Institution
Motorola
Company•Schaumburg, Illinois, United States•
About: Motorola is a company organization based out in Schaumburg, Illinois, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Signal & Communications system. The organization has 27298 authors who have published 38274 publications receiving 968710 citations. The organization is also known as: Motorola, Inc. & Galvin Manufacturing Corporation.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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03 May 1985TL;DR: In this article, a radio channel for carrying messages between one central site (100) of a plurality of central sites and two-way remote data units (106) is considered.
Abstract: A communication system for carrying messages via a radio channel between one central site (100) of a plurality of central sites and a plurality of two-way remote data units (106). Each central site (100) has a radio coverage area (300) and each remote unit has a unique address and association with one of the central sites. When a message addressed to one of the remote units is received in a central site, a file (804) of remote unit addresses is searched to find the location and central site association of the remote unit to which the message is addressed. If an address match is found indicating that the remote transceiver is in the coverage area of the message-receiving central site, the addressed message is stored and transmitted in that site. If an address match is found indicating that the remote transceiver is in another central site, the addressed message is conveyed to that site for transmission.
358 citations
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TL;DR: Modified desirability functions that are everywhere differentiable are presented so that more efficient gradient-based optimization methods can be used instead of search methods to optimize the overall desIRability response.
Abstract: Desirability functions have been used extensively to simultaneously optimize several responses. Since the original formulation of these functions contains non-differentiable points, only search methods can be used to optimize the overall desirability response. Furthermore, all responses are treated as equally important. We present modified desirability functions that are everywhere differentiable so that more efficient gradient-based optimization methods can be used instead. The proposed functions have the extra flexibility of allowing the analyst to assign different priorities among the responses. The methodology is applied to a wire bonding process that occurs in semiconductor manufacturing, an industrial process where multiple responses are common.
356 citations
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02 May 2001TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed a peer-to-peer radio network that provides collision-free channel access with an emphasis on improving geographic reuse of the frequency spectrum, where the reservation channel implements a time division multiple access algorithm with dynamic slot allocation.
Abstract: A novel protocol for an ad-hoc, peer-to-peer radio network that provides collision-free channel access with an emphasis on improving geographic reuse of the frequency spectrum. The protocol of the invention is executed on the reservation or control channel, and provides a method for allocating data transactions on the data channels. The system of the invention utilizes multiple parallel data channels that are coordinated by a single reservation channel. The transceiver of the system employs two modems to solve the channel reliability issues with multiple channel designs, where one is dedicated as a receive-only modem for gathering channel usage information on the reservation channel. High quality voice, video and data may be transmitted. The reservation channel implements a time division multiple access algorithm with dynamic slot allocation. In a distributed manner, nodes determine geographic reuse of slots based on channel quality extracted from the modem. Signal quality calculations are used to determine the likelihood of a slot reuse causing destructive interference within a node's neighborhood. Requests for slot usage are compared with the known traffic pattern and accepted or rejected by nodes within RF signal range based on the signal quality calculations.
356 citations
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TL;DR: Ferroelectric functionality in intimate contact with silicon is achieved by growing coherently strained strontium titanate (SrTiO3) films via oxide molecular beam epitaxy in direct contact with Silicon, with no interfacial silicon dioxide.
Abstract: Metal oxide semiconductor field-effect transistors, formed using silicon dioxide and silicon, have undergone four decades of staggering technological advancement. With fundamental limits to this technology close at hand, alternatives to silicon dioxide are being pursued to enable new functionality and device architectures. We achieved ferroelectric functionality in intimate contact with silicon by growing coherently strained strontium titanate (SrTiO3) films via oxide molecular beam epitaxy in direct contact with silicon, with no interfacial silicon dioxide. We observed ferroelectricity in these ultrathin SrTiO3 layers by means of piezoresponse force microscopy. Stable ferroelectric nanodomains created in SrTiO3 were observed at temperatures as high as 400 kelvin.
351 citations
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30 Aug 1993TL;DR: In this article, a paging terminal (102) is coupled to an electronic mail network (113) for receiving the electronic mail messages, storing the received electronic mail message including alias identification (208, 210) of the originating devices of the e-mail messages, and encoding messages including the message data and the alias of the received e-mails for transmission to at least one selective call receiver (130).
Abstract: An electronic mail message delivery system (100) includes an electronic mail network (113) for delivering electronic mail messages from originating devices to destination devices, the electronic mail messages including network addresses (212) for identifying originating and destination devices communicating the electronic mail messages, and including message data (214). A paging terminal (102) is coupled to the electronic mail network (113) for receiving the electronic mail messages, storing the received electronic mail messages including alias identification (208, 210) of the originating devices of the electronic mail messages, and encoding messages including the message data and the alias of the received electronic mail messages for transmission to at least one selective call receiver (130). A paging transmitting means (124, 126) transmits the encoded messages over a paging communication channel, and at least one portable selective call receiver (130) can receive the transmitted messages. Optionally, the at least one portable selective call receiver (130) can transmit a reply message through the paging terminal (102) to an originating device on the electronic mail network (113).
351 citations
Authors
Showing all 27298 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Georgios B. Giannakis | 137 | 1321 | 73517 |
Yonggang Huang | 136 | 797 | 69290 |
Chenming Hu | 119 | 1296 | 57264 |
Theodore S. Rappaport | 112 | 490 | 68853 |
Chang Ming Li | 97 | 896 | 42888 |
John Kim | 90 | 406 | 41986 |
James W. Hicks | 89 | 406 | 51636 |
David Blaauw | 87 | 750 | 29855 |
Mark Harman | 83 | 506 | 29118 |
Philippe Renaud | 77 | 773 | 26868 |
Aggelos K. Katsaggelos | 76 | 946 | 26196 |
Min Zhao | 71 | 547 | 24549 |
Weidong Shi | 70 | 528 | 16368 |
David Pearce | 70 | 342 | 25680 |
Douglas L. Jones | 70 | 512 | 21596 |