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AICCSA-05

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Tutorials
Tutorial
1: IP-Oriented QoS in Next Generation Networks
Pascal Lorenz
University of Haute-Alsace
Emerging Internet
Quality of Service (QoS) mechanisms are expected to enable wide spread
use of real time services such as VoIP and videoconferencing. The
"best effort" Internet delivery cannot be used for the new
multimedia applications. New technologies and new standards are
necessary to offer Quality of Service (QoS) for these multimedia
applications. Therefore new communication architectures integrate
mechanisms allowing guaranteed QoS services as well as high rate
communications.The service level agreement with a mobile Internet user
is hard to satisfy, since there may not be enough resources available
in some parts of the network the mobile user is moving into. The
emerging Internet QoS architectures, differentiated services and
integrated services, do not consider user mobility. QoS mechanisms
enforce a differentiated sharing of bandwidth among services and
users. Thus, there must be mechanisms available to identify traffic
flows with different QoS parameters, and to make it possible to charge
the users based on requested quality. The integration of fixed and
mobile wireless access into IP networks presents a cost effective and
efficient way to provide seamless end-to-end connectivity and
ubiquitous access in a market where the demand for mobile Internet
services has grown rapidly and predicted to generate billions of
dollars in revenue. This tutorial covers to the issues of QoS
provisioning in heterogeneous networks and Internet access over future
wireless networks as well as ATM, MPLS, DiffServ, IntServ frameworks.
It discusses the characteristics of the Internet, mobility and QoS
provisioning in wireless and mobile IP networks. This tutorial also
covers routing, security, baseline architecture of the
inter-networking protocols and end to end traffic management issues.
Speaker
Biography
Pascal Lorenz [SM
'00] (lorenz@ieee.org) received a PhD degree from the University of
Nancy, France. Between 1990 and 1995 he was a research engineer at
WorldFIP Europe and at Alcatel-Alsthom. He is a professor at the
University of Haute-Alsace and responsible of the Network and
Telecommunication Research Group. His research interests include QoS,
wireless networks and high-speed networks. He was the Program and
Organizing Chair of the IEEE ICATM'98, ICATM'99, ECUMN'00, ICN'01,
ECUMN'02 and ICT'03 conferences. Since 2000, he is a Technical Editor
of the IEEE Communications Magazine Editorial Board. He is the
secretary of the IEEE ComSoc Communications Systems Integration and
Modelling Technical Committee. He is a member of many international
program committees and he has served as a guest editor for a number of
journals including Telecommunications Systems, IEEE Communications
Magazine and LNCS. He has organized and chaired several technical
sessions and gave tutorials at major international conferences. He is
the author of 2 books and 90 international publications in journals
and conferences.
Tutorial 2: Beyond the
"E": An introduction to Multimedia Technologies &
Applications on the Web
Abdulmotaleb El-Saddik
University of Ottawa
The tutorial
first presents a brief overview of multimedia applications and shows
some java applets and video clips of emerging multimedia services. It
then introduces the fundamental networking technologies used for
multimedia services and discusses their problems. Particular emphasis
is placed on the basic video and audio compression technologies,
including the entire MPEG and H263 families, with emphasis on MPEG-2
and MPEG-4. Next, the Internet protocols and languages, which are
essential for the development of E-learning system, will be discussed.
Fundamental e-security procedures and protocols are presented, as also
new authentication and content protection procedures such as digital
watermarking. The tutorial also demonstrates new multimedia
applications in e-commerce, tele-learning, tele-collaboration, tele-training
and tele-medicine using Collaborative Virtual Reality. In brief, it
will cover the following multimedia topics, enhanced with video clips
and java applets:" Introduction, Applications
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Networking Technologies for
multimedia (LAN, MAN, WLAN, HAN, WAN, ATM, IP)
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Multimedia to the home (DSL,
cable,wireless,...)
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Image, Video and Audio Compression
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Multimedia Synchronization
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Multimedia and the Internet: IP
and other protocols, QoS provision, Mobile IP, WAP.
