Archived News of the Insititut ACPS

24.10.23
Our conference paper “'Practical Evaluation of Differential Frequency Shift Chirp Modulation for Acoustic Underwater Communication” and our joint conference paper “'Affordable underwater acoustic modems and their application in everyday life: a complete overview'” has been accepted for the 17th International Conference on Underwater Networks & Systems (WUWNet’23). Congratulation to the authors Filippo Campagnaro (University of Padova) and Fabian Steinmetz. Conference Link: https://wuwnet.acm.org/2023/
09.10.23
Our poster 'Towards Autonomous Utility-Aware Energy Management for Energy Harvesting Devices' has been accepted for the conference / workshop  '21st ACM Conference on Embedded Networked Sensor Systems (SenSys 2023)'. Congratulation to the head of the institute Prof. Renner.
07.07.23
We are proud and delighted for having been invited to participate in the amazing campaign "Ask Me Anything: Application edition" by TUHH. Wanna see what this is? Have a look.
21.06.23
We are pleased to announce that Prof. Jacob Sorber, Professor at Clemson University, USA, will be giving a talk on his research on intermittent computing. Title: Learning to Compute without Reliable Power Date and location: Monday, 26.06.23 at 11:30 am in room HS28 - 0.08 You are warmly invited! Abstract The Internet of Things is just hype until we learn to compute without batteries and reliable power. We are simply not going to recharge, replace, and dispose of trillions of batteries. Battery-less sensing devices offer a more sustainable option (smaller, cheaper, more environmentally friendly) that can be deployed for decades (batteries typically wear out after 2–5 years), but they store less energy and lose power more often. Even with energy harvesting advances, today's batteryless devices are difficult to program, test, and deploy, due to unpredictable energy supplies, limited energy storage, and frequent power failures. Biography Jacob Sorber is a Dean's Professor of Computer Science at Clemson University. His work makes mobile sensors and embedded systems more efficient, robust, deployable, and secure, by exploring novel systems (both hardware and software) and languages. His research has received support by the National Science Foundation (including a CAREER Award), the US Geological Survey, General Electric, and other sources. He works on problems in health, biology, agriculture, and manufacturing. Before joining Clemson, he was a postdoctoral researcher at Dartmouth College and a graduate student at UMass Amherst.
21.06.23
The journal article 'Synthetic generation of vibroacoustic modulation signals for structural health monitoring' has been accepted for the journal 'Mechanical Systems and Signal Processing'. Congratulation to our co-worker and co-author of the article Peter Oppermann and also to the head of the institute Prof. Renner.