CNSM 2013 Information and Fact Sheet

Program Overview (click to enlarge, full version below):

Preliminary Program

Overview of Meetings (click to enlarge):

Preliminary Program 

Proceedings

All papers are available on-line here, as a downloadable zip file. You can access the papers by clicking on PROGRAM.html once you unzip the file. All conference papers are also linked separately to the full program below.

CNSM 2013
ICQT 2013
SVM 2013
SETM 2013

Full Program

Monday, October 14 (back to the top)

9.00-9.15 ICQT Welcome

ICQT Proceedings

9.15-10.30 ICQT Key Note

E-Africa by the Horizon 2020. Ultra Wide Band in Africa? A Mainly Political Choice
Claude de Jacquelot (Political Advisor Broadband-Infrastructure Policy Expert, France)

11.00-12.30 ICQT Session 1: Inter-domain Quality of Service

SLA learning from past failures, a Multi-Armed Bandit approach
Lise Rodier (PRISM, Université de Versailles Saint-Quentin en Yvelines, France); Johanne Cohen (PRISM, Université de Versailles Saint-Quentin en Yvelines, France); Hélia Pouyllau (Thales Research and Technology, France); David Auger (PRISM, Université de Versailles Saint-Quentin en Yvelines, France)
Auction-type framework for selling inter-domain paths
Xavier Misseri (TELECOM ParisTech, France); Stefano Moretti (Université Paris Dauphine, France); Jean-Louis Rougier (TELECOM ParisTech, France)
On the Manipulability of Voting Systems: Application to Multi-Operator Networks
François Durand (INRIA, France); Fabien Mathieu (Alcatel-Lucent Bell Labs France, France); Ludovic Noirie (Alcatel-Lucent Bell Labs France, France)

14.00-15.30 ICQT Session 2: Charging Strategies for Content Delivery and Internet Access

The Trouble with Choice: An Empirical Study to Investigate the Influence of Charging Strategies and Content Selection on QoE
Andreas Sackl (FTW Telecommunications Research Center Vienna, Austria); Patrick Zwickl (FTW Telecommu- nications Research Center Vienna, Austria); Peter Reichl (University of Vienna, Austria)
When free riding is the best choice: the case of network charges for content providers
Maurizio Naldi (University of Rome "Tor Vergata", Italy); Giuseppe D'Acquisto (University of Rome "Tor Vergata", Italy)
Incentivizing efficient load repartition in heterogeneous wireless networks with selfish delay-sensitive users
Vladimir Fux (TELECOM Bretagne, France); Patrick Maillé (TELECOM Bretagne, France)

16.00-17.30 Roundtable

Between Shared Data Plans and Sponsored Content: Towards a Comprehensive Research Agenda for Smart Data Pricing (SDP)
Participants: Maurizio Naldi, Claude de Jacquelot, Ludovic Noirie, Tuan Trinh Anh
Moderator: Peter Reichl

Tuesday, October 15 (back to the top)

09:00 - 09:30 CNSM 2013 Opening

Welcome Messages
Harald Gall (Dean WWF, University of Zuerich, Switzerland); Burkhard Stiller (General Chair, University of Zuerich, Switzerland); Metin Feridun (IBM Research - Zurich, Switzerland); Gabi Dreo Rodosek (Universität der Bundeswehr München, Germany)

09:30 - 10:30 CNSM Key Note 1

Why Cloud? Secure. Private. Resilient. Open.
Matthias Kaiserswerth (Director and Vice President IBM Research, Zurich, Switzerland)

11:00 - 12:30 CNSM Session 1: Resource Management I (Chair: Lisandro Z Granville, Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil)

A Scalable Approach for Structuring Large-Scale Hierarchical Cloud Management Systems
Hendrik Moens (UGent - iMinds, Belgium); Filip De Turck (Ghent University - iMinds, Belgium)
Network Aware Virtual Machine and Image Placement in a Cloud
David Breitgand (IBM Haifa Research Lab, Israel); Amir Epstein (IBM Haifa Research Lab, Israel); Alex Glikson (IBM, Israel); Assaf Israel (Technion, Israel); Danny Raz (Technion, Israel)
Dynamic Controller Provisioning in Software Defined Networks
Md. Faizul Bari (University of Waterloo, Canada); Arup Raton Roy (University of Waterloo, Canada); Shihabur Rahman Chowdhury (University of Waterloo, Canada); Qi Zhang (University of Waterloo, Canada); Mohamed Faten Zhani (University of Waterloo - Canada, Canada); Reaz Ahmed (Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology, Bangladesh); Raouf Boutaba (University of Waterloo, Canada)

14:00 - 15:30 CNSM Session 2: Performance Management (Chair: Gabi Dreo Rodosek, Univ. der Bundeswehr München, Germany)

