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This event took place on 3rd December 2014 at 11:30am (11:30 GMT)
Knowledge Media Institute, Berrill Building, The Open University, Milton Keynes, United Kingdom, MK7 6AA
Standard real-time models do not consider the fact that a chosen technical deadline is different from the critical latency where the service utility becomes zero. But this fact is rather important for engineering practice.
In this talk we present a tolerance-based refinement of the real-time model. By doing so we make the process of deriving the estimation of the critical latency explicit. The difference between the technical deadline and the critical latency is a measure for the safety margin of the system. This safety margin is important for both, soft real-time and hard real-time systems, though with different quantities and qualities. Furthermore, we explain why the critical latency can hardly be quantified by a concrete value. However, we demonstrate how to derive reasonable estimates for it. We use a concrete application to show how the distinctive knowledge of the critical latency and the technical deadline are useful for real-time scheduling. As an outlook we argue by examples how this tolerance-based model is also applicable beyond just real-time performance, like optimised energy management. |
The webcast was open to 1000 users
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