Skip to main content

Home/ science/ Group items tagged server

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Janos Haits

gimli.cse.lehigh.edu - 0 views

  •  
    gimli is a web host server used by the SWAT research group in the Computer Science and Engineering department at Lehigh University in Bethlehem, PA. gimli is host to a number of virtual web servers and services.  Services hosted on this machine include:
Janos Haits

OpenLink Software: - 0 views

  •  
    Virtuoso is an innovative enterprise grade multi-model data server for agile enterprises & individuals. It delivers an unrivaled platform agnostic solution for data management, access, and integration.
Janos Haits

PredictionIO Open Source Machine Learning Server - 1 views

  •  
    "BUILD SMARTER SOFTWARE with Machine Learning PredictionIO is an open source machine learning server for software developers to create predictive features, such as personalization, recommendation and content discovery."
Janos Haits

COAST: COntent Aware Searching, retrieval and sTreaming - 0 views

  •  
    COAST, a Future Content Network (FCN) is defined as a network, based on the content-oriented paradigm. In conjunction to the client-server paradigm, the content-oriented paradigm focuses not only on the communication party, but also on the delivered data themselves.  In short, COAST is expected to deliver a FCN overlay architecture, where the users will just specify which data they need, and the COAST framework will find the desired data and forward it to the users ef
Janos Haits

Academic Torrents - 0 views

  •  
    "Currently making 1.67TB of research data available. Sharing data is hard. Emails have size limits, and setting up servers is too much work. We've designed a distributed system for sharing enormous datasets - for researchers, by researchers. The result is a scalable, secure, and fault-tolerant repository for data, with blazing fast download speeds."
Janos Haits

PeerJ.com/ - 0 views

  •  
    PeerJ provides academics with two Open Access publication venues: PeerJ (a peer-reviewed academic journal) and PeerJ PrePrints (a 'pre-print server'). Both are focused on the Biological and Medical Sciences, and together they provide an integrated solution for your publishing needs. Submissions open late Summer.
Janos Haits

YaCy 'KIT-sn-head': About - 0 views

  •  
    Sciencenet - Towards a global search and share engine for all scientific knowledge. We have developed a prototype distributed scientific search engine technology, "Sciencenet", which facilitates rapid searching over this large data space. By "bringing the search engine to the data" we do not require server farms. This platform also allows users to contribute to the search index and publish their large scale data to support e-Science. Furthermore, a community-driven method guarantees that only scientific content is crawled and presented. Our peer-to-peer approach is sufficiently scalable for the science web without performance or capacity tradeoff.
Janos Haits

LibraryCloud | Home - 0 views

  •  
    a metadata server that gathers library metadata from multiple institutions and makes it available through open APIs and as Linked Open Data. The aim is to make everything libraries know available to the full Web ecosystem.
Skeptical Debunker

Technology Review: Mapping the Malicious Web - 0 views

  • Now a researcher at Websense, a security firm based in San Diego, has developed a way to monitor such malicious activity automatically. Speaking at the RSA Security Conference in San Francisco last week, Stephan Chenette, a principal security researcher at Websense, detailed an experimental system that crawls the Web, identifying the source of content embedded in Web pages and determining whether any code on a site is acting maliciously. Chenette's software, called FireShark, creates a map of interconnected websites and highlights potentially malicious content. Every day, the software maps the connections between nearly a million websites and the servers that provide content to those sites. "When you graph multiple sites, you can see their communities of content," Chenette says. While some of the content hubs that connect different communities could be legitimate--such as the servers that provide ads to many different sites--other sources of content could indicate that an attacker is serving up malicious code, he says. According to a study published by Websense, online attackers' use of legitimate sites to spread malicious software has increased 225 percent over the past year.
  •  
    Over the past couple of years, cybercriminals have increasingly focused on finding ways to inject malicious code into legitimate websites. Typically they've done this by embedding code in an editable part of a page and using this code to serve up harmful content from another part of the Web. But this activity can be difficult to spot because websites also increasingly pull in legitimate content, such as ads, videos, or snippets of code, from outside sites.
thinkahol *

Face-to-Face with Homo Floresiensis | Anthropology | Sci-News.com - 6 views

  •  
    "Dr Susan Hayes' facial approximation of the female Homo floresiensis"
  •  
    Sorry for the page not work. In my browser I view 404 not found. The requested URL /othersciences/anthropology/article00776.html was not found on this server. no mas 900
1 - 10 of 10
Showing 20 items per page