TUTORIAL 1 |
This tutorial will cover system-level architectures for mobile/wireless ATM with necessary radio protocols for wireless ATM access and networking protocols to support mobility management. Standardization activity within the ATM Forum's WATM group will be presented along with implementation experience from research prototypes of mobile and wireless ATM. This tutorial will not only benefit researchers, professors, students, but also consultants, network engineers and managers who wish to acquire the knowledge and practical know-how on Wireless ATM.
Biographical Sketches:
Arup Acharya is a Research Staff Member with the Systems Architecture Group, C&C Research Labs, NEC USA, Princeton, and is working on mobile ATM protocols and fast IP switching over ATM. He has actively contributed to the ATM Forum's WATM working group since its inception. He received his B.Tech. (Hons.) degree in Computer Science and Engineering from IIT, Kharagpur in 1987, and M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in Computer Science from Rutgers University in 1990 and 1995, respectively.
C.-K. Toh is with Hughes Research Labs and is responsible for R&D efforts on ad hoc networking and Wireless ATM. He is Area Editor on wireless networks for the IEEE on-line journal Communications Surveys and Feature Editor for ACM Mobile Computing and Communications Review, and is the author of the book Wireless ATM and Ad Hoc Networks: Protocols and Architectures which was published by Kluwer Academic Press (1997). He received his Diploma (Electronics and Communications) with a Certificate of Merit award from the Singapore Polytechnic in 1986, his B.Eng. (Electronics) degree with first class honours from University of Manchester in 1991, and his Ph.D. degree from University of Cambridge, England, in 1996.
Lou Dellaverson
is Chairman of the Wireless ATM Group of the ATM Forum
and Manager of Wireless ATM Lab at Motorola Radio Research Lab.
TUTORIAL 2 |
Topics that will be covered include Agent Advertisements, registration procedures, tunneling mechanisms, the role of security, and home agents and foreign agents. We will also cover how to set up a home network, getting care-of addresses via DHCP, Route Optimization, smooth handoffs, IPv6 mobility support, and the Service Location Protocol. In addition, we will look at an architectural model for supporting nomadic users under development within the Cross-Industry Working Team (XIWT) in the "Nomadicity" group.
Biographical Sketch:
Charles E. Perkins has recently joined Sun Microsystems
and was previously a research staff member at IBM T.J. Watson Research
Center.
He is an editor for ACM/IEEE Transactions on Networking and
ACM/Baltzer Mobile Networks and Applications,
and has recently authored a book on Mobile IP.
He is also associate editor for the ACM SIGMOBILE magazine
Mobile Communications and Computing Review
and is serving on the Internet Architecture Board (IAB).
Charles holds a B.A. in mathematics and a M.E.E. degree from Rice
University, and a M.A. in mathematics from Columbia University.
TUTORIAL 3 |
A number of approaches to reducing the simulation time for such models will be presented including parallel simulation, hierarchical modeling, and multi-paradigm models. The tutorial will begin with an overview of existing simulators, including OPNET, Bones, and other commercial products. The primary emphasis of the tutorial is on presenting the use of Maisie for parallel simulation of network models and their subsequent porting into physical implementation. The sources of overhead in the parallel execution of network models will be discussed together with methods to reduce their impact. Common pitfalls encountered in the design of parallel simulation models will be discussed. We will also describe techniques to port simulation models to protocol implementations. Finally, a number of case studies will be presented to highlight the lessons that have been learned in the design, simulation, and implementation of wireless network protocols.
Biographical Sketches:
Rajive Bagrodia is an Associate Professor of Computer Science in the School of Engineering and Applied Science at UCLA. He is an associate editor of ACM Transactions on Modeling and Computer Systems (TOMACS) and served as the Program Chair and General Chair, respectively, for the 1993 and 1994 Workshop on Parallel and Distributed Simulation. Professor Bagrodia was selected as a 1991 Presidential Young Investigator by NSF and received the 1992 TRW Outstanding Young Teacher award from the School of Engineering and Applied Science at UCLA and the 1991 Excellence in Teaching award from the Computer Science Department there. He obtained a Bachelor of Technology in Electrical Engineering from the Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay, in 1981, and the M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in Computer Science from the University of Texas at Austin, in 1983 and 1987, respectively.
Mario Gerla
is a Professor of Computer Science at UCLA.
His current research projects cover the areas of
topology design and bandwidth allocation in ATM networks; design and
implementation of optical interconnects for supercomputer applications;
design and performance evaluation of air/ground wireless communications
for the Aeronautical Telecommunications Network; and network protocol
design and implementation for a mobile, integrated services wireless
radio network.
He received his graduate degree in Electrical Engineering from
Politecnico di Milano, Italy in 1966 and his M.S. and Ph.D. degrees
in Computer Science from the University of California, Los Angeles,
in 1970 and 1973, respectively.
TUTORIAL 4 |
Biographical Sketch:
Zygmunt Haas
is an Associate Professor
in the School of Electrical Engineering at Cornell University
and was previously with AT&T Bell Laboratories
as a Member of Technical Staff.
He has organized several Workshops, delivered tutorials at major
IEEE conferences, and serves as editor of several journals. He was a guest
editor of two IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications
issues ("Gigabit Networks" and "Mobile Computing
Networks").
He received his B.Sc. in Electrical Engineering
in 1979 and M.Sc. in Electrical Engineering in 1985.
In 1988, he earned his Ph.D. from Stanford University.
TUTORIAL 5 |
Biographical Sketch:
Murray S. Mazer is Principal Research Fellow at The Open Group
Research Institute (Cambridge, MA, USA),
where he leads a
project on ongoing, adaptive access to Web-based resources under
variable or intermittent connectivity.
He previously worked at Digital
Equipment Corporation, on distributed systems and mobile computing
(including disconnected access to network-based file systems),
and is a Technical Editor for
IEEE Personal Communications.
Dr. Mazer received the
Ph.D. in Computer Science from the University of Toronto.