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[Author] Shigeya SUZUKI(2hit)

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  • Domain Name System--Past, Present and Future

    Shigeya SUZUKI  Motonori NAKAMURA  

     
    INVITED PAPER

      Vol:
    E88-B No:3
      Page(s):
    857-864

    Domain Name System--DNS is a key service of the Internet. Without DNS, we cannot use any useful Internet applications. At the beginning of the Internet, email or file transfer applications were provided. DNS provides key service to them--resource discovery. Nowadays, there are broad range of software making use of DNS as basis of their application. In this paper, we explain the evolution of DNS, how DNS works and recent activities including operational issues. Then, we describe EPC network which make use of RFID to bridge real world and the Internet, and how DNS helps to organize EPC network.

  • Otedama: A Relocatable RFID Information Repository Architecture

    Shigeya SUZUKI  Rodney VAN METER  Osamu NAKAMURA  Jun MURAI  

     
    PAPER

      Vol:
    E93-D No:11
      Page(s):
    2922-2931

    We present a novel RFID middleware architecture, Otedama, which makes use of a unique property of RFID information to improve performance. RFID tags are bound to items. New information related to an RFID tag is generated at the site where the ID exists, and the entity most interested in the history and the item itself is in close proximity to the RFID tag. To exploit this property, we propose a scheme which bundles information related to a specific ID into one object and moves that bundle to a nearby server as the RFID tag moves from place to place. By using this scheme, information is always accessible by querying a system near the physical location of the tag, providing better query performance. Additionally, the volume of records that must be kept by a repository manager is reduced, because the relocation naturally migrates data away as physical objects move. We show the effectiveness of this architecture by analyzing data from a major retailer, finding that information retrieval performance will be six times better, and the cost of search is possibly several times cheaper.