LEADER 05080nam 2200589 a 450 001 9910785845103321 005 20230301180127.0 010 $a3-11-084508-3 024 7 $a10.1515/9783110845082 035 $a(CKB)2670000000251969 035 $a(SSID)ssj0000560121 035 $a(PQKBManifestationID)11374007 035 $a(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000560121 035 $a(PQKBWorkID)10570451 035 $a(PQKB)10237981 035 $a(MiAaPQ)EBC3042585 035 $a(WaSeSS)Ind00013301 035 $a(DE-B1597)53185 035 $a(OCoLC)979734253 035 $a(DE-B1597)9783110845082 035 $a(Au-PeEL)EBL3042585 035 $a(CaPaEBR)ebr10599567 035 $a(OCoLC)922945668 035 $a(EXLCZ)992670000000251969 100 $a19821207e19832011 uy 0 101 0 $aeng 135 $aurcn||||||||| 181 $ctxt$2rdacontent 182 $cc$2rdamedia 183 $acr$2rdacarrier 200 00$aPractical aspects of modern high performance liquid chromatography $eproceedings, December 7-8, Berlin (West) /$feditor, Imre Molna?r 205 $aReprint 2011 210 $aBerlin $cW. de Gruyter$d1983, c1982 215 $aviii, 449 pages $cnum. figures 300 $aCover title: Practical aspects of modern HPLC. 300 $a"Selected papers, presented at the Symposium on "Practical Aspects of Modern High Performance Liquid Chromatography (HPLC)" ... held on December 7th and 8th, 1981 at Schering AG, Berlin (West)" -- Pref. 311 0 $a3-11-008892-4 320 $aIncludes bibliographical references and indexes. 327 $tFront matter --$tEFFECT OF MOBILE PHASE COMPOSITION ON THE RETENTION BEHAVIOR OF OLIGONUCLEOTIDES IN REVERSED PHASE CHROMATOGRAPHY /$rRassi, Ziad El / Horváth, Csaba --$tQUANTITATIVE STRUCTURE RETENTION RELATIONSHIPS FOR OLIGONUCLEOTIDES /$rJacobson, Jana / Rassi, Ziad El / Horváth, Csaba --$tSPHERICAL AND IRREGULAR SILICA. DOES SHAPE INFLUENCE THE SELECTIVITY? /$rMüller, Hartmut / Engelhardt, Heinz --$tTHE CURRENT ROLE OF HPLC FOR THE ROUTINE ANALYSIS OF ENDOGENOUS COMPOUNDS IN CLINICAL CHEMISTRY /$rSchöneshöfer, M. / Molnar, I. --$tANALYSIS OF UNCONJUGATED CORTISONE AND 6?-OH-CORTISOL IN HUMAN URINE BY HIGH-PERFORMANCE LIQUID CHROMATOGRAPHY /$rWeber, B. / Schöneshöfer, M. --$tHIGH PERFORMANCE LIQUID CHROMATOGRAPHY OR PROTEIN ON REVERSE PHASE EXEMPLIFIED WITH HUMAN INTERFERONS AND OTHER PROTEINS: REVIEW AND SCOPE OF A METHOD /$rFriesen, Heinz-Jürgen --$tHPLC OF MEMBRANE BOUND PROTEINS /$rJosi?, Dj. / Reutter, W. --$tSEPARATION OF PROTEINS BY SIZE EXCLUSION AND REVERSED PHASE HIGH PRESSURE LIQUID CHROMATOGRAPHY /$rSchwarz, Walter / Born, Jochen / Tiedemann, Heinz --$tHIGH PERFORMANCE LIQUID CHROMATOGRAPHY AS APPLIED TO THE STUDIES OF THE FIBRINOGEN STRUCTURE /$rKehl, Maria / Lottspeich, Friedrich / Henschen, Agnes --$tTHE HPLC OF DI VALENT SULFUR /$rMöckel, Hermann J. / Freyholdt, Torsten / Weiss, Joachim --$tASPECTS OF AFFINITY CHROMATOGRAPHY IN HPLC /$rBuchholz, K. / Borchert, A. --$tTHE ROLE OF HPLC IN PHARMACOKINETICS /$rKrause, W. --$tIMPROVEMENT OF COLUMN PERFORMANCE IN HPLC USING A SPECIAL INLET PORT /$rLamer, W. --$tDISSOLUTION RATE DETERMINATION OF LOW-DOSE ORAL CONTRACEPTIVES USING AUTOMATED HPLC WITH COLUMN SWITCHING TECHNIQUE /$rHühn, Axel --$tPRACTICAL ASPECTS OF THE ROUTINE DETERMINATION BY HPLC OF FREE NORADRENALINE AND ADRENALINE IN URINE AND PLASMA /$rKringe, K.