submission dates and instructions.
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ACM MobiArch: The 5th ACM International Workshop on Mobility in the
Evolving Internet Architecture
(Sept 24th 2010, Held in conjunction with ACM MobiCom and ACM
MobiHoc, Chicago, IL, USA)
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DATES
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Paper Registration : Not Required
Paper Submission : June 8, 2010, 11.59 PM EDT
Notification : July 5, 2010
Camera Ready : July 15, 2010
CALL FOR PAPERS
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With recent developments in wireless access, sensor, and mobile device
technologies, the mobility of users, terminals, and networks has
become an indispensable component of today's Internet vision. Wireless
access devices already outnumber stationary Internet hosts and an
increasing share of traffic traverses at least one wireless link.
These trends can be expected to continue in the near future and call
for a reexamination of the architectural design of the current and
future internets. The current TCP/IP architecture was originally
designed for communication between stationary mainframes and servers,
and later used for wired PCs. While Mobile IP and the IPv6 mobility
extensions have sought to evolve the current architecture to provide
support for connections under device mobility, their adoption has
lagged behind expectations. This lack of adoption and additional
challenges posed by mobility have led to renewed interest in a
clean-slate design that comprehensively addresses mobility, free of
existing architectural constraints. A clean-slate design requires
rethinking current architectural foundations like the end-to-end
principle as well as associated Internet business models. It requires
addressing issues such as efficient mobility management and
optimization, locator-identifier split, multi-homing, security,
transport over wireless access and related operational/deployment
concerns. Moreover, the architecture will also need to include new
services to meet the changed needs of the majority of mobile
applications.
MobiArch 2010 welcomes submissions from both researchers and
practitioners that explore challenges or advances in architectures,
protocols, and technologies to address mobility in the current
Internet or in future clean-slate Internets. We especially welcome
position papers that describe highly original ideas, discuss new
directions, or generate insightful discussion at the workshop.
Topics of MobiArch 2010 cover all aspects of architectural issues and
system support for mobility in the Internet, including but not limited
to:
* Impact of new wireless technologies/services, networking
technologies, and mobility patterns on the Internet architecture
* Architectures and protocols for mobility support in the
Internet, ranging from link to application layers or cross-layer
design solutions
* Addressing and routing issues (e.g., locator/identifier split,
content routing, multi-homing)
* Location management, representation of geolocation, and support
for location-aware application and protocols
* Security and privacy issues in mobile networks and impact on
Internet architecture
* Role of network virtualization in mobile Internet architecture
* Economic, regulation, and deployment issues of mobility
solutions (infrastructure and devices)
Submissions must present original results. Selected papers will be
forward-looking, describe their relationship to existing work, and
have impact and implications for ongoing or future research.
PAPER SUBMISSION INSTRUCTIONS
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Submitted papers must be no more than 6 pages long. Your submission
must be in PDF. Your submission must use a 10pt font (or larger) and
be correctly formatted for printing on Letter-sized (8.5" by 11")
paper, must be double-column, with each column 9.25" by 3.33", 0.33"
space between columns, and single-spaced. If correctly formatted, this
means that no page column will have more than 55 lines of text. Number
the pages of your submission. If you need assistance in the formatting
of your paper, please use either this LaTex class file or the Word
document template.
Papers will be reviewed single blind. Paper submission will be handled
through EDAS: http://edas.info/N8824
PROGRAM CO-CHAIRS
------------------------------------
Arun Venkataramani, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Marco Gruteser, WINLAB, Rutgers University
PROGRAM COMMITTEE
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Jon Crowcroft, University of Cambridge
Morley Mao, University of Michigan
Lixia Zhang, UC Los Angeles
Lars Eggert, Nokia Research Center
Joerg Ott, Helsinki University of Technology
Katherine Guo, Bell Laboratories
Ravi Kokku, NEC Labs
Ratul Mahajan, Microsoft Research
Dipankar Raychaudhuri, Rutgers University
Robin Kravets, University of Illinois
Xiaoming Fu, University of Goettingen
Joseph Evans, University of Kansas
Yung Yi, KAIST
Xiaowei Yang, Duke University
Klaus Wehrle, RWTH Aachen
Kishore Ramachandran, NEC Labs
Seung-Jae Han, Yonsei University
Ellen Zegura, Georgia Tech
STEERING COMMITTEE
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Jon Crowcroft, University of Cambridge (chair)
Xiaoming Fu, University of Goettingen (ex-officio)
Katherine Guo, Bell Laboratories
Henning Schulzrinne, Columbia University
Lars Eggert, Nokia Research Center
Joerg Ott, Helsinki University of Technology
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