More Control Over Network Resources: An ISP Caching Perspective
Daphne Tuncer (University College London, United Kingdom); Marinos Charalambides (University College London, United Kingdom); Raul Landa (University College London, United Kingdom); George Pavlou (University College London, United Kingdom)
Network Performance Improvement Through Evaluation of Bicriteria Routing Methods in Transport Networks
Lúcia Martins (University of Coimbra & INESC-Coimbra, Portugal); José Craveirinha (University of Coimbra, Portugal); João Clímaco (- University of Coimbra, Portugal); Ricardo Cadime (PT Inovação, Portugal); Catarina Mónica (PT Inovação, Portugal); João Lopes (PT-Inovação, Portugal)
Characterizing the Impact of Network Substrate Topologies on Virtual Network Embedding
Marcelo Caggiani Luizelli (Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil); Leonardo R Bays (Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil); Marinho P. Barcellos (Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil); Luciana Salete Buriol (Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil); Luciano Paschoal Gaspary (Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil)

16:00 - 22:30 CNSM Social Event

Wednesday, October 16 (back to the top)

09:00 - 10:30 CNSM Key Note 2

Information-Centric Networking and In-Network Cache Management: Overview, Trends and Challenges
George Pavlou (University College London, U.K.)

11:00 - 12:30 CNSM Session 3: Resource Management II (Chair: Danny Raz, Technion, Israel)

A Formal Approach for Virtual Machine Migration Planning
Saeed Al-Haj (University of North Carolina Charlotte, USA); Ehab Al-Shaer (University of North Carolina Charlotte, USA)
Classifying Server Behavior and Predicting Impact of Modernization Actions
Jasmina Bogojeska (IBM Research - Zurich, Switzerland); David Lanyi (IBM Research - Zurich, Switzerland); Ioana Giurgiu (IBM Research - Zurich, Switzerland); George Stark (IBM Global Services, USA); Dorothea Wiesmann (IBM Research - Zurich, Switzerland)
Real-Time Adaptive Algorithm for Resource Monitoring
Marcello Pietri (University of Modena and Reggio Emilia, Italy); Stefania Tosi (University of Modena and Reggio Emilia, Italy); Mauro Andreolini (University of Modena, Italy); Michele Colajanni (University of Modena and Reggio Emilia, Italy)

14:00 - 15:30 CNSM Session 4: Quality Management (Chair: Hanan Lutfiyya, University of Western Ontario, Canada)

Pazl: A Mobile Crowdsensing based Indoor WiFi Monitoring System
Valentin Radu (The University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom); Lito Kriara (The University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom); Mahesh K Marina (The University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom)
Leveraging Attention Scarcity to Improve the Overall User Experience of Cloud Services
Marco A. S. Netto (IBM Research, Brazil); Marcos Dias de Assunção (IBM Research & IBM, Brazil); Silvia Cristina Sardela Bianchi (IBM, Brazil)
Update Aware Replica Placement
Assaf Rappaport (Technion, Israel); Danny Raz (Technion, Israel)

16:00 - 18:00 CNSM Poster Session (Chair: Rick Hofstede, University of Twente, The Netherlands)

