AWS Managed Service Offering

Today we are excited to start offering a fully managed AWS service to our customers and clients. Take away the headache of running your IT services and simply your business letting us help you on your journey. We will capture your requirements, design your solution and build and operate it in the AWS public cloud for you, giving you time to concentrate on your other business goals and interests.

Research Work (Dr Mark Johnson)

Dr Mark Johnson has been involved in some valuable research work as follows:

Current Research Projects

  • Support Strategies for Dyslexic Computer Users, including the on-going evaluation of the DUIST framework.
  • An investigation into alternative approaches to stimulate student engagement in traditionally unpopular/difficult computer disciplines such as discrete mathematics.
  • A study into the use of role-play as a valuable teaching aid for students studying requirements engineering, formal specification of software systems and elicitation techniques in higher education.

His research work outputs can be found here.

Research Work (Dr James Oakes)

Thesis – Intelligent Management of Virtualised Computer Based Workloads and Systems

Some interesting work by James Oakes has been conducted on the management of virtualised computer platforms. The details of the thesis work can be found here: Intelligent Management of Virtualised Computer Based Workloads and Systems. There will hopefully be further developments and research based on this initial work to follow!

IEEE Paper – Simplified Deployment of Virtual Machines using an Intelligent Design Engine

The following paper proposes an advanced private cloud methodology for simplfying the provisioning of virtual machines: https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/7556037

Springer Paper – Measuring and Reducing the Cognitive Load for the End Users of Complex Systems

The following paper discusses methods on how to reduce the cognitive load (mental power requirement) for the end users of complex systems: https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-030-29516-5_88