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Multimedia conferencing and
collaboration tools
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Wireless Internet and Wireless
application Protocol (WAP)
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"E" -learning/commerce
and Security issues
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Digital Watermarking for
Multimedia
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Virtual Reality and Collaborative
Virtual Environments & applications
Speaker Biography
Dr. Abdulmotaleb El
Saddik is associate professor at the School of Information Technology
and Engineering (SITE) at the University of Ottawa. He is the director
of the Multimedia Communications Research Laboratory (MCRLab). He
received his Ph.D. (Dr.-Ing.) and M.Sc. (Dipl.-Ing.) degree in
Electrical Engineering and Information Technology from Darmstadt
University of Technology, Germany in 1995, and 2001 respectively. He
has wide expertise in software engineering development of configurable
and adaptable component-based multimedia modules and large scale
learning systems. He has led the development of a novel multimedia
tele-collaborative environment (JASMINE). He has authored and
co-authored two (2) books and more than 40 publications in the areas
of software engineering development of multimedia artefacts and shared
environments.
Tutorial 3:
Pattern-Oriented Analysis and Design (POAD) of Software Systems
Hany
Ammar
West Virginia University
As the complexity of
software systems increases, we look for approaches to facilitate the
development of software applications. Design patterns and design
frameworks are among these promising approaches. Design reuse has
emerged with the premise that coding is not the most difficult part of
building software; it is the decisions we make early at the design
level. Design patterns promise reuse benefits early in the development
lifecycle. To reap the benefits of deploying these proven design
solutions, we need to define design composition techniques to
construct applications using patterns. Versatile design models should
be developed to support these techniques. Several Design Pattern
catalogues have emerged with design patterns that can be used in the
design of various application domains from real-time embedded systems
applications to large distributed systems.Designing applications by
systematically deploying design patterns is not a trivial process.
This tutorial presents a systematic process for Pattern-Oriented
Analysis and Design (POAD). The process will be presented and
illustrated by several case studies. The tutorial is based on a recent
book entitled "Pattern-Oriented Analysis and Design (POAD):
Composing Design Patterns to build Software Applications" by
Sherif M. Yacoub and Hany H. Ammar, and Published by Addison Wesley.
Speaker
Biography
Hany H. Ammar is a
professor of computer engineering at the Lane Department of Computer
Science and Electrical Engineering at West Virginia University, USA.
He has taught graduate and undergraduate Software Engineering courses
since 1987. He has published over 100 articles in prestigious journals
and conference proceedings. He has been recently a Principal
Investigator on a number of research projects funded by the US
National Science Foundation and NASA.
Tutorial
4: Optimization Techniques for Network Routing
Carlos
A.S. Oliveira and Panos M. Pardalos
University of Florida
Routing is an
important aspect in every communications network, since it is
responsible for determining the communications efficiency in terms of
time and cost of the resulting network installation. In the last
years, several models and algorithms have been developed to determine
optimal strategies for network routing. The objective of this tutorial
is to present researchers and practitioners with a complete view of
the most important techniques for optimal routing.
In the first part of the
tutorial, existing techniques for determination of optimal routing are
presented. The algorithmic ideas are developed and algorithms are
described for point-to-point packet routing. The second part of the
tutorial deals with methods for routing in the more complex multicast
systems, which have become increasingly important due to its numerous
applications.
Multicast networks have
received attention in the last few years as a way of implementing new
collaborative applications over the Internet. The main objective of
multicasting is to allow data transfers from one source to multiple
destinations in the network and, therefore, serving users engaged on
cooperative applications. The number of such applications has steadily
increased in the last few years, incorporating areas such as:
E-Commerce, Supply Chain, Financial Data Delivery, and Virtual
Conference and multimedia.
Many problems in
multicast networks require the solution of difficult (NP-hard)
optimization problems. We describe techniques for solution of such
optimization problems, exploring techniques from combinatorial
optimization, integer programming, and approximation algorithms, which
can be used to give good solutions in practice for these problems.
