motes
An Investigation Into Intra-Vehicle Sensor Networks
White Paper As a result, collections of these motes can be placed in an environment in order to collect data unobtrusively. This paper presents an investigation into the feasibility of retrofitting a vehicle with wireless sensor network motes. [03 Sep 2007]
Hardware Assisted Compression in Wireless Sensor Networks
White Paper A Wireless Sensor Network (WSN) is comprised of resource constained devices called motes. Motes are battery operated and must conserve as much power as possible. Power usage for each mote is made up of processing data, sensing the surroundings, and... [03 Sep 2007]
Algorithm/Architecture Co-Exploration for Designing Energy Efficient Wireless Channel Estimator
White Paper A Wireless Sensor Network (WSN) is comprised of motes which are resource constraint devices. Motes are battery operated and must conserve as much power as possible. Power usage for each mote is made up of processing data, sensing the surroundings... [03 Sep 2007]
A Spatiotemporal Communication Protocol for Wireless Sensor Networks
White Paper Theoretical analysis, simulation experiments, and a real implementation on Berkeley motes are provided to validate the claims. This paper presents a spatiotemporal communication protocol for sensor networks, called SPEED. [25 Aug 2007]
SPEED: A Stateless Protocol for Real-Time Communication in Sensor Networks
White Paper Theoretical analysis, simulation experiments and a real implementation on Berkeley motes are provided to validate the claims. This paper presents a real-time communication protocol for sensor networks, called SPEED. [25 Aug 2007]
Efficient and Practical Query Scoping in Sensor Networks
White Paper Experiments over a network of 54 motes confirm the algorithm's effectiveness. This paper proposes Voronoi scoping, a distributed algorithm to constrain the dissemination of messages from different sinks. [23 Aug 2007]
An Investigation Into Intra-Vehicle Sensor Networks
White Paper As a result, collections of these motes can be placed in an environment in order to collect data unobtrusively. This paper presents an investigation into the feasibility of retrofitting a vehicle with wireless sensor network motes. [13 Aug 2007]
Hardware Assisted Compression in Wireless Sensor Networks
White Paper A Wireless Sensor Network (WSN) is comprised of resource constained devices called motes. Motes are battery operated and must conserve as much power as possible. Power usage for each mote is made up of processing data, sensing the surroundings, and... [13 Aug 2007]
Algorithm/Architecture Co-Exploration for Designing Energy Efficient Wireless Channel Estimator
White Paper A Wireless Sensor Network (WSN) is comprised of motes which are resource constraint devices. Motes are battery operated and must conserve as much power as possible. Power usage for each mote is made up of processing data, sensing the surroundings... [13 Aug 2007]
Gradient-Driven Target Acquisition in Mobile Wireless Sensor Networks
White Paper This paper evaluates the model through a light-intensity matching experiment in MicaZ motes, which indicates that the model works well in a wireless sensor network environment. Navigation of mobile wireless sensor networks and fast target... [20 Jul 2007]
Extending Internet Connectivity to Smart Dust
White Paper Sizzle runs on the Berkeley/Crossbow "motes"- battery-powered, wireless devices equipped with an 8-bit microprocessor, 128KB FLASH and a mere 4KB of RAM. Researchers at Sun Microsystems Laboratories have created the world's smallest secure web server. [08 Nov 2005]
Quocirca's Straight Talking: Big Brother watching you?
Comment Roads could be covered in Tarmac with motes embedded in it, counting the number of vehicles passing over it and their weights. Work from the likes of the University of Berkeley, Intel and BT on RFID 'dust' or 'motes' is also showing longer-term... [22 Apr 2005]
Intel offers a glimpse of the future
News Ultimately, said Gelsinger, tiny processors called 'motes' could be deployed throughout the domestic environment and public spaces, from bathrooms to vehicle suspensions, all dynamically organising themselves into giant wireless networks. [01 Mar 2002]
