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Institution

Hewlett-Packard

CompanyPalo Alto, California, United States
About: Hewlett-Packard is a company organization based out in Palo Alto, California, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Signal & Layer (electronics). The organization has 34663 authors who have published 59808 publications receiving 1467218 citations. The organization is also known as: Hewlett Packard & Hewlett-Packard Company.


Papers
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Patent
28 Oct 2003
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a vmsw instruction that provides a means for transitioning between virtualization mode and non-virtualization mode without an interruption, and a virtualization fault that faults on an attempt by a priority-0 routine in virtualisation mode attempting to execute a privileged instruction.
Abstract: Virtual-machine-monitor operation and implementation is facilitated by number of easily implemented features and extensions added to the features of a processor architecture. These features, one or more of which are used in various embodiments of the present invention, include a vmsw instruction that provides a means for transitioning between virtualization mode and non-virtualization mode without an interruption, a virtualization fault that faults on an attempt by a priority-0 routine in virtualization mode attempting to execute a privileged instruction, and a flexible highest-implemented-address mechanism to partition virtual address space into a virtualization address space and a non-virtualization address space.

198 citations

Patent
David A. Horsley1
27 Apr 2001
TL;DR: In this paper, a method of fabricating a non-perforate suspended platform on a bonded-substrate is described, which includes forming a dielectric layer on a support surface of a base substrate followed by patterning an interface surface of the dielectrics layer to define a well feature.
Abstract: A method of fabricating a non-perforate suspended platform on a bonded-substrate is disclosed. The method includes forming a dielectric layer on a support surface of a base substrate followed by patterning an interface surface of the dielectric layer to define a well feature. The well feature is etched until a well having a depth that leaves a thin protective layer of the dielectric layer covering the support surface. Next a platform substrate is urged into contact with the base substrate followed by annealing the base and platform substrates to fusion bond the interface surface with a mounting surface of the platform substrate. The platform substrate is thinned, to form a membrane over a sealed cavity defined by the well and the mounting surface. The membrane is patterned and etch to form a plurality of trenches that extend through the membrane to the sealed cavity and define a suspended platform and a flexure. A selective etch material such as HF is used to remove the remaining dielectric layer from beneath the platform and the flexures thereby freeing the suspended platform and the flexures.

197 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Experiments show that this nonlinear aggregation mechanism vastly outperforms both the imperfect market and the best of the participants and is extended to prove robust in the presence of public information.
Abstract: We present a novel methodology for predicting future outcomes that uses small numbers of individuals participating in an imperfect information market. By determining their risk attitudes and performing a nonlinear aggregation of their predictions, we are able to assess the probability of the future outcome of an uncertain event and compare it to both the objective probability of its occurrence and the performance of the market as a whole. Experiments show that this nonlinear aggregation mechanism vastly outperforms both the imperfect market and the best of the participants. We then extend the mechanism to prove robust in the presence of public information.

197 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
17 Aug 2015
TL;DR: This work first develops a high-level Policy Graph Abstraction (PGA) that allows network policies to be expressed simply and independently, and leverage the graph structure to detect and resolve policy conflicts efficiently, and also models and composes service chaining policies.
Abstract: Software Defined Networking (SDN) and cloud automation enable a large number of diverse parties (network operators, application admins, tenants/end-users) and control programs (SDN Apps, network services) to generate network policies independently and dynamically. Yet existing policy abstractions and frameworks do not support natural expression and automatic composition of high-level policies from diverse sources. We tackle the open problem of automatic, correct and fast composition of multiple independently specified network policies. We first develop a high-level Policy Graph Abstraction (PGA) that allows network policies to be expressed simply and independently, and leverage the graph structure to detect and resolve policy conflicts efficiently. Besides supporting ACL policies, PGA also models and composes service chaining policies, i.e., the sequence of middleboxes to be traversed, by merging multiple service chain requirements into conflict-free composed chains. Our system validation using a large enterprise network policy dataset demonstrates practical composition times even for very large inputs, with only sub-millisecond runtime latencies.

197 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the surface composition of radiation-grafted polymers in both the dry and hydrated (frozen at 160°K) states was studied using electron spectroscopy for chemical analysis.
Abstract: Electron spectroscopy for chemical analysis (ESCA) was used to study the surface composition of several radiation-grafted polymers in both the dry and hydrated (frozen at 160°K) states. Poly(2-hydroxyethyl methacrylate) (HEMA) and polyacrylamide, both hydrophilic polymers, were readily detected in the hydrated or dehydrated states when grafted to polyethylene substrates. For silicone rubber substrates, both grafts were observed on the hydrated surface but were significantly decreased in surface concentration upon dehydration. For grafts on a polyester-urethane, acrylamide was not a major constituent of either the dry or hydrated surface, while HEMA appeared to increase in abundance upon drying. The amount of the hydrophobic poly(ethyl methacrylate) found on the graft surface depended upon the substrate polymer used, but the surface abundance of poly(ethyl methacrylate) was not affected by drying. These results were considered in terms of polar group orientation, polymer chain mobility, substrate permeability, and the limitations of the ESCA technique. The implications of these results with respect to the use of radiation-grafted hydrophilic polymers for biomedical applications are also discussed.

197 citations


Authors

Showing all 34676 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Andrew White1491494113874
Stephen R. Forrest1481041111816
Rafi Ahmed14663393190
Leonidas J. Guibas12469179200
Chenming Hu119129657264
Robert E. Tarjan11440067305
Hong-Jiang Zhang11246149068
Ching-Ping Wong106112842835
Guillermo Sapiro10466770128
James R. Heath10342558548
Arun Majumdar10245952464
Luca Benini101145347862
R. Stanley Williams10060546448
David M. Blei98378111547
Wei-Ying Ma9746440914
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20231
202223
2021240
20201,028
20191,269
2018964