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Multiplayer games can increase player enjoyment through social interactions, cooperation and competition. The popularity of such games is shown by current market trends. Especially networked multiplayer games frequently achieve great success, but confront game developers with additional networking challenges in the already complex field of game production. The primary challenge is game state synchronization across all players. Based on the current research, there are three main methods for this task – deterministic lockstep, snapshot interpolation and state-sync – with their own advantages and disadvantages.
This work quantitatively evaluated and discussed the vertical (entity count) and horizontal (player count) limitations of deterministic lockstep and compared the method to snapshot interpolation. Results showed, that deterministic lockstep has no indicated vertical scaling limitation with a player count of up to 10 supporting 16,000 or more entities. A horizontal scaling limitation could not be found either and lockstep was confirmed to work with 40 or more players while handling 1024 entities. However, both scaling dimensions correlate negatively, which was indicated by the maximum scaling configurations 30 players and 4096 entities or 20 players and 8192 entities.
An unoptimized snapshot interpolation implementation achieved a vertical scaling limitation of 4096 entities with 10 players and a horizontal scaling limit of 40 or more players with 1024 entities and therefore was found to have a lower entity limit compared to deterministic lockstep.
Furthermore, results are compared to related work. Other contributions of this thesis include an overview of game networks and the three game state synchronization techniques. An architecture model for deterministic lockstep including a hybrid approach combining it with snapshot interpolation for re-synchronization and hot-joins. And finally, a network packet deconstruction of the implemented networking framework Unity Transport Package (UTP).
Password-based authentication is widely used online, despite its numerous shortcomings, enabling attackers to take over users’ accounts. Phishing-resistant Fast IDentity Online (FIDO) credentials have therefore been proposed to improve account security and authentication user experience. With the recent introduction of FIDO-based passkeys, industry-leading corporations aim to drive widespread adoption of passwordless authentication to eliminate some of the most common account takeover attacks their users are exposed to. This thesis presents the first iteration of a distributed web crawler measuring the adoption of FIDO-based authentication methods on the web to observe ongoing developments and assess the viability of the promised passwordless future. The feasibility of automatically detecting authentication methods is investigated by analyzing crawled web content. Because today’s web is increasingly client-side rendered, capturing relevant data with traditional scraping methods is challenging. Thus, the traditional approach is compared to the browser-based crawling of dynamic content to optimize the detection rate. The results show that authentication method detection is possible, although there are some limitations regarding accuracy and coverage. Moreover, browser-based crawling is found to significantly increase detection rate.
The increasing availability of online video content, partially fueled by the Covid-19 pandemic and the growing presence of social media, adds to the importance of providing audio descriptions as a media alternative to video content for blind and visually impaired people. In order to address concerns as to what can be sufficiently described and how such descriptions can be delivered to users, a concept has been developed providing audio descriptions in multiple levels of detail. Relevant information is incorporated into an XML-based data structure. The concept also includes a process to provide optional explanations to terms and abbreviations, helping users without specific knowledge or people with cognitive concerns in comprehending complex videos. These features are implemented into a prototype based on the Able Player software. By conducting a user test, the benefits of multi-layered audio descriptions and optional explanatory content are evaluated. Findings suggest that the choice of several levels of detail is received positively. Users acknowledged the concept of explanations played parallelly to the video and described further use cases for such a practice. Participants preferred a higher level of detail for a high-paced action video and a lower level for informative content. Possibilities to extend the data structure and features include multilanguage use cases and distributed systems.
Video games have a significant influence on our time. However, lack of accessibility makes it hard for disabled gamers to play most of them. Virtual reality offers new possibilities to include people with disabilities and enable them to play games. Additionally, serious VR games provide educational benefits, such as improved memory and engagement.
In this work, the accessibility problems in video games and VR applications are explored with an emphasis on serious games as well as a general lack of guidelines. An overview of existing guidelines is given. From this, a set of guidelines is derived that summarizes the relevant rules for accessible VR games.
New ways to interact with VR environments come with both opportunities and challenges. This work investigates the applicability of different hands-free input methods to play a VR game. Using a serious game five focus and three activation methods were implemented exemplary with the Oculus Go. The suitability of these methods was analyzed in a pre-study that excluded head movements for controlling the game. The remaining input methods were evaluated in an explorative user study in terms of operability and ease of use.In summary, all tested methods can be used to control the game. The evaluation shows head-tracking as the preferred input method, while scanning eye-tracking and voice control were rated mediocre.
In addition, the correlation between input methods and different menu types was examined, but the influence turned out to be negligible.
Web Accessibility is becoming increasingly important. Guidelines and according tests were created in order to ensure Web Accessibility for everyone. Detailed reports are created in order to advise content creators on this topic. However, these reports can be even more elaborate than the guidelines themselves with their very specific and technical vocabulary and their sheer length. This makes it hard, especially for non-experts, to understand what the results mean and to know where to start.
StroCards is a functional prototype developed to help viewers of Web Accessibility reports understand their contents easier. One way of doing this is by sorting and filtering identified accessibility issues. It can generate charts from the number of failed, passed and not applicable success criteria that highlight aspects that are not explained in the report itself. It can explain the user how well each of the tested website performs in terms of accessibility regarding different responsibilities. One of its key features is generating individual reports for individual responsibilities like e.g. visual design. With this functionality a designer like in this example, could receive a list of issues that are relevant to them without being overwhelmed by issues that they cannot solve. This creates a more efficient handling of the report. Besides displaying the report highlighting project roles, StroCards can have a more human-centered and empathetic approach by showing which user groups are affected and therefore excluded by accessibility issues on the website. This makes the long list of guidelines more tangible – especially for non-experts.
