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The Korean Wikipedia (Korean: 한국어 위키백과, romanized: Han-gugeo Wiki Baekgwa) is the Korean language edition of Wikipedia. It was founded on 11 October 2002 and reached ten thousand articles on 4 June 2005. [1] As of September 2024, it is the 23rd largest Wikipedia, with 685,752 articles and 1,943 active users. [2]
Medium access control. v. t. e. Spatial multiplexing. 2xSMX or STC+2xMRC. Spatial multiplexing or space-division multiplexing (SM, SDM or SMX) is a multiplexing technique in MIMO wireless communication, fiber-optic communication and other communications technologies used to transmit independent channels separated in space.
Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP), [a] also called IP telephony, is a method and group of technologies for voice calls for the delivery of voice communication sessions over Internet Protocol (IP) networks, [2] such as the Internet.
Spatial weight matrix. The concept of a spatial weight is used in spatial analysis to describe neighbor relations between regions on a map. [1] If location is a neighbor of location then otherwise . Usually (though not always) we do not consider a site to be a neighbor of itself [2] so . These coefficients are encoded in the spatial weight matrix.
Spatial computing is any of various human–computer interaction techniques that are perceived by users as taking place in the real world, in and around their natural bodies and physical environments, instead of constrained to and perceptually behind computer screens. This concept inverts the long-standing practice of teaching people to ...
Spatial Reuse Protocol. Spatial Reuse Protocol is a networking protocol developed by Cisco. It is a link layer protocol for ring-based packet internetworking that is commonly used in optical fiber ring networks. Ideas from the protocol are reflected in parts of the IEEE 802.17 Resilient Packet Ring (RPR) standard.
The interplanetary Internet is a conceived computer network in space, consisting of a set of network nodes that can communicate with each other. [1][2] These nodes are the planet's orbiters and landers, and the Earth ground stations. For example, the orbiters collect the scientific data from the Curiosity rover on Mars through near-Mars ...
Legal situation. South Korean geographic data is subject to several restrictions due to laws such as the Geospatial Information Management Act [ko] (also known as the Act on Construction and Management of Spatial Information). Article 16, Paragraph 1 of that law prohibits state-led survey data from crossing the physical boundaries of Korea.