The increasing complexity of smartphone applications and services necessitate high battery consumption but the growth of smartphones' battery capacity is not keeping pace with these increasing power demands. To overcome this problem, researchers gave birth to the Mobile Cloud Computing (MCC) research area. In this paper we advance on previous ideas, by proposing and implementing the first known Near Field Communication (NFC)-based computation offloading framework. This research is motivated by the advantages of NFC's short distance communication, with its better security, and its low battery consumption. We design a new NFC communication protocol that overcomes the limitations of the default protocol; removing the need for constant user interaction, the one-way communication restraint, and the limit on low data size transfer. We present experimental results of the energy consumption and the time duration of two computationally intensive representative applications: (i) RSA key generation and encryption, and (ii) gaming/puzzles. We show that when the helper device is more powerful than the device offloading the computations, the execution time of the tasks is reduced. Finally, we show that devices that offload application parts considerably reduce their energy consumption due to the low-power NFC interface and the benefits of offloading.

Keep your nice friends close, but your rich friends closer - computation offloading using NFC / Sucipto, Kathleen; Chatzopoulos, Dimitris; Kosta, Sokol; Hui, Pan. - (2017), pp. 1-9. (Intervento presentato al convegno 2017 IEEE Conference on Computer Communications, INFOCOM 2017 tenutosi a Atlanta; United States nel 2017) [10.1109/INFOCOM.2017.8057147].

Keep your nice friends close, but your rich friends closer - computation offloading using NFC

Kosta, Sokol;
2017

Abstract

The increasing complexity of smartphone applications and services necessitate high battery consumption but the growth of smartphones' battery capacity is not keeping pace with these increasing power demands. To overcome this problem, researchers gave birth to the Mobile Cloud Computing (MCC) research area. In this paper we advance on previous ideas, by proposing and implementing the first known Near Field Communication (NFC)-based computation offloading framework. This research is motivated by the advantages of NFC's short distance communication, with its better security, and its low battery consumption. We design a new NFC communication protocol that overcomes the limitations of the default protocol; removing the need for constant user interaction, the one-way communication restraint, and the limit on low data size transfer. We present experimental results of the energy consumption and the time duration of two computationally intensive representative applications: (i) RSA key generation and encryption, and (ii) gaming/puzzles. We show that when the helper device is more powerful than the device offloading the computations, the execution time of the tasks is reduced. Finally, we show that devices that offload application parts considerably reduce their energy consumption due to the low-power NFC interface and the benefits of offloading.
2017
2017 IEEE Conference on Computer Communications, INFOCOM 2017
Computer Science (all); Electrical and Electronic Engineering
04 Pubblicazione in atti di convegno::04b Atto di convegno in volume
Keep your nice friends close, but your rich friends closer - computation offloading using NFC / Sucipto, Kathleen; Chatzopoulos, Dimitris; Kosta, Sokol; Hui, Pan. - (2017), pp. 1-9. (Intervento presentato al convegno 2017 IEEE Conference on Computer Communications, INFOCOM 2017 tenutosi a Atlanta; United States nel 2017) [10.1109/INFOCOM.2017.8057147].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1029055
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