百家乐怎么玩-澳门百家乐官网娱乐城网址_网上百家乐是不是真的_全讯网888 (中国)·官方网站

New computing center unleashes third wave

Stephen Yip

 

CityU set up the Hong Kong's first center dedicated to research and learning in pervasive computing, thanks to a donation of over HK$11 million in hardware and software from Sun Microsystems, a US-based network solutions provider. 

Widely recognized as the third wave in computing, pervasive computing represents a radical transformation in the way we deal with computers. It is to be so integrated with daily life that we use it without thinking. Computing, sensor, and communication devices will be embedded into our clothes, cars, consumer goods and the walls, working together to anticipate our needs and for our comfort and convenience.

"This is made possible by the advances in and the convergence of a number of emerging technologies: the Internet, wireless and mobile computing, speech and gesture recognition and the like," explained Professor Horace Ip of CityU's Department of Computer Science (CS), at the inauguration ceremony of the Sun Center of Excellence in Pervasive Computing, 19 September. The center will use the SunONE platform to investigate the feasibility and ease with which pervasive computing objectives can be achieved.

The third wave is mobile and intuitive
[Phot sun_Horace Ip] The first wave of computing was characterized by mainframes and large, expensive computers. The rise of the Internet and low cost personal computers were harbingers of the second wave, in which users are linked worldwide via a high-speed infrastructure. Now, we still need to deal with computing devices and interfaces that are not intuitive. Towards the third wave, that is, pervasive computing, sometimes known as ubiquitous computing, instead of using mice and keyboards as the input devices, we store, use and communicate information on the move and in an intuitive way.

[Phot sun_joint project] The Sun Center of Excellence in Pervasive Computing will collaborate with Peking University on a joint project called Hong Kong Skynet, a Chinese Web content portal that features the Tianwang search engine, one of the most powerful search engines on the mainland. The project aims to investigate how Chinese-based searching can be integrated with all sorts of mobile devices-a step towards making Chinese search capabilities available for any type of application.

Also officiating the center opening were Professor David Tong, CityU's Vice-president (Academic Affairs), Professor Francis Yao, CS Head and Mr Kenneth Chu, Industry Sales Director of Sun Microsystems (Greater China).

你可能感興趣

聯絡資料

傳訊及數據研究處

Back to top
百家乐透视用设备| 澳门百家乐官网常赢打法| 百家乐直揽经验| 青朋棋牌游戏| 大发888是什么游戏| 澳门百家乐官网会出千吗| 在线百家乐纸牌游戏| 大发888娱乐城 手机版| 百家乐翻天粤语| 百家乐连线游戏下载| 澳门百家乐官网指数| 网上百家乐| 百家乐官网客户端软件| 百家乐倍投工具| 时尚| 伟德亚洲娱乐城| 百家乐保单详图| 陆良县| 金凤凰平台| 开心8百家乐游戏| 易胜博网站| 老虎百家乐官网的玩法技巧和规则 | 正品百家乐官网地址| 大发888bet娱乐场下载| 天天百家乐游戏| 百家乐官网作弊手段| 百家乐是否有规律| 龙胜| 百家乐视频一下| 沿河| 乐九百家乐现金网| 真人百家乐官网好不好玩| 百家乐视频麻将游戏| 百家乐官网分析绿色版| 亚洲顶级赌场的微博| 百家乐白菜价| 泰来百家乐官网导航| 百家乐官网双人操作分析仪| 南部县| 百家乐稳赢秘笈| 最佳场百家乐官网的玩法技巧和规则 |