-------- Original-Nachricht -------- Betreff: [Tccc] CFP: ACM SIGCOMM 2012 Workshop on Cellular Networks: Operations, Challenges, and Future Design (CellNet) Datum: Tue, 17 Jan 2012 11:07:39 -0800 Von: Ryuji Wakikawa ryuji.wakikawa@gmail.com An: tccc@lists.cs.columbia.edu
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====================================================================== Cellular Networks: Operations, Challenges, and Future Design (CellNet) Helsinki, Finland (Monday August 13, 2012) http://conferences.sigcomm.org/sigcomm/2012/cellnet.php ======================================================================
Call for Papers
With the popularity of smart phones and tablets, we are living in an increasingly mobile world. Third-party mobile applications such as Apple Siri, iCloud, and Yelp are rapidly growing everyday and greatly enrich our lives. The eco-system for mobile applications is vibrant and conducive to open innovation. Even one of the most popular mobile OS -- Android operation system is open source. This allows many phone and tablet vendors to innovate on the hardware and firmware. Underpinning this mobile world, it is the cellular networks. Unfortunately, the cellular networks present a rather disheartening picture. They are closed, mostly proprietary, and constructed using closed monolithic equipments. The innovation is limited to a very small number of equipment vendors, not open to the general research community. As a result, cellular networks are prone to outages, dropped calls, performance problems, and hard to manage. The closed nature of cellular networks threatens to derail the mobile revolution or limit its true potential.
Research innovation in mobile cellular networks is hampered by the fact that most academic researchers have no access to cellular radios, source codes of cellular network equipments, cellular network management tools, and realistic network traces at scale. As a result, most wireless research is conducted using WiFi. We believe this situation much change. To effect change, this workshop brings network operators, and academic researchers together to address the problems. First, we would like academic researchers to understand operational aspects of cellular network. Second, we would like researchers from academia and industry to jointly identify the challenges, and propose future designs so that cellular networks can evolve to meet the growing challenges of a mobile world.
We encourage submission of both position papers and work-in-progress papers on previously unpublished work on cellular networks.
- Topics
We solicit submissions on topics including, but not limited to, the following: • Operation aspects: • Radio resource allocation and usage profiling • Cellular network architecture characterization • Understanding and modeling cellular data traffic • Cellular network security • Challenges facing today's cellular networks: • Cellular network management • Mobility • Energy efficiency • Spectrum shortage • Future cellular network design: • Architectures • Protocols • Algorithms • Security and privacy
- Submission Instructions
Each submission must be a single PDF file no longer than six (6) pages in length (in two-column, 10-point format) including references, following the LaTeX style file. Papers should be submitted via thesubmission site. Papers must include the author name and affiliation for single-blind peer reviewing by the program committee. Authors of accepted papers are expected to present their papers at the workshop. Submissions must be original work not under review at any other workshop, conference, or journal.
- Important Dates
Paper Registration March 23, 2012, 11:59 p.m. GMT Submissions due March 30, 2012, 11:59 p.m. GMT Notification of acceptance May 11, 2012 Camera ready version due June 1, 2012 Workshop date August 13, 2012 Please email the general chairs with any questions you may have.
- Organizers
Program Committee Co-Chairs Li Erran Li (Bell Labs) Z. Morley Mao (Univ of Michigan)
Program Committee Members Suman Banerjee, Wisconsin Andrew Campbell, Dartmouth College Xu Simon Chen, AT&T Research Zihui Ge, AT&T Research Marco Gruteser,Winlab/Rutgers University Edward Knightly, Rice Ulas Kozat, Docomo Kobus Van Der Merwe, AT&T Research Ram Ramjee, Microsoft Research Jennifer Rexford, Princeton Cedric Westphal, Huawei Yongguang Zhang, Microsoft Research
- Thanks to our supporters (in alphabetical order): AT&T Labs Research, Aalto University , Bell Labs Alcatel-Lucent, Comcast, Cisco, HP, Internet Society, Microsoft Research, NetApp, Nokia, OY L M ERICSSON AB, Telefónica Investigación y Desarrollo S.A. Unipersonal, Verisign Labs _______________________________________________ IEEE Communications Society Tech. Committee on Computer Communications (TCCC) - for discussions on computer networking and communication. Tccc@lists.cs.columbia.edu https://lists.cs.columbia.edu/cucslists/listinfo/tccc