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Obaidat, Mohammad S. (Mohammad Salameh), 1952-

 Person

Found in 7 Collections and/or Records:

A new UDDI service registry and its performance evaluation, 2009

 Item — Call number MU Thesis ORe
Identifier: b2825634
Abstract Building upon the existing Universal Description, Discovery and Integration (UDDI) registry specification, this thesis proposes additonal features and specifications to the OASIS standard, UDDI v3.0.2. These improvements and additional capabilities on UDDI make significant steps forward in interoperability with other development frameworks, programming paradigms and registry standards, enhance the search capabilities of UDDI by including support for aggregated searches, reduced bandwidth...
Dates: 2009

Dynamic waveform : power adaptation in wireless LANs, 2002

 Item — Call number MU Thesis Gre
Identifier: b2125205
Abstract This thesis presents a method for dyamically setting 802.11 wireless LAN waveforms and transmission power levels based on the wireless channel's signal to noise ratio. Simulation models were developed to study the performance of our media access control (MAC) protocol, SNR-WPA (Signal to Noise Ratio-Waveform Power Adaptation), and compare the performance to a baseline wireless LAN MAC. SNR-WPA method is shown to increase the throughput and range while decreasing the packet delay for...
Dates: 2002

Enhancements to the SOCKS network security protocol, 2008

 Item — Call number MU Thesis Sun
Identifier: b2090076
Abstract This thesis is the result of work done on extending the capabilities of SOCKS protocol. SOCKS is an application layer network security protocol deployed in firewalls, standardized in Request For Comments (RFC) 1928 by the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) as SOCKS Version 5. There are two proposed extensions to the SOCKS protocol made and implemented in this thesis. The first extension is the addition of multicast capabilities to the SOCKS protocol. The current standard of the...
Dates: 2008

Performance evaluation of adaptive ABR voice over ATM networks, 2001

 Item — Call number MU Thesis Obe
Identifier: b2194892
Abstract This work investigates and studies the performance of voice quality when sent over the ABR service in ATM networks. Sources can modify the rate at which they send traffic to the network based on the feedback carried by the Resource Management (RM) cells. This is achieved by changing the encoding level. As the contention increases in the network resources, (bandwith in this case), sources start to reduce the rate at which they generate and send traffic. The efficiency of the scheme under...
Dates: 2001

Security enhancement schemes for wireless networks, 2008

 Item — Call number MU Thesis Gue
Identifier: b2090075
Abstract The IEEE 802.11 standard is becoming the most popular and efficient network topology deployed today. Providing and ensuring the security of wireless network is essential part to its continuous growth. Goals such as confidentiality and trust imply that every data transmitted by each user stays known only to the communicating parties. Authorization of users is also a very important aspect of network integrity. There exist mechanisms defined by the Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPA) protocol that...
Dates: 2008

Simulation of input buffering in an asynchronous transfer mode switch, 1997

 Item — Call number MU Thesis Rie
Identifier: b2088043
Abstract Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM) switching systems have been developed in order to support the new traffic patterns in telecommunication networks. An ATM switching system is composed of identical basic switching building blocks called switching elements that have been arranged in a particular topology. The basic function of a switching element is to buffer cells that are destined for the same outlet. Currently, two major buffering strategies are available for use in switching elements,...
Dates: 1997

Storage area network (SAN) infrastructure design and performance analysis, 2003

 Item — Call number MU Thesis Ran
Identifier: b2088314
Abstract This thesis proposes new methodologies for the design and performance evaluation of Storage Area Networks (SANs) infrastructures. Designing a storage area network (SAN) fabric requires devising a set of fiber channel switches and links to connect hosts to their storage devices. The network must be capable of simultaneously meeting specified data flow requirements between multiple host-device pairs. We have presented a detailed analytical view of the key architectural switch...
Dates: 2003