D
Danny Soroker
Researcher at IBM
Publications - 60
Citations - 1256
Danny Soroker is an academic researcher from IBM. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mobile device & Debugger. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 60 publications receiving 1245 citations.
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Patent
Pervasive symbiotic advertising system and methods therefor
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present an advertising system and methods, including an ad service that one of generates, presents and receives information pertaining to an ad presentation, an ad display output device that outputs the ad presentation at a presentation location, a user response receiver at the ad service, which receives a response transmitted from a mobile device based on the ad display at the presentation location and a ad service transmitter that transmits an executable object to a target device specified in the user response.
Patent
Tool and method for mapping and viewing an event
TL;DR: A tool for mapping an event includes a map generator for generating an event map, an annotating unit for annotating the event map based on a user input, a view generator and a display device for displaying the zoomable and pannable view of the annotated event map as discussed by the authors.
Patent
System and method for identifying form type in a handwriting recognition based form completion system
TL;DR: In this paper, the system of the present invention includes a form design component, a form description repository, and a forms processing component each form used with the system has a layout including a form identifier field with a common location space for each given form of the plurality of different types of forms.
Journal ArticleDOI
Tolerating faults in hypercubes using subcube partitioning
TL;DR: It is shown that any regular algorithm can be implemented on an n-cube that has at most n-1 faults with slowdowns of at most two for computation and at most four for communication, the first result showing that an n -cube can tolerate more than O(n) arbitrarily placed faults with a constant factor slowdown.
Proceedings ArticleDOI
Using XForms to simplify Web programming
TL;DR: A way to avoid this increasing complexity by re-examining the basic requirements of web applications is described, to first separate client concerns from server concerns, and then to reduce the interaction between client and server to its most elemental: parameter passing.