Past Distinguished Lecturers Last Updated 1/2/2020

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Past Distinguished Lecturers Last Updated 1/2/2020 IEEE Communications Society Past Distinguished Lecturers Last updated 1/2/2020 Speaker Name DL Topics DL Term ● Multiuser communication ● Multiple access communication ● Spectrum Sharing in wireless communication Term effective Behnaam Aazhang ● Cooperative Communication through 31 December 2007 ● Scheduling in Wireless Communication ● Feedback in Wireless Communication ● Delivering Ubiquitous Services Over Heterogeneous Networks (In the Term effective Context of End-to-End Networking) Hamid Aghvami through 31 December ● Future Broadband Access Networks-Challenges 2006 ● Communication and Bio-Sensors Technologies Integration for Cost-Effective Ubiquitous Healthcare Term effective ● Energy Efficiency in Mobile Healthcare Systems Nazim Agoulmine through 31 December ● Autonomic Fixed and Wireless Networks: Concepts and 2014 Implementations ● An overview of 5G network research ● 10 years of Future Internet research: where do we stand? Term effective ● Reconsidering management challenges in chaotic telecommunication Rui Luis Aguiar through 31 December environments 2018 ● Questioning Quality of Service in telecommunications today ● New Technologies (3G, IP, WDM) Impact on Network Operations Term effective Salah Aidarous ● Evolution to NGOSS and Transition Strategies through 31 December 2002 ● Cognitive Radio and Dynamic Spectrum Access Term effective ● Energy Harvesting Communication Networks Sonia Aissa through 31 December ● Wireless Power Transfer 2016 1 IEEE Communications Society Past Distinguished Lecturers Last updated 1/2/2020 ● Fundamentals of Nanoscale Communications ● Bio-inspired Communication and Networking ● Introduction to Molecular Communications and Nanonetworks ● Carbon-nanotube (CNT)-based Nanoscale Ad Hoc and Sensor Term effective Networks Ozgur Akan through 31 December ● Cognitive Radio Sensor Networks 2012 ● Next-generation Wireless Sensor Networks ● Multimedia Communications: Now and Future ● Deep Space Communications and InterPlaNetary Internet ● Cognitive Radio Networks ● Cognitive Ad Hoc Networks ● Wireless Multimedia Sensor Networks ● Sensor networks in Challenging Environments such as Underwater and Term effective Ian Akyildiz Underground through 31 December 2009 ● Wireless Mesh Networks ● Nano-Networks: A New Communication Paradigm ● Wireless Networking in the Next Decade ● Addressing spectrum scarcity through optical wireless ​ Term effective Mohamed-Slim communications through 31 December Alouini ● Pushing the envelope of wireless sensor networks ​ 2017 ● Architecture Analysis and performance modeling of network systems Term effective Khaled Amer and protocols through 31 December 2006 ● NGN (Next Generation Networks) and FN (Future Networks) ● VoIP, IP Telephony ● Communications QoS & Reliability Term effective Koichi Asatani ● Access Networks through 31 December 2014 ● Wireless LAN and Broadband Internet ● Regulatory Issues of NGN and Internet 2 IEEE Communications Society Past Distinguished Lecturers Last updated 1/2/2020 ● Wireless Mesh Networks ● Wireless Network Management Term effective Victor Bahl ● Enterprise Network Management through 31 December 2008 ● Cognitive Wireless Networking & Spectrum Management ● Offloading Cellular Traffic through Opportunistic Communications ● Performance Analysis and Optimization of wireless networks Term effective Albert Banchs ● An Overview of 5G mobile networks through 31 December 2017 ● Applying control and game theory to wireless networking ● Peak to average reduction in OFDM-MIMO ● Adaptive modulation coding and power allocation for OFDM-MIMO ● Effect of phase noise on OFDM and OFDM-MIMO schemes Term effective Zeke Bar-Ness ● MIMO Hybrid ARQ for highly frequency selective and time varying through 31 December 2007 channel ● Modulation Classification for Emerging Communication Technologies ● Ultra-Wide Bandwidth (UWB) Receiver Performance Analysis ● UWB Receiver Structures for Multiple User Interference ● Diversity and Fading Channels ● Interference in Wireless Systems Term effective Norman C. ● Pulse-Shaping through 31 December Beaulieu 2015 ● Wireless Communication Theory ● Fading Channel Modeling and Simulation ● Importance Sampling and Rejection Sampling Techniques ● Multimedia Communications ● Networked Entertainment Term effective Ali Begen ● IPTV Technologies and Content Delivery through 31 December ​ 2019 ● Over-the-Top Video and Streaming 3 IEEE Communications