Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
RTAI—Real-Time Application Interface; RTC—Real-Time Clock; RTE—Real-Time Enterprise; RTEMS—Real-Time Executive for Multiprocessor Systems; RTF—Rich Text Format; RTL—Right-to-Left; RTMP—Real Time Messaging Protocol; RTOS—Real-Time Operating System; RTP—Real-time Transport Protocol; RTS—Ready To Send; RTSP—Real Time ...
ISO 4 (Information and documentation — Rules for the abbreviation of title words and titles of publications) is an international standard which defines a uniform system for the abbreviation of serial publication titles, i.e., titles of publications such as scientific journals that are published in regular installments.
Topics include: "software systems, prototyping issues, high-level specification techniques, procedural and functional programming techniques, data-flow concepts, multiprocessing, real-time, distributed, concurrent, and telecommunications systems, software metrics, reliability models for software, performance issues, and management concerns." [1]
A reference model architecture is a canonical form, not a system design specification. The RCS reference model architecture combines real-time motion planning and control with high level task planning, problem solving, world modeling, recursive state estimation, tactile and visual image processing, and acoustic signature analysis. In fact, the ...
It is published by the IEEE Circuits and Systems Society and the IEEE Council on Electronic Design Automation (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers). The journal was established in 1982 and the editor-in-chief is Rajesh K. Gupta (University of California at San Diego).
The UML modeling language has been extended by the OMG consortium to support model-driven development of real-time and embedded application. This extension has been defined via a UML2 profile called MARTE (Modeling and Analysis of Real-Time and Embedded systems). It consists mainly of four parts:
Soft real-time systems are typically used to solve issues of concurrent access and the need to keep a number of connected systems up-to-date through changing situations. Some examples of soft real-time systems: Software that maintains and updates the flight plans for commercial airliners. The flight plans must be kept reasonably current, but ...
Because they have highly deterministic timing behavior, TT systems have been used for many years to develop safety-critical aerospace and related systems. [2]An early text that sets forth the principles of time triggered architecture, communications, and sparse time approaches is Real-Time Systems: Design Principles for Distributed Embedded Applications in 1997.