Seleziona la regione che meglio si adatta alla tua posizione o alle tue preferenze.
Questa impostazione controlla la lingua dell'interfaccia utente, inclusi i pulsanti, i menu e tutto il testo del sito. Seleziona la tua lingua preferita per la migliore esperienza di navigazione.
Seleziona le lingue per gli annunci di lavoro che desideri vedere. Questa impostazione determina quali annunci di lavoro ti verranno mostrati.
Lakeside Labs is a cluster for science and innovation in the area of information and communication technology, focusing on self-organizing networked systems. It offers space for creative ideas in an international environment that promotes scientific excellence and mutual appreciation. About 60 people from various disciplines are funded by Lakeside Labs. The cluster is lead and managed by the nonprofit company Lakeside Labs GmbH. Research activities are performed at the University of Klagenfurt and Lakeside Labs GmbH, partly in cooperation with academic and industrial partners.
Flying Robots: Our lab has a fleet of heterogeneous drones with various capabilities. They are equipped with visual and thermographic cameras. In order to perform surveillance or monitoring tasks, we developed several centralized route planning algorithms. We are also working on the sensing aspect of drones. We try to achieve better positioning accuracy and thus better navigation of the drones. It can be achieved by using multiple sensors that are placed on board of a drone. Currently we focus on information fusion from the following sensors: the inertial measurement unit (IMU), GPS, and visual camera. We also investigate different network aspects and we are also exploring the network establishment, where all the nodes can communicate with each other. Our flying robots lab is equipped with fleet of small-scale unmanned aerial vehicles:
We investigate the coordination of heterogeneous multi-robot systems for autonomous exploration of unknown indoor environments. All robots are equipped with laser range scanners or Microsoft Kinect for simultaneous localization and mapping (SLAM). The goal of this work is to have a multi-robot system autonomously explore an indoor environment with self-organizing organization. We use the following robots:
The test and measurement laboratory of Lakeside Labs GmbH at the Lakeside Science & Technology Park in Klagenfurt is open for different measurement and testing services available. This laboratory enables, for example, encoding, decoding and analyzing of GSM and UMTS signals. Simulations of various digital circuits can be generated in various test scenarios. The laboratory is equipped with these devices:
The smart microgrid lab provides the tools for hands-on experience and research on smart microgrids. The laboratory is a smart microgrid on its own containing a renewable energy source, energy storage, and several reference loads. Energy is provided by a photovoltaic system at the rooftop. A data acquisition system provides data about the output power of the photovoltaic system in real time. The lab’s battery system is capable of storing up to 10 kWh of electrical energy. The lab can operate in grid mode or island mode, thus simulate a typical smart home as well as a fully autonomous system. Research experiments in the lab include smart metering, self-organizing smart appliances supporting demand response and load scheduling approaches.
In the “Programmable Radio Lab” we implement and evaluate new protocols for (wireless) communications. For this we have several programmable radio platforms among which is the so called WARP-platform (see https://warp.rice.edu/ for further information). The implementation of this platform is fully customizable such that new protocol ideas can be implemented and tested in real-world environments. Measurement results are used to gain new insights to improve the performance of protocols.
The lab consists of 100 low power wireless modules called Zolertia (Z1). Z1 follows the legacy design of Telosb nodes, equipped with a packet based, 2.4 GHz, low power CC2420 radio chip and a 16-bit ucontroller of TI MSP430 series. Z1 is a low cost, commercially available, off-the shelf wireless module for wireless sensor Testbeds with its small size to help in rapid buildup of an online network in indoor environments. The support for legacy OS i.e. TinyOS, is freely available and the advantage of using the same hardware as that of TelosB makes them easier to begin with.