|
Virtual Dictionary
Interoperable Telesurgical Protocol The Interoperable Telesurgical Protocol is a common protocol system, developed by the University of Washington and SRI International, to standardize the way remotely operated robots are managed over the Internet. Below, we offer a selection of links from our resource databases which may match this term.
Related Dictionary
Entries for Interoperable Telesurgical Protocol:
Resources
in our database matching the Term Interoperable Telesurgical Protocol:
Results by page [1] ![]() What is IPTV? How does it benefit people? Bidding farewell to the days of mass entertainment being passive, as opposed to interactive, this FAQ attempts to explain to the layperson, a few home truths about the technology. ![]() The Medical Working Group of the X3D consortium is developing an open interoperable standard for human anatomy representation. This standard works with multiple types of scans (CAT, MRI, PET, and others), and allows equipment manufacturers to be able to export data collected from the scanning machines into a shared data format. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]()
Industry
News containing the Term Interoperable Telesurgical Protocol:
Results by page (18/01/2010)
Late last week, the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) approved a fix to the protocol that guards most sensitive transactions and communications online. But experts expect it to take a year for the fix to be fully applied. ...
(19/09/2009)
The Integrated Clinical Environment (ICE), a software platform for fully interoperable medical devices to better manage patients and their care, has been developed by the Center for Integration of Medicine and Innovative Technology (CIMIT),...
(18/02/2010)
Transfers of large amounts of data across the Internet to wireless devices suffer from a key problem: The Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) used to send and receive that data can be unnecessarily slow. A company called Aspe...
(24/05/2008)
A novel wireless-network protocol developed for the U.S. military breaks with tradition by sending not the data itself but rather a description of the data. In simulations, a network using the protocol was five times more efficient than a t...
(21/07/2004)
ICANN, the U.S. body overseeing Web site allocations globally has added IPv6, to its root server systems. This protocol will allow for the abundance of unique IP addresses we will need for a totally wired world....
|