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Architecture for Blockchain Applications
Xiwei Xu,Ingo Weber,Mark Staples +2 more
- 05 Mar 2019
320
About: The article was published on 05 Mar 2019. and is currently open access. The article focuses on the topics: Blockchain.
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Business Process Management: Concepts, Languages, Architectures
Mathias Weske
- 19 Sep 2007
TL;DR: Matthias Weske argues that all communities involved need to have a common understanding of the different aspects of business process management, and details the complete business process lifecycle from the modeling phase to process enactment and improvement, taking into account all different stakeholders involved.
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Caterpillar: A business process execution engine on the Ethereum blockchain
Orlenys López-Pintado,Luciano García-Bañuelos,Luciano García-Bañuelos,Marlon Dumas,Ingo Weber,Ingo Weber,Alexander Ponomarev +6 more
TL;DR: Caterpillar as discussed by the authors is a blockchain-based BPMN execution engine that supports the creation of instances of a process model and allows users to monitor the state of process instances and to execute tasks thereof.
Blockchain for power systems: Current trends and future applications
Maria Luisa Di Silvestre,Pierluigi Gallo,Josep M. Guerrero,Rossano Musca,Eleonora Riva Sanseverino,Giuseppe Sciumè,Juan C. Vasquez,Gaetano Zizzo +7 more
TL;DR: A wide perspective is proposed about the application of the blockchain technology in the power systems area, clarifying some technical aspects concerning this promising technology, the features and applications developed so far, while focusing on the future of innovative applications in the electrical energy sector.
Analysis of Data Management in Blockchain-Based Systems: From Architecture to Governance
TL;DR: This paper analyzes blockchains from the viewpoint of a developer to highlight important concepts and considerations when incorporating a blockchain into a larger software system as a data store and to promote a methodical approach in applying it to large software systems.
EtherTwin: Blockchain-based Secure Digital Twin Information Management
TL;DR: This work proposes an owner-centric decentralized sharing model for Digital Twin data, and shows how to overcome the numerous implementation challenges associated with fully decentralized data sharing, enabling management of Digital Twin components and their associated information.
186
References
The Byzantine Generals Problem
TL;DR: The Albanian Generals Problem as mentioned in this paper is a generalization of Dijkstra's dining philosophers problem, where two generals have to come to a common agreement on whether to attack or retreat, but can communicate only by sending messengers who might never arrive.
•Book
Software Architecture in Practice
Len Bass,Paul Clements,Rick Kazman +2 more
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TL;DR: This second edition of this book reflects the new developments in the field and new understanding of the important underpinnings of software architecture with new case studies and the new understanding both through new chapters and through additions to and elaboration of the existing chapters.
Basic concepts and taxonomy of dependable and secure computing
TL;DR: The aim is to explicate a set of general concepts, of relevance across a wide range of situations and, therefore, helping communication and cooperation among a number of scientific and technical communities, including ones that are concentrating on particular types of system, of system failures, or of causes of systems failures.
The Byzantine generals problem
TL;DR: In this article, a group of generals of the Byzantine army camped with their troops around an enemy city are shown to agree upon a common battle plan using only oral messages, if and only if more than two-thirds of the generals are loyal; so a single traitor can confound two loyal generals.
Practical Byzantine fault tolerance
Miguel Castro,Barbara Liskov +1 more
- 22 Feb 1999
TL;DR: A new replication algorithm that is able to tolerate Byzantine faults that works in asynchronous environments like the Internet and incorporates several important optimizations that improve the response time of previous algorithms by more than an order of magnitude.
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