Sunday, July 26, 2009
New paper accepted for WiMob 09
Hongzhi Jiao, and Frank Y. Li, "Cooperative Medium Access Control in Wireless Networks: the Two-hop Case", The 5th IEEE International Conference on Wireless and Mobile Computing, Networking and Communications (WiMob 2009), Marrakech, Morocco, October 12th-14th, 2009.
Tuesday, July 21, 2009
New paper accepted for PIMRC '09
Lei Jiao, and Frank Y. Li, 'MAC Strategies for Single Rendezvous Multihop Cognitive Radio Networks', The 20th IEEE Personal, Indoor and Mobile Radio Communications Symposium 2009 (IEEE PIMRC’09), Tokyo, Japan, September 13-16, 2009.
Sunday, July 12, 2009
New paper accepted for 34th Annual IEEE Conference on Local Computer Networks (LCN)
Lei Jiao and Frank Y. Li, "Single Radio Based Channel Datarate Aware Parallel Rendezvous MAC Protocol for Cognitive Radio Networks", 34th Annual IEEE Conference on Local Computer Networks (LCN), Zürich, Switzerland, October 20-23., 2009
Monday, July 06, 2009
[ARG] Paper discussion, Week 28, 09'
T. Kindberg et al., “People, Places, Things: Web Presence for the Real World,” Proc. 3rd IEEE Workshop Mobile Computing Systems and Applications (WMCSA 00), IEEE CS Press, 2000, p. 19–28.
Abstract
The convergence of Web technology, wireless networks, and portable client devices provides new design opportunities for computer/communications systems. In the HP Labs’ “Cooltown” project we have been exploring these opportunities through an infrastructure to support “web presence” for people, places and things. We put web servers into things like printers and put information into web servers about things like artwork; we group physically related things into places embodied in web servers. Using URLs for ddressing, physical URL beaconing and sensing of URLs for discovery, and localized web servers for directories, we can create a location-aware but ubiquitous system to support nomadic users. On top of this infrastructure we can leverage Internet connectivity to support communications services. Web presence bridges the World Wide Web and the physical world we inhabit, providing a model for supporting nomadic users without a central control point.
Abstract
The convergence of Web technology, wireless networks, and portable client devices provides new design opportunities for computer/communications systems. In the HP Labs’ “Cooltown” project we have been exploring these opportunities through an infrastructure to support “web presence” for people, places and things. We put web servers into things like printers and put information into web servers about things like artwork; we group physically related things into places embodied in web servers. Using URLs for ddressing, physical URL beaconing and sensing of URLs for discovery, and localized web servers for directories, we can create a location-aware but ubiquitous system to support nomadic users. On top of this infrastructure we can leverage Internet connectivity to support communications services. Web presence bridges the World Wide Web and the physical world we inhabit, providing a model for supporting nomadic users without a central control point.
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