@article{SchubaHoefkenSchaefer2012, author = {Schuba, Marko and H{\"o}fken, H. and Schaefer, T.}, title = {Smartphone Forensik}, series = {Hakin9 : Practical Protection (2012)}, journal = {Hakin9 : Practical Protection (2012)}, publisher = {-}, isbn = {1733-7186}, pages = {10 -- 20}, year = {2012}, language = {de} } @article{FerreinSteinbauerVassos2012, author = {Ferrein, Alexander and Steinbauer, Gerald and Vassos, Stavros}, title = {Action-Based Imperative Programming with YAGI}, pages = {24 -- 31}, year = {2012}, abstract = {Many tasks for autonomous agents or robots are best described by a specification of the environment and a specification of the available actions the agent or robot can perform. Combining such a specification with the possibility to imperatively program a robot or agent is what we call the actionbased imperative programming. One of the most successful such approaches is Golog. In this paper, we draft a proposal for a new robot programming language YAGI, which is based on the action-based imperative programming paradigm. Our goal is to design a small, portable stand-alone YAGI interpreter. We combine the benefits of a principled domain specification with a clean, small and simple programming language, which does not exploit any side-effects from the implementation language. We discuss general requirements of action-based programming languages and outline YAGI, our action-based language approach which particularly aims at embeddability.}, language = {en} }