14,589 research outputs found
Direct combination: a new user interaction principle for mobile and ubiquitous HCI
Direct Combination (DC) is a recently introduced user interaction principle. The principle (previously applied to desktop computing) can greatly reduce the degree of search, time, and attention required to operate user interfaces. We argue that Direct Combination applies particularly aptly to mobile computing devices, given appropriate interaction techniques, examples of which are presented here. The reduction in search afforded to users can be applied to address several issues in mobile and ubiquitous user interaction including: limited feedback bandwidth; minimal attention situations; and the need for ad-hoc spontaneous interoperation and dynamic reconfiguration of multiple devices. When Direct Combination is extended and adapted to fit the demands of mobile and ubiquitous HCI, we refer to it as Ambient Combination (AC) . Direct Combination allows the user to exploit objects in the environment to narrow down the range of interactions that need be considered (by system and user). When the DC technique of pairwise or n-fold combination is applicable, it can greatly lessen the demands on users for memorisation and interface navigation. Direct Combination also appears to offers a new way of applying context-aware information. In this paper, we present Direct Combination as applied ambiently through a series of interaction scenarios, using an implemented prototype system
More exact predictions of SUSYM for string theory
We compute the coefficients of an infinite family of chiral primary operators
in the local operator expansion of a circular Wilson loop in N=4 supersymmetric
Yang-Mills theory. The computation sums all planar rainbow Feynman graphs. We
argue that radiative corrections from planar graphs with internal vertices
cancel in leading orders and we conjecture that they cancel to all orders in
perturbation theory. The coefficients are non-trivial functions of the 'tHooft
coupling and their strong coupling limits are in exact agreement with those
previously computed using the AdS/CFT correspondence. They predict the
subleading orders in strong coupling and could in principle be compared with
string theory calculations.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figures; v2: misprints correcte
Feasibility study of silicon nitride protection of plastic encapsulated semiconductors
The application of low temperature silicon nitride protective layers on wire bonded integrated circuits mounted on lead frame assemblies is reported. An evaluation of the mechanical and electrical compatibility of both plasma nitride and photochemical silicon nitride (photonitride) passivations (parallel evaluations) of integrated circuits which were then encapsulated in plastic is described. Photonitride passivation is compatible with all wire bonded lead frame assemblies, with or without initial chip passivation. Plasma nitride passivation of lead frame assemblies is possible only if the chip is passivated before lead frame assembly. The survival rate after the environmental test sequence of devices with a coating of plasma nitride on the chip and a coating of either plasma nitride or photonitride over the assembled device is significantly greater than that of devices assembled with no nitride protective coating over either chip or lead frame
Advanced surface paneling method for subsonic and supersonic flow
Numerical results illustrating the capabilities of an advanced aerodynamic surface paneling method are presented. The method is applicable to both subsonic and supersonic flow, as represented by linearized potential flow theory. The method is based on linearly varying sources and quadratically varying doublets which are distributed over flat or curved panels. These panels are applied to the true surface geometry of arbitrarily shaped three dimensional aerodynamic configurations
Introducing New Methodologies for Identifying Design Patterns for Internationalization and Localization
This paper describes a new methodology for deriving interaction design patterns from an analysis of ethnographic data. It suggests using inductive and deductive analysis processes to identify and articulate patterns that address the needs of culturally diverse users of interactive, collaborative systems. This might inform the internationalization and localization process of computer supported collaboration systems
Wilson Loops in N=4 Supersymmetric Yang--Mills Theory
Perturbative computations of the expectation value of the Wilson loop in N=4
supersymmetric Yang-Mills theory are reported. For the two special cases of a
circular loop and a pair of anti-parallel lines, it is shown that the sum of an
infinite class of ladder-like planar diagrams, when extrapolated to strong
coupling, produces an expectation value characteristic of the results of the
AdS/CFT correspondence, . For the case of
the circular loop, the sum is obtained analytically for all values of the
coupling. In this case, the constant factor in front of also
agrees with the supergravity results. We speculate that the sum of diagrams
without internal vertices is exact and support this conjecture by showing that
the leading corrections to the ladder diagrams cancel identically in four
dimensions. We also show that, for arbitrary smooth loops, the ultraviolet
divergences cancel to order .Comment: 24 pages, LaTeX, uses feynmp, 12 postscript figure
Cryogenic MMIC low noise amplifiers
Monolithic (MMIC) and discrete transistor (MIC) low noise amplifiers are compared on the basis of performance, cost, and reliability. The need for cryogenic LNA’s for future large microwave arrays for radio astronomy is briefly discussed and data is presented on a prototype LNA for the 1 to 10 GHz range along with a very wideband LNA for the 1 to 60 GHz range. A table of MMIC LNA and mixer designs under development for the frequencies up to 210 GHz is reported and data on cryogenic amplifiers in the 85 to 115 GHz is reviewed. The current status of the topics of transconductance fluctuations and cryogenic noise modeling will be briefly summarized
Surface Roughness Dominated Pinning Mechanism of Magnetic Vortices in Soft Ferromagnetic Films
Although pinning of domain walls in ferromagnets is ubiquitous, the absence
of an appropriate characterization tool has limited the ability to correlate
the physical and magnetic microstructures of ferromagnetic films with specific
pinning mechanisms. Here, we show that the pinning of a magnetic vortex, the
simplest possible domain structure in soft ferromagnets, is strongly correlated
with surface roughness, and we make a quantitative comparison of the pinning
energy and spatial range in films of various thickness. The results demonstrate
that thickness fluctuations on the lateral length scale of the vortex core
diameter, i.e. an effective roughness at a specific length scale, provides the
dominant pinning mechanism. We argue that this mechanism will be important in
virtually any soft ferromagnetic film.Comment: 4 figure
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