Many Wireless Sensor Network (WSN) applications are composed of a mixture of deployed devices with varying capabilities, from extremely constrained 8-bit “Motes” to less resource-constrained 32-bit “Microservers”. EmStar is a software environment for developing and deploying complex WSN applications on networks of 32-bit embedded Microserver platforms, and integrating with networks of Motes. EmStar consists of libraries that implement message-passing IPC primitives, tools that support simulation, emulation, and visualization of live systems, both real and simulated, and services that support networking, sensing, and time synchronization. While EmStar’s design has favored ease of use and modularity over efficiency, the resulting...
Given the fast growing technological progress in microelectronics and wireless communication devices...
There are many different ways to describe a network. There are many tiny, light-weight wireless sens...
Using middleware to bridge the gap between applications and low-level constructs is a novel approach...
Em* (pronounced EmStar) is a software environment for developing and deploying Wireless Sensor Netwo...
EmStar is a software system for developing and deploying wireless sensor networks involving Linux-ba...
Recently, increasing research attention has been directed toward wireless sensor networks: collectio...
An overview of EmStar, CENS'' Linux-based framework for developing sensor network software
Recent work in wireless embedded networked systems has followed heterogeneous designs, incorporating...
EmStar served its primary purpose, based on the past 5 years, we have found that we also need a syst...
Recent work in wireless embedded networked systems has followed heterogeneous designs, incorporating...
Ever since the University of California, Berkeley released the first commercial Wireless Sensor Netw...
Developing software for Wireless sensor networks (WSNs) is difficult because they consist of tiny, f...
Wireless sensor network (WSN) consist of a mesh of a several powerful devices (denoted as base stati...
Wireless sensor networks (WSN) are long running distributed systems comprised of tiny devices called...
A Wireless Sensor Network (WSN) consists of small embedded devices – called motes or nodes – with li...
Given the fast growing technological progress in microelectronics and wireless communication devices...
There are many different ways to describe a network. There are many tiny, light-weight wireless sens...
Using middleware to bridge the gap between applications and low-level constructs is a novel approach...
Em* (pronounced EmStar) is a software environment for developing and deploying Wireless Sensor Netwo...
EmStar is a software system for developing and deploying wireless sensor networks involving Linux-ba...
Recently, increasing research attention has been directed toward wireless sensor networks: collectio...
An overview of EmStar, CENS'' Linux-based framework for developing sensor network software
Recent work in wireless embedded networked systems has followed heterogeneous designs, incorporating...
EmStar served its primary purpose, based on the past 5 years, we have found that we also need a syst...
Recent work in wireless embedded networked systems has followed heterogeneous designs, incorporating...
Ever since the University of California, Berkeley released the first commercial Wireless Sensor Netw...
Developing software for Wireless sensor networks (WSNs) is difficult because they consist of tiny, f...
Wireless sensor network (WSN) consist of a mesh of a several powerful devices (denoted as base stati...
Wireless sensor networks (WSN) are long running distributed systems comprised of tiny devices called...
A Wireless Sensor Network (WSN) consists of small embedded devices – called motes or nodes – with li...
Given the fast growing technological progress in microelectronics and wireless communication devices...
There are many different ways to describe a network. There are many tiny, light-weight wireless sens...
Using middleware to bridge the gap between applications and low-level constructs is a novel approach...