Society Past Distinguished Lecturers Last updated 1/2/2020 ● Wireless Communication and Mobile Networking ● Sensor Networks ● VANETS ● Wireless, Mobile Ad hoc and Mesh Networks Term effective Jalel Ben-Othman ● QoS in Heterogeneous Wired and Wireless Networks through 31 December 2018 ● Security: Ad hoc, Sensor and ubiquitous Networks ● Performance Evaluation: Markovian Process, SAN, Queuing Networks ● Cloud Computing ● Spectrum Sharing Economics Term effective ● Interference Games Randall Berry through 31 December ● Market design and dynamic spectrum sharing 2015 ● Green Cellular Networks: A Survey, Some Research Issues and Challenges ● Multigigabit Wireless Multimedia Communications: Future and Core Term effective Vijay K. Bhargava Technologies through 31 December 2010 ● Information Security and its Impact on Society ● From Marconi to Wireless Internet: A Communications Perspective ● Coding for Fading Channels ● Multiple Transmit and Receive Antennas: Capacity Limits, Space-Time Term effective Codes, and Signal Processing Ezio Biglieri through 31 December ● Turbo Algorithms for Decoding, Equalization, and Detection: A 2006 Graphical Approach ● Emerging Technologies of Wireless LANs: Theory, Design, and Deployment ● Next Generation Broadband Wireless Access Term effective Benny Bing ● Broadband Cable and Fiber Access through 31 December 2008 ● Software Defined Radio and Cognitive Radio Networks ● Multiple Access Communications 4 IEEE Communications Society Past Distinguished Lecturers Last updated 1/2/2020 Term effective Azzedine through 31 December Boukerche 2012 Term effective ● Autonomic Computing and Communications Raouf Boutaba through 31 December 2009 Term effective ● Synchronization of Digital Telecommunications Networks Stefano Bregni through 31 December 2008 ● Nanoscale Communication Networks Term effective ● Smart Grid: Communication-Enabled Intelligence for the Electric Stephen Bush through 31 December Power Grid 2012 ● Physical Layer MIMO Millimeter-wave Communications ​ ● Ultra-Dense Millimeter-wave Cellular Networks: Beam Discovery, ​ ​ Association, and Handover ● Machine Learning for Cognitive Radios Term effective Danijela Cabric ● Advances in Spectrum Sensing and Signal Classification through 31 December ​ 2019 ● Massive MIMO and Interference Management in Spectrum Sharing networks ● Energy-efficient Massive IoT Communications over Shared Spectrum ● 5G and Future Wireless Internet: Changes and Challenges ● Software Defined Network and Network Function Virtualization for Wireless Networks Term effective Anthony Chan ● Distributed Mobility for Future Mobile Internet through 31 December 2016 ● Role of Communication and Networking in Developing Countries and Digital Divide ● Dynamic Spectrum Access Wireless Networking Term effective Rajarathnam ● Big Data Problems in Social Network Modeling and Analytics through 31 December Chandramouli 2014 5 IEEE Communications Society Past Distinguished Lecturers Last updated 1/2/2020 Term effective ● Advances in Vehicle Information Networking Wai Chen through 31 December 2006 ● Virtual Sketches and Space Sharing: A Tool Box for Big Data Term effective ● Compact and Fast Network Measurement Methods Shigang Chen through 31 December ● Infrastructural RFID Systems and Their Impact on Internet of Things 2017 ● All-Optical Photonic Packet Switching: What Have Changed and What Have Not Changed After 20 Years? Term effective Tee Hiang Cheng ● Optical Access Networks: Past, Present and Future through 31 December 2012 ● Doppler Effect and Its Engineering Applications ● Optimizing wireless networks in a uniformed multi-dimensional resource framework Term effective ● Real-time intrusion detection for multimedia application over wireless Yu Cheng through 31 December networks ​​ 2017 ● Towards a secure and efficient vehicular ad hoc network ​ ● Data transmission techniques for storage applications Term effective ● Filter-bank modulation techniques for transmission over Giovanni Cherubini through 31 December frequency-selective channels 2007 ● Technology and Architecture Trends in Optical Networking Term effective Nim Cheung ● The Role of Optical Interconnect in Supercomputing through 31 December 2008 Term effective ● Teaching Networking via 20 Questions Mung Chiang through 31 December 2013 6 IEEE Communications Society Past Distinguished Lecturers Last updated 1/2/2020 ● Fundamentals and Advances in MIMO Communication Systems and Networks ● Application of random matrices theory to communications and signal processing Term effective Marco Chiani ● Spectrum Sensing for Cognitive Radio: fundamental limits and through 31 December 2012 multiple antenna based methods ● Codes on Graphs for Throughput Enhancement, Packet Loss Correction and Multiple Access Term effective George Chrisikos through 31 December 2015 ● The Role of Communications Signal Processing in Storage ● Systems Signal Processing and Coding for Perpendicular Magnetic Term effective Recording J.R. Cruz through 31 December ● Advanced Channel Detection and Iterative Decoding for Hard Disk 2010 Drives ● An integrated approach to big data analytics and networking Term effective ● Renewable energy