The particular problems
discussed include the efficient determination of routes from a node in
the network to a set of users, also called a multicast group, and the
determination of the number and location of multicast servers needed
to implement a multicast connection, given a set of capacity
constraints on the network links.
Speakers
Biography
Dr.
Panos Pardalos is Professor of Industrial and Systems Engineering at
the University of Florida. He is also affiliated faculty member of the
Computer Science Department, the Hellenic Studies Center, and the
Biomedical Engineering Program. He is also the Co-Director of the
Center for Applied Optimization.. Dr. Pardalos obtained a PhD degree
from the University of Minnesota in Computer and Information Sciences.
He has held visiting appointments at Princeton University, DIMACS
Center, Institute of Mathematics and Applications, FIELDS Institute,
AT & T Labs Research, Trier University, Linkoping Institute of
Technology, and Universities in Greece. He has received numerous
awards including, University of Florida Research Foundation Professor,
Foreign Member of the Royal Academy of Doctors (Spain), Foreign Member
Lithuanian Academy of Sciences, and Foreign Member of the Petrovskaya
Academy of Sciences and Arts (Russia). Dr. Pardalos is a world leading
expert in global and combinatorial optimization. He is the
editor-in-chief of the Journal of Global Optimization, managing editor
of several book series, and a member of the editorial board of ten
international journals. He is the author of 7 books and the editor of
more than 40 books. He has written numerous articles and developed
several well known software packages. His research is supported by
National Science Foundation and other government organizations. His
recent research interests include network design problems,
optimization in telecommunications, e-commerce, and massive computing.
Dr. Pardalos has been an invited lecturer at many universities and
research institutes around the world. He has also organized several
international conferences.
Tutorial
5: Heterogeneous and Mobile Databases
A.
R. Hurson
Pennsylvania State University
The
conventional notion of timely and reliable access to global
information sources is rapidly changing. Users have become much more
demanding in that they desire and sometimes even require access to
information "anytime, anywhere." The extensive diversity in
the range of information that is accessible to a user at any given
time is also growing at a rapid rate. Furthermore, rapidly expanding
technology is making available a wide breadth of devices with
different memory, storage, network, power, and display requirements to
access this diverse data set.Classical distributed database systems
monolithically offer distribution transparency and higher performance.
However, with the advances in technologies this monolithic approach is
insufficient.
In the new computational environment
data distribution issue has been evolved to the data integration from
several heterogeneous databases. Multidatabases are designed to deal
with this issue. They are designed to allow timely and reliable access
to large amount of heterogeneous and autonomous data sources in an
environment that is characterized as "sometime, somewhere."
Within the scope of these systems, multidatabase researchers have
addressed issues such as autonomy, heterogeneity, transaction
management, concurrency control, transparency, and query resolution.
These solutions are based upon fixed clients and servers connected
over a reliable network infrastructure. However, the concept of
mobility, where a user accesses data through a remote connection with
a portable device, has introduced additional complexities and
restrictions in a multidatabase system.
This tutorial will cover the basics
of mobile data access systems, as well as traditional distributed
database issues within the framework of MDBSs and MDASs.
Speaker
Biography
A. R. Hurson is a
Computer Science and Engineering Faculty at The Pennsylvania State
University. His research for the past 20 years has been directed
toward the design and analysis of general as well as special purpose
computer architectures. He has published over 220 technical papers in
areas including database systems, multidatabases, global information
sharing processing, application of mobile agent technology, object
oriented databases, Mobile computing environment, computer
architecture and cache memory, parallel and distributed processing,
dataflow architectures, and VLSI algorithms. Professor Hurson has been
active in various IEEE/ACM Conferences and has given tutorials for
various conferences on global information sharing, dataflow
processing, database management systems, supercomputer technology,
data/knowledge-based systems, scheduling and load balancing, and
parallel computing. Hurson can be reached at hurson@cse.psu.edu.
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