The Lightweight Runtime Engine of the Wireless Internet Platform for Mobile Devices
ICESS '07 Proceedings of the 3rd international conference on Embedded Software and Systems
Extending self-healing in grid environment by pulse monitoring
Multiagent and Grid Systems
Dynamic algorithms for autonomic pervasive services in mobile wireless environments
International Journal of Autonomic Computing
Radical concepts for self-managing ubiquitous and pervasive computing environments
WRAC'05 Proceedings of the Second international conference on Radical Agent Concepts: innovative Concepts for Autonomic and Agent-Based Systems
Autonomic Management of Cloud Neighborhoods through Pulse Monitoring
UCC '12 Proceedings of the 2012 IEEE/ACM Fifth International Conference on Utility and Cloud Computing
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The overall goal of this research is to improve the self-awareness and environment-awareness aspect of personal autonomic computing (PAC) to facilitate self-managing capabilities such as self-healing. Personal computing offers unique challenges for self-management due to its multiequipment, multisituation, and multiuser nature. The aim is to develop a support architecture for multiplatform working, based on autonomic computing concepts and techniques. Of particular interest is collaboration among personal systems to take a shared responsibility for self-awareness and environment awareness. Concepts mirroring human mechanisms, such as reflex reactions and the use of vital signs to assess operational health, are used in designing and implementing the PAC architecture. As proof of concept, this was implemented as a self-healing tool utilizing a pulse monitor and a vital signs health monitor within the autonomic manager. This type of functionality opens new opportunities to provide self-configuring, self-optimizing, and self-protecting, as well as self-healing autonomic capabilities to personal computing