Computing & Control Engineering Journal
Volume 12, Issue 5, October 2001
Volumes & issues:
Volume 12, Issue 5
October 2001
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- Author(s): I. Pyle
- Source: Computing & Control Engineering Journal, Volume 12, Issue 5, p. 202 –203
- DOI: 10.1049/cce:20010506
- Type: Article
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Editorial. - Source: Computing & Control Engineering Journal, Volume 12, Issue 5, page: 204 –204
- DOI: 10.1049/cce:20010507
- Type: Article
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- Author(s): G. Leen and D. Heffernan
- Source: Computing & Control Engineering Journal, Volume 12, Issue 5, p. 205 –211
- DOI: 10.1049/cce:20010501
- Type: Article
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Currently it is estimated that more than 80% of all innovations within vehicles are derived from electronic systems! The cost of electronics in executive vehicles can amount to over 23% of the vehicle production cost. One wireless technology that may help to re-write the affordability equation for advanced electronic systems is known as Bluetooth. This article discusses the potential of Bluetooth within the automotive industry. - Author(s): N. Thomson
- Source: Computing & Control Engineering Journal, Volume 12, Issue 5, p. 212 –216
- DOI: 10.1049/cce:20010502
- Type: Article
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J is both a mature and an innovative development in computing, which has far-reaching potential benefits for people such as engineers and financial specialists who need to gain or regain direct control over huge and critical computations that they engage in professionally. Such applications almost always process arrays as opposed to processing cells, which has been the early and persistent norm of mainstream computer languages. J started as a language that demonstrated masterly insight into the nature of array processing. This was then realised as an interpreter, which by any standards was software of near perfection. Most recently, and following similar progress to that of APL (which is in some ways the ancestor of J), enthusiasts with considerable computer skills have integrated J into the wider computing world, so that J is now an entire and widely available computing system, which merits greater awareness than is currently the case. - Author(s): A.C.M. Fong and S.C. Hui
- Source: Computing & Control Engineering Journal, Volume 12, Issue 5, p. 217 –223
- DOI: 10.1049/cce:20010503
- Type: Article
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Traditional help desk service relies heavily on the expertise of service personnel. This article describes an intelligent data mining technique that combines neural network and rule-based reasoning with case-based reasoning to mine information from the customer service database for online machine fault diagnosis. This technique has been implemented into a help-desk system that supports online machine fault diagnosis over the Internet. - Source: Computing & Control Engineering Journal, Volume 12, Issue 5, page: 224 –224
- DOI: 10.1049/cce:20010508
- Type: Article
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- Author(s): Mu-Chun Su and Ming-Tsang Chung
- Source: Computing & Control Engineering Journal, Volume 12, Issue 5, p. 225 –230
- DOI: 10.1049/cce:20010504
- Type: Article
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A voice-controlled human-computer interface has been designed that enables severely handicapped individuals to operate a computer. This system consists of six main blocks: the keyboard and the mouse layouts; the D6106 speech recogniser; the headset incorporated with a microphone and two mercury switches; the keyboard circuit and the mouse circuits; the mouse control circuit; and the microcontroller. A prototype system has been built and tested. - Author(s): J.M. Chang and S.K. Agun
- Source: Computing & Control Engineering Journal, Volume 12, Issue 5, p. 231 –239
- DOI: 10.1049/cce:20010505
- Type: Article
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The reuse of electronic components can improve productivity in system design. However, without careful planning, components are rarely designed for reuse. Hardware description languages are commonly used to construct from simple hardware to complex ones. HDLs allow the creation of reusable models, but the reusability of a design does not come with language features alone. It requires design disciplines to reach an efficient reusable design. Reusability issues and design methodologies to achieve design-for-reusability (DFR) are presented. Results of measuring the reusability of ten VHDL applications, based on the proposed reusable models, are summarised. This research allows us to gain an insight into DFR. - Source: Computing & Control Engineering Journal, Volume 12, Issue 5, page: 240 –240
- DOI: 10.1049/cce:20010509
- Type: Article
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Mathematics in schools
Book reviews
Vehicles without wires
J for engineers and computing professionals
An intelligent online machine fault diagnosis system
Contracts and orders
Voice-controlled human-computer interface for the disabled
Design-for-reusability in VHDL
Calendar
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