August Joki
University of California, Los Angeles
5 Papers
332 Citations
August Joki is an academic researcher from University of California, Los Angeles. The author has contributed to research in topics: Network architecture & Wireless sensor network. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 5 publications.
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Papers
The Tenet architecture for tiered sensor networks
Omprakash Gnawali,Ki-Young Jang,Jeongyeup Paek,Marcos A. M. Vieira,Ramesh Govindan,Ben Greenstein,August Joki,Deborah Estrin,Eddie Kohler +8 more
- 31 Oct 2006
TL;DR: It is shown that a Tenet pursuit-evasion application exhibits performance comparable to a mote-native implementation while being considerably more compact.
Objects of wonderment
Eric Paulos,Tom Jenkins,August Joki,Parul Vora +3 more
- 25 Feb 2008
TL;DR: Wonderment as a design concept is presented, a novel toolkit based on mobile phone technology for promoting non-experts to participate in the creating of new objects of wonderment is introduced, and probe style interventions used to inform the design of a specific object ofWonderment based on urban sounds and ringtones called Hullabaloo are described.
22
•Journal Article
The Tenet Architecture for Tiered Sensor Networks
Omprakash Gnawali,Ben Greenstein,Ki-Young Jang,August Joki,Jeongyeup Paek,Marcos A. M. Vieira,Deborah Estrin,Ramesh Govindan,Eddie Kohler +8 more
TL;DR: The Tenet architecture as discussed by the authors is motivated by the observation that future largescale sensor network deployments will be tiered, consisting of motes in the lower tier and masters, relatively unconstrained 32-bit platform nodes, in the upper tier.
17
•Journal Article
Campaignr: A Framework for Participatory Data Collection on Mobile Phones
TL;DR: The design choices and some numerical evaluation of Campaignr are described and the data collection method is described, which provides access to the sensors in a robust and flexible way that hides the complexities of the mobile embedded phone environment.
The Tenet architecture for tiered sensor networks
Jeongyeup Paek,Ben Greenstein,Omprakash Gnawali,Ki-Young Jang,August Joki,Marcos A. M. Vieira,John Hicks,Deborah Estrin,Ramesh Govindan,Eddie Kohler +9 more
TL;DR: It is shown that a Tenet pursuit-evasion application exhibits performance comparable to a mote-native implementation while being considerably more compact, and that tiered architecture scales network capacity and allows reliable delivery of high rate data.