Recommended publications
  • Building Blocks for Tomorrow's Mobile App Store
    Building Blocks for Tomorrow’s Mobile App Store by Justin G. Manweiler Department of Computer Science Duke University Date: Approved: Romit Roy Choudhury, Supervisor Jeffrey S. Chase Landon P. Cox Victor Bahl Dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Department of Computer Science in the Graduate School of Duke University 2012 Abstract (0984) Building Blocks for Tomorrow’s Mobile App Store by Justin G. Manweiler Department of Computer Science Duke University Date: Approved: Romit Roy Choudhury, Supervisor Jeffrey S. Chase Landon P. Cox Victor Bahl An abstract of a dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Department of Computer Science in the Graduate School of Duke University 2012 Copyright c 2012 by Justin G. Manweiler All rights reserved Abstract In our homes and in the enterprise, in our leisure and in our professions, mobile computing is no longer merely “exciting;” it is becoming an essential, ubiquitous tool of the modern world. New and innovative mobile applications continue to inform, entertain, and surprise users. But, to make the daily use of mobile technologies more gratifying and worthwhile, we must move forward with new levels of sophistication. The Mobile App Stores of the future must be built on stronger foundations. This dissertation considers a broad view of the challenges and intuitions behind a diverse selection of such new primitives. Some of these primitives will mitigate exist- ing and fundamental challenges of mobile computing, especially relating to wireless communication. Others will take an application-driven approach, being designed to serve a novel purpose, and be adapted to the unique and varied challenges from their disparate domains.
    [Show full text]
  • The Interplanetary Internet a New Way of Thinking About Deep Space Communications"
    ”The InterPlaNetary Internet a new way of thinking about deep space communications" Scott Burleigh Ed Greenberg Adrian J. Hooke InterPlanetary Network and Information Systems Directorate DESCANSO Seminar, JPL, Pasadena 19 July, 2001 May 1974 In the beginning…. 1970 1980 1990 2000 NASA Telemetry Standardization “Packet” Spacecraft Telemetry and Telecommand NASA/ESA Working Group Basic Space/Ground Communications Standards for Consultative Committee for Space Data Systems (CCSDS) Space Missions } Extension of International Standards for Space More Complex Station Space Missions } Extension of the Terrestrial Internet Evolution of space standards into Space Evolution of the terrestrial Internet Model of Space/Ground Communications User Applications A1 A2 An A1 A2 An Constrained Weight, power, Applications volume: Your • CPU Father’s • Storage Space Ground Internet Terrestrial • Reliability Onboard Ground • Cost to qualify Constrained Networks NetworkingHighly NetworksInternet Resource Constrained Environment • Delay Telemetry • Noise • Asymmetry Radio Constrained Radio Links Links Links Telecommand Current Standardization Options Space Constrained Task Applications Force IPNRG Constrained Networking Constrained Links The Consultative Committee for Member Agencies Space Data Systems (CCSDS) is an Agenzia Spaziale Italiana (ASI)/Italy. British National Space Centre (BNSC)/United Kingdom. international voluntary consensus Canadian Space Agency (CSA)/Canada. organization of space agencies and Central Research Institute of Machine Building industrial associates interested in (TsNIIMash)/Russian Federation. Centre National d'Etudes Spatiales (CNES)/France. mutually developing standard data Deutsche Forschungsanstalt für Luft- und Raumfahrt e.V. (DLR)/Germany. handling techniques to support space European Space Agency (ESA)/Europe. Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas Espaciais (INPE)/Brazil. research, including space science and National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA HQ)/USA.
