Managing Distant Network Equipment with Text Messages

SMS text messages control network equipment in isolated areas lacking Internet a
SMS text messages control network equipment in isolated areas lacking Internet access.
Reception and service at central level for international students after arrival at KTH. For Master's students For Exchange students At the KTH Symposium, the director of the U.S. National Science Foundation explains how scientific co-operation with Sweden benefits American research. AIMday Image is a forum for knowledge exchange between academic and industrial scientists in the field of image analysis Welcome to KTH on March 7! A group of KTH students has developed an SMS-based remote management system for network devices located in inaccessible areas. Six KTH students working toward their master's degrees in Communication Systems are testing an invention designed to allow network operators to remotely manage mobile phone network equipment through simple SMS text messaging. Condroid Remote Management is intended to cut out the need for site visits to equipment in remote locations that lack Internet access. The system is intended to make network access possible anyplace in the world that can be reached by SMS, including some of the most remote, unpopulated areas on the planet. "Our invention can control network equipment in remote locations such as mountains or deserts where there's no access to the Internet," says master's student Mahsa Tabatabaei, a member of the team behind Condroid Remote Management.
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