2019
Authors
Foss, JD; Nixon, LJB; Shirley, B; Philipp, B; Malheiro, B; Mezaris, V; Kepplinger, S; Ulisses, A;
Publication
DataTV@TVX
Abstract
2019
Authors
Vasconcelos-Raposo, J; Teixeira, C;
Publication
PSYCHTECH & HEALTH JOURNAL
Abstract
2019
Authors
Pego, A; Matos Bernardo, MdR;
Publication
Handbook of Research on Entrepreneurship and Marketing for Global Reach in the Digital Economy - Advances in Business Strategy and Competitive Advantage
Abstract
2019
Authors
Oliveira, Ó; Gamboa, D; Silva, E;
Publication
Proceedings of the 16th International Conference on Applied Computing 2019
Abstract
2019
Authors
Lopes, SO; Pereira, RMS; Pereira, PA; Caldeira, AC; Fonte, VF;
Publication
International Journal of Hydrology Science and Technology
Abstract
In this paper, a daily plan model to the irrigation of a crop field using optimal control was developed. This daily plan model have in consideration: weather data (temperatures, rainfall, wind speed), the type of crop, the location, humidity in the soil at the initial time, the type of soil and the type of irrigation. The aim is to minimise the water used in the irrigation systems ensuring that the field crop is kept in a good state of preservation. MATLAB was used to develop our mathematical model and obtain its output. Its results were compared with experimental ones obtained from a real farm field of grass in Portugal. This comparison not only allowed us to validate our model, but also allowed us to conclude that, using optimal control considerable savings in water resources, while keeping the crop safe are obtained. Some real test cases were simulated and the comparison between the optimised water to be used by the irrigation system (calculated by software) and the real amount of water used in irrigation site (on-off control system for irrigation) produced water savings above 10%. © 2019 Inderscience Enterprises Ltd.
2019
Authors
Aguiar, A; Restivo, A; Correia, FF; Ferreira, HS; Dias, JP;
Publication
Programming
Abstract
Live Programming is an idea pioneered by programming environments from the earliest days of computing, such as those for Lisp and Smalltalk. One thing they had in common is liveness: an always accessible evaluation and nearly instantaneous feedback, usually focused on coding activities. In this paper, we argue for Live Software Development (LiveSD), bringing liveness to software development activities beyond coding, to make software easier to visualize, simpler to understand, and faster to evolve. Multiple challenges may vary with the activity and application domain. Research on this topic needs to consider the more important liveness gaps in software development, which representations and abstractions better support developers, and which tools are needed to support it.
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