OnTimeSecure: Secure Middleware for Federated Network Performance Monitoring
Prasad Calyam (University of Missouri-Columbia, USA); Shweta Kulkarni (The Ohio State University, USA); Alex Berryman (The Ohio State University, USA); Kunpeng Zhu (The Ohio State University, USA); Mukundan Sridharan (The Samraksh Company, USA); Rajiv Ramnath (The Ohio State University, USA); Gordon K Springer (University of Missouri-Columbia, USA)
Automated Source Code Extension for Debugging of OpenFlow based Networks
Stefan Hommes (University of Luxembourg, Luxemburg); Frank Hermann (University of Luxembourg, Luxemburg); Radu State (University of Luxembourg, Luxemburg); Thomas Engel (University of Luxemburg, Luxemburg)
Guaranteeing Consistency between Large Replicated Writable Disk Images
Sean Rooney (IBM Zurich Research Laboratory, Switzerland); Luis Garcés-Erice (IBM Research Zurich Laboratory, Switzerland)
Optimizing Crowd based Monitoring in Large Scale Mobile Networks
Jan Groenendijk (Ericsson, Ireland); Yangcheng Huang (Huawei, Ireland)
A Design and Implementation of Dual-Stack Aware Authentication System for Enterprise Captive Portal
Surasak Sanguanpong (Kasetsart University, Bangkok, Thailand); Kasom Koht-arsa (Kasetsart University, Thailand)
Monitoring latency with OpenFlow
Kévin Phemius (Thales Communications & Security, France); Mathieu Bouet (Thales Communications & Security, France)
Impact of Rare Alarms on Event Correlation
Aurore Junier (INRIA Rennes & ENS Cachan, France); Anne Bouillard (ENS, France); Benoit Ronot (Alcatel-Lucent Bell labs Frances, France)
Measuring TCP Connection Establishment Times of Dual-Stacked Web Services
Vaibhav Bajpai (Jacobs University Bremen, Germany); Jürgen Schönwälder (Jacobs University Bremen, Germany)
Towards a Trust Computing Architecture for RPL in Cyber Physical Systems
Sebastian Seeber (Universität der Bundeswehr München, Germany); Anuj Sehgal (Jacobs University Bremen & Indian Underwater Robotics Society, Germany); Björn Stelte (Universität der Bundeswehr München, Germany); Gabi Dreo Rodosek (Universität der Bundeswehr München, Germany); Jürgen Schönwälder (Jacobs University Bremen, Germany)
Gravitational Networks: self-organizing network topologies into hierarchically structured domains
Martin Johnsson (Waterford Institute of Technology, Ireland); Brendan Jennings (Waterford Institute of Technology, Ireland)
Identifying Missed Monitoring Alerts based on Unstructured Incident Tickets
Liang Tang (Florida International University, USA); Tao Li (Florida International University, USA); Larisa Shwartz (IBM Research, USA); Genady Ya. Grabarnik (St. John's University, USA)
Volume is not Enough: SVC-aware Server Allocation for Peer-assisted Streaming
Julius Rückert (Technische Universität Darmstadt, Germany); Osama Abboud (TU Darmstadt, Germany); David Hausheer (TU Darmstadt, Germany)
Lightweight Link Dimensioning using sFlow Sampling
Ricardo de O. Schmidt (University of Twente, The Netherlands); Ramin Sadre (University of Twente, The Netherlands); Anna Sperotto (Twente University, The Netherlands); Aiko Pras (University of Twente, The Netherlands)
Choreographing configuration changes
Herry Herry (University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom); Paul Anderson (University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom); Michael Rovatsos (University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom)
Joint Optimization for the Delivery of Multiple Video Channels in Telco-CDN
Fen Zhou (University of Avignon, France); Jiayi Liu (Institut Telecom - Telecom Bretagne, France); Gwendal Simon (Institut Telecom - Telecom Bretagne, France); Raouf Boutaba (University of Waterloo, Canada)
A Distributed Approach to Dynamic VM Management
Michael Tighe (The University of Western Ontario, Canada); Gaston Keller (The University of Western Ontario, Canada); Michael A. Bauer (The University of Western Ontario, Canada); Hanan Lutfiyya (University of Western Ontario, Canada)
Detecting Anomalies in Cellular Networks Using an Ensemble Method
Gabriela Ciocarlie (SRI International, USA); Ulf Lindqvist (SRI International, USA); Szabolcs Nováczki (Nokia Siemens Networks, Hungary); Henning Sanneck (Nokia Siemens Networks, Germany)
Assessment and Event Based Analysis of Dynamic Wireless Networks
Denis Carvin (LAAS-CNRS, France); Guillaume Kremer (LAAS-CNRS, France); Pascal Berthou (CNRS/LAAS - Université de Toulouse, France); Philippe Owezarski (LAAS-CNRS, France)
A Cloud Monitoring Framework for Self-Configured Monitoring Slices Based on Multiple Tools
Márcio Carvalho (Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil); Rafael Esteves (Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil); Guilherme Rodrigues (Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil); Lisandro Zambenedetti Granville (Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil); Liane Margarida Rockenbach Tarouco (Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil)
SLA Impact Modeling for Service Engagement
Yixin Diao (IBM TJ Watson Research Center, USA); Linh Lam (IBM TJ Watson Research Center, USA); Larisa Shwartz (IBM Research, USA); David Northcutt (IBM Global Technology Services, USA)
Reliability Estimation in Mobile Ad hoc Networks
Ritu Chadha (Applied Communication Sciences, USA); Alexander Poylisher (Applied Communication Sciences, USA); Constantin Serban (Applied Communication Sciences, USA)
Dynamic Multi-stage Energy-Saving Management Mechanism based on Base Station Cooperation
Peng Yu (Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications, P.R. China); Li Wenjing (Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications, P.R. China); Yulin Su (Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications, P.R. China); Qiu Xue-song (Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications, P.R. China); Lu Guan (Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications, P.R. China)
Efficient Probing Method for Active Diagnosis in Large Scale Network
Lu Guan (Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications, P.R. China); Ying Wang (Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications, P.R. China); Li Wenjing (Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications, P.R. China); Congxian Yan (Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications, P.R. China)

17:00 - 18:00 Welcome Apéro (integrated into the Poster Session and sponsored by Stadt Zürich and Kanton Zürich)