    [Show full text]
  • EFFICIENT ROUTING PROTOCOL in DELAY TOLERANT NETWORKS (Dtns)
    Degree Programme in Communication Engineering MORTEZA KARIMZADEH EFFICIENT ROUTING PROTOCOL IN DELAY TOLERANT NETWORKS (DTNs) MASTER OF SCIENCE THESIS Examiners: Prof. Yevgeni Koucheryavy Dr. Dmitri Moltchanov Examiners and topic approved in the Computing and Electrical Engineering Faculty Council meeting on 6th April, 2011 II Abstract TAMPERE UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY Master’s Degree Programme in Information Technology, Department of Communication Engineering Karimzadeh, Morteza: Efficient Routing Protocol in Delay Tolerant Networks (DTNs) Master of Science Thesis, 47 pages May 2011 Major: Communication Engineering Examiners: Professor Yevgeni Koucheryavy and Dr. Dmitri Moltchanov Keywords: Delay Tolerant Networks, Opportunistic networking, Forwarding mechanism, Routing protocol, Epidemic routing, Network coding Modern Internet protocols demonstrate inefficient performance in those networks where the connectivity between end nodes has intermittent property due to dynamic topology or resource constraints. Network environments where the nodes are characterized by opportunistic connectivity are referred to as Delay Tolerant Networks (DTNs). Highly usable in numerous practical applications such as low-density mobile ad hoc networks, command/response military networks and wireless sensor networks, DTNs have been one of the growing topics of interest characterized by significant amount of research efforts invested in this area over the past decade. Routing is one of the major components significantly affecting the overall performance of DTN networks in terms of resource consumption, data delivery and latency. Over the past few years a number of routing protocols have been proposed. The focus of this thesis is on description, classification and comparison of these protocols. We discuss the state-of- the-art routing schemes and methods in opportunistic networks and classify them into two main deterministic and stochastic routing categories.
    [Show full text]
  • David D. Clark
    Designs for an Internet David D. Clark Dra Version 3.0 of Jan 1, 2017 David D. Clark Designs for an Internet Status is version of the book is a pre-release intended to get feedback and comments from members of the network research community and other interested readers. Readers should assume that the book will receive substantial revision. e chapters on economics, management and meeting the needs of society are preliminary, and comments are particularly solicited on these chapters. Suggestions as to how to improve the descriptions of the various architectures I have discussed are particularly solicited, as are suggestions about additional citations to relevant material. For those with a technical background, note that the appendix contains a further review of relevant architectural work, beyond what is in Chapter 5. I am particularly interesting in learning which parts of the book non-technical readers nd hard to follow. Revision history Version 1.1 rst pre-release May 9 2016. Version 2.0 October 2016. Addition of appendix with further review of related work. Addition of a ”Chapter zero”, which provides an introduction to the Internet for non-technical readers. Substantial revision to several chapters. Version 3.0 Jan 2017 Addition of discussion of Active Nets Still missing–discussion of SDN in management chapter. ii 178 David D. Clark Designs for an Internet A note on the cover e picture I used on the cover is not strictly “architecture”. It is a picture of the Memorial to the Mur- dered Jews of Europe, in Berlin, which I photographed in 2006.