-P. / Neidhart, B. / Lippmann, Ch. --$tSEPARATION OF CATECHOLOESTROGENS AND THEIR MONOMETHYL ETHERS BY REVERSED-PHASE HPLC WITH TERNARY MOBILE PHASES /$rKraas, Ekkehard / Schütt, Michael / Zietz, Eberhard / Knuppen, Rudolf --$tQUANTITATIVE DETERMINATION OF ARYLOXYPROPANOLAMINES IN PLASMA AND ORGANS OF THE RAT BY ION-PAIR REVERSED-PHASE HIGH-PERFORMANCE-LIQUID- CHROPIATOGRAPHY /$rWinkler, H. / Lemmer, B. --$tHPLC-ANALYSIS OF ESTROGEN -ACTIVE ANABOLICA IN MEAT WITH THE ESTROGEN-RECEPTOR-TEST AS SPECIFIC DETECTION-SYSTEM /$rGrohmann, H.G. / Stan, H.-J. --$tMETHODS OF DETECTION IN MODERN HPLC /$rBaumann, Wolfram --$tFLUORIMETRIC DETERMINATION OF DRUGS IN BIOLOGICAL MATERIALS BY MEANS OF HIGH-PERFORMANCE LIQUID CHROMATOGRAPHY /$rHaefelfinger, P. --$tRAPID DETERMINATION OF SODIUM GLUCONATE AND GLUCOSE IN FERMENTATION FLUIDS /$rLenz, Reinhard / Zoll, Gabriele --$tRETENTION IN PRACTICAL HPLC /$rMolnar, I. --$tTHE SELECTION OF OPTIMAL CONDITIONS IN HPLC /$rLauer, ?. H. / Rozing, G.P. --$tList of Symbols used in the Text --$tCHROMATOGRAMS --$tAUTHOR INDEX --$tSUBJECT INDEX --$tBackmatter 606 $aHigh performance liquid chromatography$vCongresses 615 0$aHigh performance liquid chromatography 676 $a574.19/285 686 $aWC 3480$2rvk 701 $aMolna?r$b Imre$01542146 712 12$aSymposium on "Practical Aspects of Modern High Performance Liquid Chromatography (HPLC)"$f(1981 :$eBerlin, Germany) 801 0$bMiAaPQ 801 1$bMiAaPQ 801 2$bMiAaPQ 906 $aBOOK 912 $a9910785845103321 996 $aPractical aspects of modern high performance liquid chromatography$93794625 997 $aUNINA LEADER 12218nam 2200889Ia 450 001 9911019380503321 005 20241120173215.0 010 $a9786612122804 010 $a9781119964414 010 $a1119964415 010 $a9781282122802 010 $a1282122800 010 $a9780470695135 010 $a0470695137 010 $a9780470695128 010 $a0470695129 024 7 $a10.1002/9780470695135 035 $a(CKB)1000000000687352 035 $a(EBL)427933 035 $a(SSID)ssj0000333793 035 $a(PQKBManifestationID)11257022 035 $a(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000333793 035 $a(PQKBWorkID)10377793 035 $a(PQKB)10206479 035 $a(MiAaPQ)EBC427933 035 $a(CaBNVSL)mat08040101 035 $a(IDAMS)0b00006485f0e422 035 $a(IEEE)8040101 035 $a(PPN)252404890 035 $a(OCoLC)264716931 035 $a(CaSebORM)9780470516621 035 $a(Perlego)1010781 035 $a(EXLCZ)991000000000687352 100 $a20080521d2008 uy 0 101 0 $aeng 135 $aur|n|---||||| 181 $ctxt 182 $cc 183 $acr 200 14$aThe 3G IP multimedia subsystem (IMS) $emerging the Internet and the cellular worlds /$fGonzalo Camarillo, Miguel A. Garcia-Martin 205 $a3rd ed. 210 $aHoboken, NJ $cJ. Wiley & Sons$d2008 215 $a1 online resource (654 p.) 300 $aDescription based upon print version of record. 311 08$a9780470516621 311 08$a0470516623 320 $aIncludes bibliographical references and index. 327 $aForeword by Stephen Hayes -- Foreword by Allison Mankin and Jon Peterson -- Preface to the Third Edition -- Preface to the Second Edition -- Preface to the First Edition -- Acknowledgements -- Part I Introduction to the IMS -- IMS Vision: Where Do We Want to Go? -- 1.1 The Internet -- 1.2 The Cellular World -- 1.3 Why do we need the IMS? -- 1.4 Relation between IMS and non-IMS Services -- 2 The History of the IMS Standardization -- 2.1 Relations between IMS-related Standardization Bodies -- 2.3 Third Generation Partnership Project -- 2.4 Third Generation Partnership Project 2 -- 2.5 IETF-3GPP/3GPP2 Collaboration -- 2.6 Open Mobile Alliance -- 