Thursday, October 17 (back to the top)

09:00 - 10:30 CNSM Key Note 3

Large Scale Network Measurement: What? Why? How? Findings? Impact?
Jürgen Schönwälder (Jacobs University Bremen, Germany)

11:00 - 12:30 CNSM Session 5: Wireless Sensor Networks (Chair: Ritu Chadha, Applied Communication Sciences, United States)

Adaptive Network Management for Countering Selective Capture in Wireless Sensor Networks
Hamid Al-Hamadi (Virginia Tech, USA); Ing-Ray Chen (Virginia Tech, USA)
CoMaDa: An Adaptive Framework with Graphical Support for Configuration, Management, and Data Handling Tasks for Wireless Sensor Networks
Corinna Schmitt (University of Zurich, Switzerland); André Freitag (Technische Universität München, Germany); Georg Carle (Technische Universität München, Germany)
Thwarting Attacks on ZigBee -- Removal of the KillerBee
Björn Stelte (Universität der Bundeswehr München, Germany); Gabi Dreo Rodosek (Universität der Bundeswehr München, Germany)

14:00 - 15:30 CNSM Session 6: Security Management (Chair: Corinna Schmitt, University of Zurich, Switzerland)

Towards Real-Time Intrusion Detection for NetFlow and IPFIX
Rick Hofstede (University of Twente, The Netherlands); Vaclav Bartos (Brno University of Technology, Czech Republic); Anna Sperotto (Twente University, The Netherlands); Aiko Pras (University of Twente, The Netherlands)
A Probabilistic Cost-efficient Approach for Mobile Security Assessment
Martín Barrère (INRIA, France); Gaëtan Hurel (INRIA, France); Remi Badonnel (LORIA, France); Olivier Festor (INRIA Nancy - Grand Est, France)
Refactoring Multi-Layered Access Control Policies Through (De)Composition
Matteo Casalino (SAP Research & SAP Research, France); Romuald Thion (Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1, France)

16:00 - 17:30 CNSM Session 7: Monitoring (Chair: Filip De Turck, Ghent University - iMinds, Belgium)

Scalable matching and ranking for network search
Misbah Uddin (KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden); Rolf Stadler (KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden); Alexander Clemm (Cisco Systems, Inc., USA)
Analysis of YouTube User Experience from Passive Measurements
Giorgos Dimopoulos (Universitad Politecnica de Catalunya, Spain); Pere Barlet-Ros (Technical University of Catalonia, Spain); Josep Sanjuàs-Cuxart (Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya, Spain)
Efficient Distributed Monitoring in 6LoWPAN Networks
Abdelkader Lahmadi (LORIA, France); Alexandre Boeglin (INRIA, France); Olivier Festor (INRIA Nancy - Grand Est, France)

17:30 - 18:00 CNSM Awards, Closing, and Future

Awards, Closing, and Future

Friday, October 18 (back to the top)

09:00 - 09:15 SETM Welcome, Opening Remarks

SETM Proceedings

09:00 - 09:15 SVM Welcome

SVM Proceedings

09:15 - 10:30 SETM Key Note 1

Opportunities for Exploiting Social Awareness in Overlay Networks
Bruce Maggs (Department of Computer Science, Duke University and Vice President, Research Akamai Technologies, USA)

09:15 - 10:00 SVM Key Note

DMTF Overview
Jeff Hilland (DMTF President DMTF and Enterprise Group of Hewlett-Packard Company, USA)

10:00 - 10:30 SVM Session 1


11:00 - 12:30 SETM Session 1: Video Delivery

Multi-source Cooperative Adaptation for QoE-aware Video Multicast Rate control
Kaliappa Ravindran (City University of New York, USA)
Video Delivery over Next Generation Cellular Networks
Manos Dramitinos (Athens University of Economics and Business, Greece); Nan Zhang (Aalto University, Finland); Miroslaw Kantor (AGH University of Science and Technology, Poland); Jose Costa-Requena (AALTO University, Finland); Ioanna Papafili (Athens University of Economics and Business, Greece)
Determining leaders and clusters in video consumption
Danny De Vleeschauwer (Alcatel-Lucent, Belgium); Chris Hawinkel (Alcatel-Lucent, Belgium); Yannick Lelouedec (Orange Labs FT, France)

