Communications Systems Driven by Software Agent Technology
Journal of Network and Systems Management
Exception handling in agent-oriented systems
Advances in exception handling techniques
Workflow Management System Using Mobile Agents
ADBIS '99 Proceedings of the Third East European Conference on Advances in Databases and Information Systems
Exception Handling in Agent-Oriented Systems
Advances in Exception Handling Techniques (the book grow out of a ECOOP 2000 workshop)
Distributed agent environment: application and performance
Information Sciences—Informatics and Computer Science: An International Journal - Special issue: Introduction to multimedia and mobile agents
Agent technology in communications systems: an overview
The Knowledge Engineering Review
A decision support model for wireless information management using mobile agents
AIA'06 Proceedings of the 24th IASTED international conference on Artificial intelligence and applications
Towards an agent-oriented approach to conceptualization
Applied Soft Computing
International Journal of Internet Protocol Technology
Applications of agent technology in communications: a review
Computer Communications
Message ring-based channel reallocation for cellular wireless networks
Computer Communications
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The author describes a new kind of software, based on artificial intelligence research, that can move itself from place to place to help people work more effectively. Known as agents, these artificial assistants are software components that live inside computer environments. Developed out of research in artificial intelligence (AI), agents were made in a variety of forms to perform all sorts of useful work-including obtaining airline departure dates and times, filtering e-mail for messages the user considers important, alerting users to significant stock price changes, and a host of other tasks. At first, agents were constrained to a single computer or at most to a single computing environment-a closed, homogenous network of, say, Unix platforms. Their behavior was limited and all the tasks they could do had to be pre-established. Today, agents are breaking the bonds that confine them to a single environment while learning new ways of accomplishing tasks on their own, based on their experience. The newcomers are called mobile agents, because they can move from one computer to another. As they emerge from the shadow of AI research, they are bringing together telecommunications, software, and distributed-system technologies to create new ways of getting things done