3 General Principles of the IMS Architecture -- 3.1 From Circuit-switched to Packet-switched -- 3.2 IMS Requirements -- 3.3 Overview of Protocols used in the IMS -- 3.4 Overview of IMS Architecture -- 3.5 Identification in the IMS -- 3.6 SIM, USIM, and ISIM in 3GPP -- 3.7 Next Generation Networks (NGN) -- Part II The Signaling Plane in the IMS -- 4 Session Control on the Internet -- 4.1 SIP Functionality -- 4.2 SIP Entities -- 4.3 Message Format -- 4.4 The Start Line in SIP Responses: the Status Line -- 4.5 The Start Line in SIP Requests: the Request Line -- 4.6 Header Fields -- 4.7 Message Body -- 4.8 SIP Transactions -- 4.9 Message Flow for Session Establishment -- 4.10 SIP Dialogs -- 4.11 Extending SIP -- 4.12 Caller Preferences and User Agent Capabilities -- 4.13 Reliability of Provisional Responses -- 4.14 Preconditions -- 4.15 Event Notification -- 4.16 Signaling Compression -- 4.17 Content Indirection -- 4.18 The REFER Method -- 4.19 Globally Routable User- Agent URIs (GRUU) -- 4.20 NAT Traversal -- 5 Session Control in the IMS -- 5.1 Prerequisites for Operation in the IMS -- 5.2 IPv4 and IPv6 in the IMS -- 5.3 IP Connectivity Access Network -- 5.4 P-CSCF Discovery -- 5.5 IMS-level Registration -- 5.6 Subscription to the reg Event State -- 5.7 Basic Session Setup -- 5.8 Application Servers: Providing Services to Users. 327 $a5.9 Changes due to Next Generation Networks (NGN) -- 5.10 Interworking -- 5.11 Combinational Services -- 5.12 Basic Sessions not Requiring Resource Reservation -- 5.13 Globally Routable User-Agent URI (GRUU) in IMS -- 5.14 IMS Communication Services Identification (ICSI) -- 5.15 IMS Application Reference Identifier (IARI) -- 5.16 NAT Traversal in the IMS -- 6 AAA on the Internet -- 6.1 Authentication, Authorization, and Accounting -- 6.2 AAA Framework on the Internet -- 6.3 The Diameter Protocol -- 7 AAA in the IMS -- 7.1 Authentication and Authorization in the IMS -- 7.2 he Cx and Dx Interfaces -- 7.3 The Sh Interface -- 7.4 Accounting -- 8 Policy and Charging Control in the IMS -- 8.1 PCC Architecture -- 8.2 Charging Architecture -- 8.3 Offline Charging Architecture -- 8.4 Online Charging Architecture -- 9 Quality of Service on the Internet -- 9.1 Integrated Services -- 9.2 Differentiated Services -- 10 Quality of Service in the IMS -- 10.1 Policy Control and QoS -- 10.2 Instructions to Perform Resource Reservations -- 10.3 Reservations by the Terminals -- 10.4 QoS in the Network -- 11 Security on the Internet -- 11.1 HTTP Digest Access Authentication -- 11.2 Certificates -- 11.3 TLS -- 11.4 S/MIME -- 11.5 Authenticated Identity Body -- 11.6 IPsec -- 11.7 Privacy -- 11.8 Encrypting Media Streams -- 12 Security in the IMS -- 12.1 Access Security -- 12.2 Network Security -- 13 Emergency Calls on the Internet -- 13.1 Introduction -- 13.2 Location Acquisition -- 13.3 Identifying Emergency Calls -- 13.4 Locating the closest PSAP -- 14 Emergency Calls in the IMS -- 14.1 Architecture for Supporting Emergency Calls in IMS -- 14.2 Establishing an Emergency Call in IMS -- 14.3 IMS Registration for Emergency Calls -- 14.4 Call back from PSAP to user -- 14.5 Anonymous calls -- 14.6 Emergency Calls in Fixed Broadband Accesses -- Part III The Media Plane in the IMS -- 15 Media Encoding -- 15.1 Speech Encoding -- 15.2 Video Encoding -- 15.3 Text Encoding -- 15.4 Mandatory Codecs in the IMS. 327 $a16 Media Transport -- 16.1 Reliable Media Transport -- 16.2 Unreliable Media Transport -- 16.3 Media Transport in the IMS -- Part IV Building Services with the IMS -- 17 Service Configuration on the Internet -- 17.1 The XML Configuration Access Protocol (XCAP) -- 17.2 An Overview of XML -- 17.3 HTTP URIs that Identify XCAP Resources -- 17.4 XCAP operations -- 17.5 Entity Tags and Conditional Operations -- 17.6 Subscriptions to Changes in XML Documents -- 17.7 XML Patch Operations -- 18 Service Configuration in the IMS -- 18.1 XDM architecture -- 18.2 Downloading an XML document, attribute, or element -- 18.3 Directory Retrieval -- 18.4 Data Search with XDM -- 18.5 Subscribing to Changes in XML Documents -- 19 The Presence Service on the Internet -- 19.1 Overview of the Presence Service -- 19.2 The Presence Life Cycle -- 19.3 Presence Subscriptions and Notifications -- 19.4 Presence Publication -- 19.5 Presence Information Data Format (PIDF) -- 19.6 The Presence Data Model for SIP -- 19.7 Mapping the SIP Presence Data Model to the PIDF -- 19.8 Rich Presence Information Data Format -- 19.9 CIPID -- 19.10 Timed Presence Extension to the PIDF -- 19.11 Presence Capabilities -- 19.12 Geographical Location in Presence -- 19.13 Watcher Information -- 19.14 Watcher Authorization: Presence Authorization Rules -- 19.15 URI-list Services and Resource Lists -- 19.16 Presence Optimizations -- 20 The Presence Service in the IMS -- 20.1 The Foundation of Services -- 20.2 Presence Architecture in the IMS -- 20.3 Presence Publication -- 20.4 Watcher Subscription -- 20.5 Watcher Information and Authorization of Watchers -- 20.6 Presence Optimizations -- 20.7 OMA extensions to PIDF -- 21 Instant Messaging on the Internet -- 21.1 The im URI -- 21.2 Modes of Instant Messages -- 21.3 Pager-mode Instant Messaging -- 21.4 Session-based Instant Messaging -- 21.5 The ?isComposing? Indication -- 21.6 Messaging Multiple Parties -- 21.7 File Transfer -- 22 The Instant Messaging Service in the IMS. 327 $a22.1 Pager-mode Instant Messaging in the IMS -- 22.2 Pager-mode Instant Messaging to Multiple Recipients -- 22.3 Session-based Instant Messaging in the IMS -- 22.4 File Transfer -- 23 Conferencing on the Internet -- 23.1 Conferencing Standardization at the IETF -- 23.2 The SIPPING Conferencing Framework -- 23.3 The XCON Conferencing Framework -- 23.4 The Binary Floor Control Protocol (BFCP) -- 24 Conferencing in the IMS -- 24.1 The IMS Conferencing Service -- 24.2 Relation with the work in TISPAN and OMA -- 25 Push-to-Talk over Cellular -- 25.1 PoC Standardization -- 25.2 IETF Work Relevant to PoC -- 25.3 Architecture -- 25.4 Registration -- 25.5 PoC Server Roles -- 25.6 PoC Session Types -- 25.7 Adding Users to a PoC Session -- 25.8 Group Advertisements -- 25.9 Session Establishment Types -- 25.10 Answer Modes -- 25.11 Right-to-send-media Indication Types -- 25.12 Participant Information -- 25.13 Barring and Instant Personal Alerts -- 25.14 Full Duplex Call Follow on -- 25.15 The User Plane -- 25.16 Simultaneous PoC Sessions -- 25.17 Charging in PoC -- 26 Multimedia Telephony