In the process of developing StroCards, some design decisions were made with a group of experts. The implemented functional prototype was tested in a qualitative and quantitative user study. It was perceived as easier to understand and better to work with.
A tool like this could wildly help people maintaining, creating, and developing websites to put these Web Accessibility guidelines into practice and consequently minimize exclusion of people from websites.
The legitimacy of users is of great importance for the security of information systems. The authentication process is a trade-off between system security and user experience. E.g., forced password complexity or multi-factor authentication can increase protection, but the application becomes more cumbersome for the users. Therefore, it makes sense to investigate whether the identity of a user can be verified reliably enough, without his active participation, to replace or supplement existing login processes.
This master thesis examines if the inertial sensors of a smartphone can be leveraged to continuously determine whether the device is currently in possession of its legitimate owner or by another person. To this end, an approach proposed in related studies will be implemented and examined in detail. This approach is based on the use of a so-called Siamese artificial neural network to transform the measured values of the sensors into a new vector that can be classified more reliably.
It is demonstrated that the reported results of the proposed approach can be reproduced under certain conditions. However, if the same model is used under conditions that are closer to a real-world application, its reliability decreases significantly. Therefore, a variant of the proposed approach is derived whose results are superior to the original model under real conditions.
The thesis concludes with concrete recommendations for further development of the model and provides methodological suggestions for improving the quality of research in the topic of "Continuous Authentication".
Head Mounted Displays (HMD) are increasingly used in various industries. But apart from the industry environment, the potentials of HMDs in a private environment like at home has been rel- atively unexplored so far. What daily tasks can these help with, in the home kitchen for example?
The aim of this thesis is to obtain knowledge about the usefulness of such an HMD, the HoloLens, in combination with an application, while following a new recipe. Therefore a prototype applica- tion for the HoloLens got developed which guides a user through the cooking of a sushi burger by using multimedia content.
With a mixed method design, consisting of quantitative and qualitative methods, the HoloLens in combination with an application was evaluated by 14 participants.
Not only the weight of the device was a problem for users. The test also revealed that the display is darkening the view and participants tend to look below the glasses. An advantage is indeed to reach the next cooking step without the need of using hands and always having in sight what needs to be done next. Positive feedback was given as well for the application. Through voice control the user communicates to a character which will guide through the recipe by videos and text.
If in future the technical characteristics of HMD devices will improve, an application in this con- text will be of advantage in order to simplify learning a new recipe. This device, in combination with an application, could help early-middle stage cognitive impaired people and blind people to cook.
Massively Multiplayer Online Games (MMOGs) are increasing in both popularity and scale.
One of the reasons for this is that interacting with human counterparts is typically considered much more interesting than playing against an Artificial Intelligence.
Although the visual quality of game worlds has increased over the past years,they often fall short in providing consistency with regard to behavior and interactivity.
This is especially true for the game worlds of MMOGs. One way of making a game world feel more alive is to implement a Fire Propagation System that defines show fire spreads in the game world. Singleplayer games like Far Cry 2 and The Legend of Zelda:
Breath of the Wild already feature implementations of such a system. As far as the author of this thesis knows, however, noMMOGwith an implemented Fire Propagation System has been released yet. This work introduces two approaches for developing such a system for a MMOG with a client-server architecture.
It was implemented using the proprietary game engine Snowdrop. The approaches presented in this thesis can be used as a basis for developing a Fire Propagation System and can be adjusted easily to fit the needs of a specific project.
Large-scale computing platforms, like the IBM System z mainframe, are often administrated in an out-of-band manner, with a large portion of the systems management software running on dedicated servers which cause extra hardware costs. Splitting up systems management applications into smaller services and spreading them over the platform itself likewise is an approach that potentially helps with increasing the utilization of platform-internal resources, while at the same time lowering the need for external server hardware, which would reduce the extra costs significantly. However, with regard to IBM System z, this raises the general question how a great number of critical services can be run and managed reliably on a heterogeneous computing landscape, as out-of-band servers and internal processor modules do not share the same processor architecture.
In this thesis, we introduce our prototypical design of a microservice infrastructure for multi-architecture environments, which we completely built upon preexisting open source projects and features they already bring along. We present how scheduling of services according to application-specific requirements and particularities can be achieved in a way that offers maximum transparency and comfort for platform operators and users.
Nowadays more and more companies use agile software development to build software in short release cycles. Monolithic applications are split into microservices, which can independently be maintained and deployed by agile teams. Modern platforms like Docker support this process. Docker offers services to containerize such services and orchestrate them in a container cluster. A software supply chain is the umbrella term for the process of developing, automated building and testing, as well as deploying a complete application. By combining a software supply chain and Docker, those processes can be automated in standardized environments. Since Docker is a young technology and software supply chains are critical processes in organizations, security needs to be reviewed. In this work a software supply chain based on Docker is built and a threat modeling process is used to assess its security. The main components are modeled and threats are identified using STRIDE. Afterwards risks are calculated and methods to secure the software supply chain based on security objectives confidentiality, integrity and availability are discussed. As a result, some components require special treatments in security context since they have a high residual risk of being targeted by an attacker. This work can be used as basis to build and secure the main components of a software supply chain. However additional components such as logging, monitoring as well as integration into existing business processes need to be reviewed.