    [Show full text]
  • Annual Report
    ANNUAL REPORT 2019FISCAL YEAR ACM, the Association for Computing Machinery, is an international scientific and educational organization dedicated to advancing the arts, sciences, and applications of information technology. Letter from the President It’s been quite an eventful year and challenges posed by evolving technology. for ACM. While this annual Education has always been at the foundation of exercise allows us a moment ACM, as reflected in two recent curriculum efforts. First, “ACM’s mission to celebrate some of the many the ACM Task Force on Data Science issued “Comput- hinges on successes and achievements ing Competencies for Undergraduate Data Science Cur- creating a the Association has realized ricula.” The guidelines lay out the computing-specific over the past year, it is also an competencies that should be included when other community that opportunity to focus on new academic departments offer programs in data science encompasses and innovative ways to ensure at the undergraduate level. Second, building on the all who work in ACM remains a vibrant global success of our recent guidelines for 4-year cybersecu- the computing resource for the computing community. rity curricula, the ACM Committee for Computing Edu- ACM’s mission hinges on creating a community cation in Community Colleges created a related cur- and technology that encompasses all who work in the computing and riculum targeted at two-year programs, “Cybersecurity arena” technology arena. This year, ACM established a new Di- Curricular Guidance for Associate-Degree Programs.” versity and Inclusion Council to identify ways to create The following pages offer a sampling of the many environments that are welcoming to new perspectives ACM events and accomplishments that occurred over and will attract an even broader membership from the past fiscal year, none of which would have been around the world.
    [Show full text]
  • JPL Contributes to Chernobyl Analysis
    Laboratory Pasadena, California Vol. 28, No. 16 August 7, 1998 Jet Propulsion Universe Lab to develop interplanetary Internet ‘Father of the Internet’ Dr. Vinton Cerf named JPL Distinguished Visiting Scientist from the Internet community, other NASA cen- By MARK WHALEN ters, universities and the private sector to Internet pioneer Dr. Vinton Cerf has been explore ways to merge the work of the Internet named a Distinguished Visiting Scientist at JPL and space communications communities. to help develop an interplanetary Internet. The first job of the team will develop a new Cerf will serve a two-year post that will be interplanetary Internet architecture that can in addition to his regular duties as senior vice cope with the long transmission delays and president of Internet Architecture and noisy, intermittent data links inherent today in Engineering at MCI Communications Corp. deep space communications. The traditional “It took 20 years for the Internet to take off framework of TCP/IP will have to be radically here on Earth,” said Cerf, widely known as the adapted for interplanetary communications. “Father of the Internet” for co-developing the Other challenges include the construction of TCP/IP protocol, the computer language that interplanetary gateways and perhaps methods gave birth to the communications medium. “It’s to provide for local caching of content—much my guess that in the next 20 years, we will want in the same manner as many World Wide Web to interact with systems and people visiting the sites are mirrored in different geographic areas moon, Mars and possibly other celestial bod- to optimize performance.
    [Show full text]
  • The People Who Invented the Internet Source: Wikipedia's History of the Internet
    The People Who Invented the Internet Source: Wikipedia's History of the Internet PDF generated using the open source mwlib toolkit. See http://code.pediapress.com/ for more information. PDF generated at: Sat, 22 Sep 2012 02:49:54 UTC Contents Articles History of the Internet 1 Barry Appelman 26 Paul Baran 28 Vint Cerf 33 Danny Cohen (engineer) 41 David D. Clark 44 Steve Crocker 45 Donald Davies 47 Douglas Engelbart 49 Charles M. Herzfeld 56 Internet Engineering Task Force 58 Bob Kahn 61 Peter T. Kirstein 65 Leonard Kleinrock 66 John Klensin 70 J. C. R. Licklider 71 Jon Postel 77 Louis Pouzin 80 Lawrence Roberts (scientist) 81 John Romkey 84 Ivan Sutherland 85 Robert Taylor (computer scientist) 89 Ray Tomlinson 92 Oleg Vishnepolsky 94 Phil Zimmermann 96 References Article Sources and Contributors 99 Image Sources, Licenses and Contributors 102 Article Licenses License 103 History of the Internet 1 History of the Internet The history of the Internet began with the development of electronic computers in the 1950s. This began with point-to-point communication between mainframe computers and terminals, expanded to point-to-point connections between computers and then early research into packet switching. Packet switched networks such as ARPANET, Mark I at NPL in the UK, CYCLADES, Merit Network, Tymnet, and Telenet, were developed in the late 1960s and early 1970s using a variety of protocols. The ARPANET in particular led to the development of protocols for internetworking, where multiple separate networks could be joined together into a network of networks. In 1982 the Internet Protocol Suite (TCP/IP) was standardized and the concept of a world-wide network of fully interconnected TCP/IP networks called the Internet was introduced.
