Search for dissertations about: "electrical system management"
Showing result 1 - 5 of 358 swedish dissertations containing the words electrical system management.
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1. Data management improvements in the electrical grid : a pathway to a smarter cyber-physical system
Abstract : The current power system is a network of electrical components forming a physical system. It is experiencing changes, such as the deployment of electric vehicles and distributed energy sources. Meanwhile, cybernetworks are becoming coupled into the physical grid to an increasing degree. READ MORE
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2. Enterprise architecture for IT management : a CIO decision making perspective on the electrical power industry
Abstract : Within the electric power industry, the average company's enterprise system - i.e. the overall system of IT related entities - is today highly complex. READ MORE
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3. On Risk Management of Electrical Distribution Systems and the Impact of Regulations
Abstract : The Swedish electricity market was de-regulated in 1996, followed by new laws and a new regulation applied to the natural monopolies of electrical distribution systems (EDS). These circumstances have motivated distribution systems operators (DSOs) to introduce more comprehensive analysis methods. READ MORE
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4. !secure(system) <=?=> !safe(system) : On Security and Safety of Industrial Software Systems
Abstract : The focus of our research work is on readily accessible, embedded, real-time development with concurrency support. To this end, we develop the Real-Time For the Masses (RTFM) programming framework with a model of computation based on tasks and resources and that stipulates a timing semantics. READ MORE
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5. The role of fault management in the embedded system design
Abstract : In the last decade, the world of telecommunications has seen the value ofservices definitively affirmed and the loss of the connectivity value. This changeof pace in the use of the network (and available hardware resources) has ledto continuous, unlimited growth in data traffic, increased incomes for serviceproviders, and a constant erosion of operators’ incomes for voice and ShortMessage Service (SMS) traffic. READ MORE