of the 6th International Wireless Communications and Mobile Computing Conference, 2010
In this paper, we propose a network mobility supporting scheme (N-NEMO) in Proxy Mobile IPv6 (PMIPv6) network, which is an issue still up in the air for the PMIPv6. In the N-NEMO, a tunnel splitting scheme is used to differentiate the inter-Mobility Access Gateway (MAG) and intra-MAG mobility.
Zhiwei Yan   +4 more
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Integrating Mobile Ad Hoc Network into Mobile IPv6 Network

2004
In the future more and more devices connected to the Internet will be wireless. Wireless networks can be classified into two types of networks: network with infrastructure (i.e. networks with base stations, gateway and routing support), which is called Mobile IP, and network without infrastructure which is called ad hoc networks.
Ali, Adel   +2 more
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Mobility prediction in mobile wireless networks

Journal of Network and Computer Applications, 2012
In realistic mobile ad-hoc network scenarios, the hosts usually travel to the pre-specified destinations, and often exhibit non-random motion behaviors. In such mobility patterns, the future motion behavior of the mobile is correlated with its past and current mobility characteristics.
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Mobile networking through Mobile IP

IEEE Internet Computing, 1998
Mobile IP is a proposed standard protocol that builds on the Internet Protocol by making mobility transparent to applications and higher level protocols like TCP. Mobile IP (RFC 2002) is a standard proposed by a working group within the Internet Engineering Task Force; it allows the mobile node to use two IP addresses: a fixed home address and a care ...
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Service mobility in mobile network

International Conference on Communication Technology Proceedings, 2003. ICCT 2003., 2004
This paper designs a service mobility system based on mobile agent: MASM (mobile agent based service mobility) and presents a new opinion to realize service mobility with mobile agent. MASM takes full advantages of both mobile agent and Java and brings forwards a new design method of mobile agent based on 'dotting' and modularization technologies ...
null Yuhai Yu, null Ping Zhang
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Mobile Communications and Networks

IEEE Communications Magazine, 2023
Wanshi Chen   +4 more
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