Fr. 142.00

Networks - Standardization, Infrastructure, and Applications

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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New information and communication technologies unquestionably brought about enormous changes that resulted in an ever-increasing networked society. Indeed, there is no area in the social and economic world which is unaffected by the recent advances. In response to these changes scientists from numerous disciplines teamed up in 1997 to lay a foundation for a common theory of networks. The objective was to gain a deeper understanding of the mechanisms behind social, economic, technical and other kinds of networks in order to develop a unifiedtheory of networks. Such a theory would then guide public and private decisions concerning the planning, operations and controlling of all kinds of networks. The contributions in this book represent the first steps toward this ambitious goal.

List of contents

Preface.- I Standardization 1.- Modeling Diffusion Processes in Networks.- From QWERTY to Nuclear Power Reactors: Historic Battles for the Standard.- II Infrastructure 63.- Supporting Mobility through Computer Networks.- Quality of Service Management for Middleware and Applications.- US-American Legislation on Digital Signatures.- III Applications 139.- Communication on Capital Markets.- Contracts and eContracting: The Case of Forwarding Agents and Carriers.- Internet Based Management of Distributed Business Processes.

Summary

New information and communication technologies unquestionably brought about enormous changes that resulted in an ever-increasing networked society. Indeed, there is no area in the social and economic world which is unaffected by the recent advances. In response to these changes scientists from numerous disciplines teamed up in 1997 to lay a foundation for a common theory of networks. The objective was to gain a deeper understanding of the mechanisms behind social, economic, technical and other kinds of networks in order to develop a unified theory of networks. Such a theory would then guide public and private decisions concerning the planning, operations and controlling of all kinds of networks. The contributions in this book represent the first steps toward this ambitious goal.

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