    [Show full text]
  • Future Architecture of the Interplanetary Internet
    Feature Article: DOI. No. 10.1109/MAES.2019.2927897 The Sky is NOT the Limit Anymore: Future Architecture of the Interplanetary Internet Ahmad Alhilal, Tristan Braud, The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Hong Kong Pan Hui, The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Hong Kong and University of Helsinki, Finland INTRODUCTION space flight, and aim for near-future Mars exploration. Finally, in 2018, Luxembourg became the first country to Space exploration is not only feeding human curiosity, legislate for asteroid exploration and mining, opening but also allows for scientific advancement in environ- the way for a whole new space industry. However, each mental research, and in finding natural resources [1]. mission operates independently, has its own dedicated Although media exposure reached its peak during the architecture, uses point-to-point communication, and is Apollo programs, space research remains a very active dependent on operator-specific resources. In this paper, domain, with new exploration and observation missions we propose an interoperable infrastructure in a similar every year. fashion to the Internet at stellar scale to simplify the com- Following the Apollo program, public and private munication for upcoming space missions. organizations launched a wide variety of exploration mis- In recent years, space exploration managed to attract a sions with increasingly complex communication con- lot of media attention, resulting in a clear regain of interest strains. In 1977, NASA launched Voyagers 1 and 2 [2] to of the public for space exploration. As a consequence, explore Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune. In Septem- space agencies started to plan several ambitious missions ber 2007, Voyager 1 crossed the termination shock at for the 22nd century, both manned and unmanned.
    [Show full text]
  • Routing Over the Interplanetary Internet
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska University of Nebraska - Lincoln DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln Computer Science and Engineering: Theses, Computer Science and Engineering, Department Dissertations, and Student Research of 8-2012 Routing over the Interplanetary Internet Joyeeta Mukherjee University of Nebraska-Lincoln, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/computerscidiss Part of the Computer Engineering Commons, and the Computer Sciences Commons Mukherjee, Joyeeta, "Routing over the Interplanetary Internet" (2012). Computer Science and Engineering: Theses, Dissertations, and Student Research. 42. https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/computerscidiss/42 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Computer Science and Engineering, Department of at DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln. It has been accepted for inclusion in Computer Science and Engineering: Theses, Dissertations, and Student Research by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln. ROUTING OVER THE INTERPLANETARY INTERNET by Joyeeta Mukherjee A THESIS Presented to the Faculty of The Graduate College at the University of Nebraska In Partial Fulfilment of Requirements For the Degree of Master of Science Major: Computer Science Under the Supervision of Professor Byrav Ramamurthy Lincoln, Nebraska August, 2012 ROUTING OVER THE INTERPLANETARY INTERNET Joyeeta Mukherjee, M. S. University of Nebraska, 2012 Adviser: Byrav Ramamurthy Future space exploration demands a Space Network that will be able to connect spacecrafts with one another and in turn with Earth’s terrestrial Internet and hence efficiently transfer data back and forth. The feasibility of this technology would enable common people to directly access telemetric data from distant planets and satellites.