11:00 - 12:30 SVM Session 2

OpenSAF and VMware from the Perspective of High Availability
Ali Nikzad (Concordia University, Canada); Ferhat Khendek (Concordia University, Canada); Maria Toeroe (Ericsson, Canada)
Integrating VM Selection Criteria in Distributed Dynamic VM Consolidation Using Fuzzy Q-Learning
Seyed Saeid Masoumzadeh (University of Vienna, Austria); Helmut Hlavacs (University of Vienna, Austria)
Integrating an Online Configuration Checker with Existing Management Systems: Application to CIM/WBEM Environments
Ludi Akue (University of Toulouse & IRIT, France); Emmanuel Lavinal (University of Toulouse & IRIT, France); Thierry Desprats (Universite Paul Sabatier, France); Michelle Sibilla (Université Paul Sabatier, France)

14:00 - 14:30 SETM/SVM Joint Poster Session

OVF 2 Features
Lawrence Lamers (VM ware, United States)
DMTF CIM-based Network Management
Aleksandr Zhdankin (Cisco Systems, United States); Bhumip Khasnabish (ZTE, United States); Hemal Shah (Broadcom, United States); John Parchem (Microsoft, United States)
Cloud Infrastructure Management Interface (CIMI)
Mark Carlson (Oracle, United States)
OpenSAF and VMware from the Perspective of High Availability
Ali Nikzad (Concordia University, Canada); Maria Toeroe (Ericsson, Canada); Ferhat Khendek (Concordia University, Canada)
Configuration Management and Monitoring of Heterogeneous, Inter-organizational Cloud Infrastructures
Vitalian Danciu (Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, Germany ); Wolfgang Hommel (Leibniz Supercomputing Centre, Germany); Silvia Knittl (msg systems ag, Germany)
Socially-aware Management of New Overlay Application Traffic with Energy Efficiency in the Internet
Corinna Schmitt (University of Zurich, Switzerland); Thomas Bocek (University of Zurich, Switzerland); Burkhard Stiller (University of Zurich, Switzerland)
Relevant Applications to Use SmartenIT
Thomas Bocek (University of Zurich, Switzerland); Corinna Schmitt (University of Zurich, Switzerland); Guilherme Machado (University of Zurich, Switzerland); Burkhard Stiller (University of Zurich, Switzerland), Tobias Hoßfeld (University of Wuerzburg, Germany); Valentin Burger (University of Wuerzburg, Germany)
Reciprocity with Virtual Nodes: Supporting Mobile Peers in Peer-to-Peer Content Distribution
Matthias Wichtlhuber (TU Darmstadt, Germany); Peter Heise (TU Darmstadt, Germany); Björn Scheurich (TU Darmstadt, Germany); David Hausheer (TU Darmstadt, Germany)
HORST - Home Router Sharing based on Trust
Michael Seufert (University of Wuerzburg, Germany); Valentin Burger (University of Wuerzburg, Germany); Tobias Hoßfeld (University of Wuerzburg, Germany)
eCOUSIN: enhanced COntent distribUtion with Social Information
Yannick Le Louedec (Orange Labs, France); Rubén Cuevas (Universidad Carlos III de Madrid, Spain); Danny De Vleeschauwer (Alcatel-Lucent Bell N.V., Belgium); Jörg Widmer (Institute IMDEA Networks, Spain); Noël Crespi (Institut Mines-Telecom, Telecom SudParis, France); Klaus Satzke (Alcatel-Lucent Bell Germany, Germany); David Hausheer (Technische Universitaet Darmstadt, Germany); Claudio Venezia (Telecom Italia S.p.A., Italy); Eiko Yoneki (University of Cambridge, United Kingdom)
Video Delivery over Next Generation Cellular Networks
Manos Dramitinos (Athens University of Economics and Business, Greece); Nan Zhang (Aalto University, Finland); Miroslaw Kantor (AGH University of Science and Technology, Poland); Jose Costa-Requena (AALTO University, Finland); Ioanna Papafili (Athens University of Economics and Business, Greece)
A model for posting and selection of videos by the users of an On-line Social Network
George Darzanos (Athens University of Economics and Business, Greece); Ioanna Papafili (Athens University of Economics and Business, Greece); George D. Stamoulis (Athens University of Economics and Business, Greece)

14:30 - 15:00 SVM Invited Talk

Software Defined Networking in the Cloud
Thomas Bohnert (Zurich University of Applied Sciences, Switzerland); Philipp Aeschlimann (Zurich University of Applied Sciences, Switzerland)

14:30-15:30 SETM Key Note 2

Network-Awareness and Virtualization Meets Cloud
Volker Hilt (Alcatel-Lucent Bell Labs, Germany)

15:00 - 15:30 SVM Session 3

An Approach for Knowledge-Based IT Management of Air Traffic Control Systems
Fabian Meyer (RheinMain University of Applied Sciences, Germany); Reinhold Kroeger (Hochschule RheinMain - University of Applied Sciences, Germany); Ralf Heidger (Deutsche Flugsicherung GmbH (DFS), Germany)

