This a Bayesian ICA algorithm for the linear instantaneous mixing model with additive Gaussian noise [1]. The inference problem is solved by ML-II, i.e. the sources are found by integration over the source posterior and the noise covariance and mixing matrix are found by maximization of the marginal likelihood [1]. The sufficient statistics are estimated by either variational mean field theory with the linear response correction or by adaptive TAP mean field theory [2,3]. The mean field equations are solved by a belief propagation method [4] or sequential iteration. The computational complexity is N M^3, where N is the number of time samples and M the number of sources.
Blaster is a simple application that illustrates Windows NT 5.0’s support of the IrDA protocol. IrDA provides reliable point to point connectivity between 2 computers equipped with infrared
A language monitor provides a full duplex communications path between the print spooler and bi-directional printers that are capable of providing software-accessible status information and adds printer control information, such as commands defined by a printer job language, to the data stream s.
This software was done in part for a textbook on AI I ve written called _The Basis of AI_ (tentative title, subject to change but not if I get my way). For details see: http://www.mcs.com/~drt/basisofai.html
Addfilter is a command-line application which adds and removes filter drivers for a given drive or volume. It is intended to demonstrate how to insert a filter driver into the driver stack of a device. The sample illustrates how to do this by using the SetupDi APIs. The sample works on both x86 and Alpha platforms. It has only been tested in a 32-bit environment. Since Addfilter is not a driver, it does not deal with Plug and Play or Power Management.
FPFilter is a sample disk filter driver that demonstrates how a disk failure prediction filter driver could be implemented. A failure prediction filter driver can predict when a disk may fail and notify the disk driver stack of this condition.
The flpydisk sample is a floppy driver that resides in the directory \\Ntddk\Src\Storage\Fdc\Flpydsk. It is similar to a class driver in that it sits a level above the floppy disk controller in the driver stack, and brokers communication between the application level and the low-level driver. The floppy driver takes commands from the application and then calls routines in the controller which will in turn perform the actual interaction with the device. The sample compiles in 64-bit, but has not been tested in this environment. It is compatible with x86 and Alpha platforms.