    [Show full text]
  • Syllabus – Internet and Web Journalism
    Syllabus – Internet and Web Journalism 1. Internet –Introduction, History, evolution and development, The Internet is the global system of interconnected computer networks that use the Internet protocol suite (TCP/IP) to link devices worldwide. It is a network of networks that consists of private, public, academic, business, and government networks of local to global scope, linked by a broad array of electronic, wireless, and optical networking technologies. The Internet carries a vast range of information resources and services, such as the inter-linked hypertext documents and applications of the World Wide Web (WWW), electronic mail, telephony, and file sharing. The origins of the Internet date back to research commissioned by the federal government of the United States in the 1960s to build robust, fault-tolerant communication with computer networks. The primary precursor network, the ARPANET, initially served as a backbone for interconnection of regional academic and military networks in the 1980s. The funding of the National Science Foundation Network as a new backbone in the 1980s, as well as private funding for other commercial extensions, led to worldwide participation in the development of new networking technologies, and the merger of many networks. The linking of commercial networks and enterprises by the early 1990s marks the beginning of the transition to the modern Internet, and generated a sustained exponential growth as generations of institutional, personal, and mobile computers were connected to the network. Although the Internet was widely used by academia since the 1980s, the commercialization Incorporated its services and technologies into virtually every aspect of modern life. Most traditional communications media, including telephony, radio, television, paper mail and newspapers are reshaped, redefined, or even bypassed by the Internet, giving birth to new services such as email, Internet telephony, Internet television, online music, digital newspapers, and video streaming websites.
    [Show full text]
  • Reflections on Three Decades in Internet Time Christine Borgman
    This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States of America License. Reflections on Three Decades in Internet Time Christine Borgman, Paul Evan Peters Award Coalition for Networked Information Meeting, San Diego, April 4, 2011 From where did we come? Where are we now? Where might we go from here? Kyoto, 2009 2 From where did we come? 3 World-Wide Web, 1991 ◦ HTTP ◦ HTML ◦ URL http://www.educause.edu/ Professional+Development/ PaulEvanPetersAwardWinnersspan/ Semantic Web, 1999 PaulEvanPeters2000AwardWinner/ 1516 Web science, 2006 http://home.messiah.edu/~ar1314/definitions.html 4 Telecommunications Protocol / Internet protocol -TCP/IP (with Robert Kahn) Internet Society ICANN Interplanetary Internet http://www.educause.edu/ Professional+Development/ PaulEvanPetersAwardWinnersspan/ PaulEvanPeters2002AwardWinner/ 1515 5 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interplanetary_Internet Internet Archive, 1996- ◦ Web archiving ◦ Book scanning ◦ Contributed content http://www.educause.edu/Professional ◦ Personal digital archiving… +Development/ PaulEvanPetersAwardWinnersspan/ PaulEvanPeters2004AwardWinner/ 1514 http://www.escapefromberkeley.com/race-info/advisory-board/brewster-kahle/ 6 arXiv, 1991- ◦ Preprint distribution ◦ Open access publishing ◦ Institutional repositories http://www.educause.edu/Professional +Development/ PaulEvanPetersAwardWinnersspan/ PaulEvanPeters2006AwardWinner/ 10177 Arxiv.org homepage pi day 2011 7 School of Information, U of Michigan Cyberinfrastructure
    [Show full text]
  • Overview of the Interplanetary Internet
    Overview of the InterPlanetary Internet BroadSkyBroadSky WorkshopWorkshop 10th Ka and Broadband Communications Conference Vicenza, Italy 01 October 2004 Adrian J. Hooke Interplanetary Network Directorate Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology 818.354.3063 [email protected] Roadmap of International Space Data Systems Standardization 1980 1990 2000 2010 Basic Space/Ground “Packet” Spacecraft Telemetry and Telecommand communications 02 January, 1996 STRV-1b standards for } Baselined by International IP address: all space missions Space Station and GN 192.48.114.156 Consultative Committee for Space Data Systems (CCSDS) CCSDS Advanced Orbiting Systems The File Transfer: FTAM Dark File Transfer: FTP Transport: TP4 Age Transport: TCP Space Internetworking Of CCSDS in richly connected, Network: ISO 8473 GOSIP Network: IP. Mobile IP Proximity-1 short delay, stressed space environments NASA/DOD/CCSDS } Space Communications Next Generation Protocol Standards Space Internet (CCSDS-SCPS) Project (NGSI) Project Space Internetworking in sparsely connected, CCSDS File Delay Tolerant long delay, stressed Delivery Protocol Networking space environments } Standardized Space CCSDS Space Link Extension CCSDS Spacecraft Mission Operations and Service Management Monitor & Control Services } Technical Areas of International Space Standardization Space Internetworking Spacecraft Services Onboard Interface Services Mission Operations and Information Management Services Space Link Services Cross Support Systems Services Engineering
    [Show full text]