16:00 - 17:00 SETM Session 2: Network Traffic Management

Networking Solutions in the Federation of Clouds
Roman Lapacz (Poznan Supercomputing and Networking Center (PSNC), Poland); Blazej Pietrzak (Poznan Supercomputing and Networking Center (PSNC), Poland)
Dynamic Traffic Management mechanism for active optimization of ISP costs
Zbigniew Dulinski (Jagiellonian University, Poland); Rafal Stankiewicz (AGH University of Science and Technology, Poland)

17:00 - 18:00 SETM Session 3: User Involved Approaches

HORST - Home Router Sharing based on Trust
Michael Seufert (University of Wuerzburg, Germany); Valentin Burger (University of Wuerzburg, Germany); Tobias Hoßfeld (University of Wuerzburg, Germany)
Reciprocity with Virtual Nodes: Supporting Mobile Peers in Peer-to-Peer Content Distribution
Matthias Wichtlhuber (Technische Universität Darmstadt, Germany); Peter Heise (TU Darmstadt, Germany); Björn Scheurich (TU Darmstadt, Germany); David Hausheer (TU Darmstadt, Germany)

16:00 - 17:30 SVM Session 4

Who Decides Migration? A Migration Lock Mechanism for Virtual Machines
Xiaolin Wang (Peking University, P.R. China); Yingwei Luo (Peking University, P.R. China); Zhenlin Wang (Michigan Technological University, USA)
Adapting Applications to Exploit Virtualization Management Knowledge
Vitalian A. Danciu (Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, Germany); Alexander Knapp (Augsburg University, Germany)
Towards an Improved Data Centre Simulation with DCSim
Michael Tighe (The University of Western Ontario, Canada); Gaston Keller (The University of Western Ontario, Canada); Michael Bauer (University of Western Ontario, Canada); Hanan Lutfiyya (University of Western Ontario, Canada)

17:30 - 18:00 SVM Panel


Key Note Details

ICQT Key Note on Oct 14, 9:15-10:30

E-Africa by the horizon 2020 Ultra Wide Band in Africa ? A mainly political choice
Claude de Jacquelot (Political advisor Broadband-Infrastructure policy expert, Paris, France)

Abstract

On the basis of different experiences and analyses of the african context, wide band and ultra wide band development is a major stake for countries of the african continent in order to be transformed into an E-society and to enter the E-world.


CV

Claude de Jacquelot is a well-known ICT Infrastructure and Broadband Policy expert. Over the last 23 years, he has worked in the field of telecommunications policy and development in developing countries. He heads his own association of different independent international experts to be able to offer the best expertise to its customers. In 1999-2000 at UNMIK Government as Head of Telecommunication he has rebuilt the Kosovo operator; most recently as PIDA ICT team leader (Head of State-African Union and AfDB study), he was involved in the Broadband development strategic framework in Africa (Policy, Legal, regulatory and Infrastructure). Since 2012 as individual expert for the world Bank, He is involved in Broadband development framework for MENA-UMA countries. Involved in Broadband development model and regulatory frameworks, C. de Jacquelot has an extensive expertise in political (legal, regulatory) and policy framework to implement Broadband strategic framework in developing countries.


CNSM Key Note 1 on Oct 15, 9:30-10:30

Why Cloud? Secure. Private. Resilient. Open.
Matthias Kaiserswerth (Director and Vice President IBM Research, Zurich, Switzerland)

Abstract

As the cloud grows up, companies come to expect more out of the technology. Yet, we've seen a string of highly visible cloud outages and security breaches that make us wonder whether the cloud is up to the job. The problem, though, isn't that the cloud is inherently unsafe. It's a one-size-fits-all mentality. This presentation will explain the types of clouds, how they are being used and what we need to collectively do to make it secure, resilient and open to drive adoption.


CV

In June 2006 Dr. Matthias Kaiserswerth has been named Director and Vice President IBM Research – Zurich, Switzerland. In addition, he holds a position in the Software Research Strategy Board, in which he coordinates research work in this area across IBM's twelve global research laboratories.

From 2002 until the end of 2005 he was the Managing Director of an IBM Integrated Account. In 2000 Matthias Kaiserswerth became the director of IBM's laboratory in Zurich. Additional responsibilities were for the IBM Zurich Industry Solutions Lab where IBM hosts customers to meet with its researchers to discuss future technology and emerging business trends. From 1997 through 1999, Matthias Kaiserswerth was on assignment at the IBM TJ Watson Research Center where he led the networking software and security research. In addition, he was responsible for setting IBM Research's global security research strategy and starting IBM efforts in the emerging field of privacy technology research. From 1988 through 1997 he worked as a Research Staff Member at IBM Research – Zurich on various research projects ranging from high-performance communication systems to message brokering in a medical environment. Most recently, he worked on smart cards and Java security, which lead to the OpenCard industry standard for using smart cards in a Java environment and Visa's Java Cardtm Price Breakthrough program based on the IBM Research – Zurich JCOP platform.