Services: PSTN/ISDN Simulation Services -- 26.1 Providing Audible Announcements -- 26.2 Communication Diversion (CDIV) -- 26.3 Communication Diversion Notification (CDIVN) -- 26.4 Conference (CONF) -- 26.5 Message Waiting Indication (MWI) -- 26.6 OIP and OIR -- 26.7 TIP and TIR -- 26.8 ACRACR and CB -- 26.9 Advice of Charge (AoC) -- 26.10 CCBS and CCNR -- 26.11 Malicious Communication Identification (MCID) -- 26.12 Communication Hold (HOLD) -- 26.13 Explicit Communication Transfer (ECT) -- 26.14 User Settings in PSTN/ISDN Simulation Services -- 27 Voice Call Continuity (VCC) -- 27.1 Overview of Voice Call Continuity -- 27.2 VCC architecture -- 27.3 Registration -- 27.4 Call origination and anchoring -- 27.5 Call termination and anchoring -- 27.6 Domain Transfer -- Appendix A List of IMS-related Specifications -- A.1 Introduction -- A.2 3GPP Specifications -- A.3 ETSI NGN Specifications -- A.4 OMA Specifications. 327 $aReferences -- Index. 330 $aThe IMS (IP Multimedia Subsystem) is the technology that merges the Internet with the cellular world. It makes Internet technologies such as the web, email, instant messaging, presence, and videoconferencing available nearly everywhere at any time. The third edition of this bestselling book is fully updated and provides comprehensively expanded content, including new chapters on emergency calls and on Voice Call Continuity (VCC). As well as this, The 3G IP Multimedia Subsystem (IMS) presents updated material including a comprehensive picture of Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) as well as its applicability to IMS. As most of the protocols have been designed in the IETF, this book explains how the IETF developed these protocols and describes how these protocols are used in the IMS architecture. This is an indispensable guide for engineers, programmers, business managers, marketing representatives and technically aware users who want to understand how the IMS works and explore the business model behind it. . New chapters on emergency calls, Voice Call Continuity (VCC), service configuration (XCAP, XDM), and conferencing . Fully updated throughout, including Policy and Charging Control (PCC), QoS, Presence, Instant Messaging, Multimedia Telephony Services, and Push-to-talk over Cellular (PoC) . Describes the IP Multimedia Subsystem from two different perspectives: from the IETF perspective, and from the 3GPP perspective. . Provides details on the latest policy technology and security architecture . Written by experienced professionals in the field. 517 3 $a3G Internet Protocol multimedia subsystem (IMS) 606 $aWireless communication systems 606 $aMobile communication systems 606 $aMultimedia communications 606 $aInternet Protocol multimedia subsystem 615 0$aWireless communication systems. 615 0$aMobile communication systems. 615 0$aMultimedia communications. 615 0$aInternet Protocol multimedia subsystem. 676 $a621.38456 686 $aDAT 252f$2stub 686 $aDAT 614f$2stub 686 $aDAT 680f$2stub 686 $aELT 745f$2stub 686 $aQR 700$2rvk 700 $aCamarillo$b Gonzalo$0599685 701 $aGarcia-Martin$b Miguel A$0771102 801 0$bMiAaPQ 801 1$bMiAaPQ 801 2$bMiAaPQ 906 $aBOOK 912 $a9911019380503321 996 $aThe 3G IP multimedia subsystem (IMS)$94422602 997 $aUNINA