Matthias Kaiserswerth received his MSc and PhD in Computer Science from McGill University in Montreal, Canada and from Friedrich-Alexander University in Erlangen-Nuremberg, Germany respectively.

Since May 2012 Dr. Matthias Kaiserswerth has been President of the Economic Development Agency Zimmerberg-Sihltal. He is also on the founding Board of Trustees at TECHNOPARK ® Zurich and HASLERSTIFTUNG Bern.


CNSM Key Note 2 on Oct 16, 9:00-10:30

Information-Centric Networking and In-Network Cache Management: Overview, Trends and Challenges
George Pavlou (University College London, U.K.)

Abstract

Information-Centric Networking (ICN), also referred to as content-centric, content-aware or data-oriented networking, is seen as an emerging paradigm that tries to re- focus communications, centering on content access rather than on host-to-host interaction as is the case today. The proliferation of user-generated content and the fact that the vast majority of interactions over the Internet concern media content access has led researchers to think of new communication models in which information/content comes on center stage and is accessed by name in a location-independent fashion; in addition, content chunks are cached in network routers, providing localized access, reducing overall network load and avoiding flash-crowd situations. The resulting communications paradigm is receiver-driven, with "time-phased" multi-casting and access to content from in-network caches being the norm. This presentation will start with an overview of information-centric networking, it will present the state of the relevant research activities and will consider the current trends and challenges, focusing in particular on in-network cache management.

CV

Prof. Dr. George Pavlou is Professor of Communication Networks in the Department of Electronic and Electrical Engineering, University College London, U.K., where he coordinates research activities in network/service management and networking. He holds a Diploma in Engineering from the National Technical University of Athens, Greece, and MSc and Ph.D. degrees in Computer Science from University College London. His research interests focus broadly on network/service management and networking. He has been instrumental in a number of flagship research projects that produced significant results, resulting in standards and widely deployed systems; in this context, he has contributed to standardization activities in ISO, ITU-T, and the IETF.

Prof. Pavlou has previously been the Vice Chair of the IEEE Committee on Network Operations and Management. He is on the editorial board of the IEEE Transactions on Network & Service Management (TNSM), he is editor in IEEE Communications responsible for a bi-annual series in network/service management and he is on the advisory board of the Journal of Network and Systems Management (JNSM). He has published extensively, with his publications having been widely cited, and has also given invited keynote speeches and tutorials in many major international conferences. For his technical contributions to network and service management, he received in 2011 the Dan Stokesberry award which is the highest distinction in the field, presented every two years to "an individual who has made particularly distinguished technical contributions to the growth of the field". See his web pages for more details on his research activities.

CNSM Key Note 3 on Oct 17, 9:00-10:30

Large Scale Network Measurement: What? Why? How? Findings? Impact?
Jürgen Schönwälder (Jacobs University Bremen, Germany)

Abstract

Network monitoring plays a fundamental role in network management   and it is naturally associated with performing measurements.  The   network management community has over the years produced many widely   deployed network monitoring technologies and a significant number of   technical papers have been published. Almost independent of this, a   slightly different network measurement community has established   itself over the last decade producing publications and technologies   for large scale network measurements that are less directly linked   to network management. This talk aims at taking a look at _what_   people measure, _why_ people measure, _how_ people measure, and   which _findings_ are typically being produced. This will lead to a   discussion of the value produced by typical large scale network   measurement research projects and how they relate to traditional   network management.

CV

Pof. Dr. Jürgen Schönwälder is leading the computer networks and distributed systems research group at Jacobs University Bremen, Germany. His research interests are Internet management technologies, flow-based network traffic analysis, large-scale Internet measurements, protocols for challenged networks and the Internet of Things, and network security.

Prof. Schönwälder is an active member of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). He has edited more than 30 network management related specifications and standards. He is currently co-chairing the NETMOD working group of the IETF. Previously, he co-chaired the ISMS working group of the IETF and the NMRG research group of the Internet Research Task Force (IRTF).

Jürgen served on the editorial boards of the IEEE Transactions on Network Management, the Springer Journal of Network and Systems Management and the Wiley International Journal of Network Management. He served as a guest co-editor of special issues of the IEEE Communications Magazine, the IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications, and the Springer Journal of Network and Systems Management. He has been involved in various functions in the organization of several workshops and conferences in the area or network and systems management.

SETM Key Note 1 on Oct 18, 9:15-10:30

Opportunities for Exploiting Social Awareness in Overlay Networks
Bruce Maggs (Department of Computer Science, Duke University and Vice President, Research Akamai Technologies, USA)

Abstract

This talk describes two network overlays that are used heavily by the customers of Akamai Technologies today. The first protects the banking industry from distributed denial of service attacks, whereas the second reduces the latency experienced by users of a major search engine. In the context of these two overlays, the talk discusses limitations in the functionality that a content distribution network (CDN) like Akamai can provide on behalf of its customers (the content providers), and suggests that there may be opportunities to address these limitations by exploiting social awareness.

CV

Bruce Maggs received the S.B., S.M., and Ph.D. degrees in computer science from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1985, 1986, and 1989, respectively. His advisor was Charles Leiserson. After spending one year as a Postdoctoral Associate at MIT, he worked as a Research Scientist at NEC Research Institute in Princeton from 1990 to 1993. In 1994, he moved to Carnegie Mellon, where he stayed until joining Duke University in 2009 as a Professor in the Department of Computer Science. While on a two-year leave-of-absence from Carnegie Mellon, Maggs helped to launch Akamai Technologies, serving as its Vice President for Research and Development, before returning to Carnegie Mellon. He retains a part-time role at Akamai as Vice President for Research.

Maggs's research focuses on networks for parallel and distributed computing systems. In 1986, he became the first winner (with Charles Leiserson) of the Daniel L. Slotnick Award for Most Original Paper at the International Conference on Parallel Processing, and in 1994 he received an NSF National Young Investigator Award. He was co-chair of the 1993-1994 DIMACS Special Year on Massively Parallel Computation and has served on the steering committees for the ACM Symposium on Parallel Algorithms and Architectures (SPAA) and ACM Internet Measurement Conference (IMC), and on the program committees of numerous ACM conferences including STOC, SODA, PODC, and SIGCOMM.

SVM Key Note on Oct 18, 9:15-10:00

DMTF Overview
Jeff Hilland (President DMTF and Enterprise Group of Hewlett-Packard Company, USA)

Abstract

DMTF has a 20 year history of management standards development. With many specifications becoming national and international standards, DMTF is the nexus for management standards. This presentation is an insider's guide to the DMTF – who participates, what is happening, how the organization is structured, and opportunities for academics and alliances to engage with DMTF.

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Jeff Hilland is a Senior Systems Architect in the Enterprise Group of Hewlett-Packard Company (HP). Jeff served as VP of Technology for the DMTF for 6 years before being appointed President of the DMTF. Jeff has served in various leadership roles in the DMTF since 2003, including co-chair of both the Server Management Work Group and the Desktop & Mobile Work Group. Jeff has spent the last 19 years driving industry standards and has served in chairing roles in both the RDMA Consortium and the InfiniBand Trade Association. Jeff's 30-plus year career in the computing industry includes systems and server management, management protocols, data modeling, distributed systems architecture, system software integration, automated deployment and configuration tool development, device driver, services architecture and development, and performance analysis. It has also included significant contributions to high speed intercommunications protocol development and standardization including RDMA, InfiniBand, and the Virtual Interface Architecture.

SETM Key Note 2 on Oct 18, 14:30-15:30

Network-Awareness and Virtualization Meets Cloud
Volker Hilt (Alcatel-Lucent Bell Labs, Germany)

Abstract

Cloud computing has revolutionized the way services are provided over the Internet. Cloud-based services scale up and down seamlessly using the resources needed to meet current demand. While services can easily manage computing resources such as CPU and storage, it is challenging to gain visibility into the network infrastructure and configure network resources for the delivery of a service. This limitation of today's clouds is impacting in particular telecommunication services that are time-sensitive, media-based, mission-critical, or persistent (long-lived).

Network virtualization and network-awareness are key enablers for a new type of cloud that supports a wider range of services at greater efficiency. New research on network-awareness and virtualization is enabling services to quickly respond to changing network conditions and jointly orchestrate network and computing resources. These clouds can use resources more efficiently and deliver highly available services with superior end-to-end performance.

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Dr. Volker Hilt is the head of Networked Services Research at Bell Labs/Alcatel-Lucent in Stuttgart, Germany. Dr. Hilt received his master's degree in Information Systems in 1996 and his Ph.D. in Computer Science in 2001 both from the University of Mannheim in Germany. He joined Bell Labs/Alcatel-Lucent in New Jersey, USA in 2002 and moved to Germany in 2012.

His field of research is computer networking where he has made contributions in the area of cloud computing, content distribution, peer-to-peer applications, distributed multimedia systems and the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP). Dr. Hilt is a contributor to the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) and chairs the SIP Overload Control Working Group. He has published over 50 papers and co-authored more than 15 Internet drafts and RFCs.

Note: The final program will become available at the end of August 2013


Attendee-List - CNSM 2013, Collocated Workshops, and Meetings