Call for Papers (DSOM 2005)
16th IFIP/IEEE Distributed Systems: Operations and Management
>> Management of Ambient Networks <<
October 24-26, 2005, Barcelona, Catalunya, Spain
<http://www.dsom2005.org/>
The sixteenth IFIP/IEEE International Workshop on Distributed Systems:
Operations and Management (DSOM 2005) will be held October 24-26, 2005
in Barcelona, Spain. The workshop is sponsored by the International
Federation for Information Processing (IFIP) Working Group 6.6 on
Management of Networks and Distributed Systems with technical
co-sponsorship by the IEEE Communications Society, Technical Committee
on Network Operations and Management (CNOM). The Workshop's location
is the Campus Nord of Universitat Politecnica de Catalunya (UPC) in
Barcelona. UPC is in a residential area in the north of the city, at
walking distance of hotels and commercial areas and well accessible by
public transportation from downtown.
This is the first time that DSOM will be co-located with four other
events in order to strengthen the links between our respective
communities. These co-located conferences are the 8th International
Conference on Management of Multimedia Networks and Services (MMNS
2005), the 7th Symposium on Self-Stabilizing Systems (SSS 2005), the
5th Workshop on IP Operations and Management (IPOM 2005), and the
International Workshop on Autonomic Grid Networking and Management
(AGNM 2005).
SCOPE OF THE DSOM WORKSHOP
--------------------------
Ambient Networks are a new vision to provide accessibility and
distributed services through the dynamic composition of networks. The
wide adoption of packet switched networking technologies and the fast
growing wireless networking infrastructures in public as well as in
private spaces allow systems to choose how to obtain connectivity.
Systems may also dynamically form new networks and the devices or the
whole network may be mobile. Furthermore, many ambient networks will
be in private spaces, owned and "operated" by non technical users
(home networks). The heterogeneity of the services and resources
participating in ambient networks and the dynamics associated with the
composition of networks poses new management challenges.
Ambient networks and services cannot be managed in the classic way.
Instead, management of ambient networks must become an invisible and
integrated part of a highly automated and adaptive control plane.
Autonomic and self-management approaches therefore are of key
importance. Important and challenging questions related to security,
privacy, trust, and isolation in ambient networks need to be
answered. In addition, questions related to the interface between
managed and self-managed networks need to be addressed. Papers
addressing these research questions are especially welcome.
Topics of interest include but are not limited to:
* Self-management and self-configuration
* Management of Home Networks
* Autonomic Management of Networks and Services
* Inter-domain Management
* Context-driven Management
* Adaptive Management Services and Applications
* Control Theoretic Management Approaches
* Distributed and Decentralized Management
* Security, Privacy, Trust, and Isolation
* Composable Management Systems
* Performance and QoS Management
* Fault Management and Fault Tolerance
* Policy-based Management and Service Level Agreements
* Monitoring, Event, and Fault Handling
* Configuration, Accounting, Billing
* Management Architectures and Information Models
* Standardized Frameworks, Models, and Programming Interfaces
* Implementation, Instrumentation, and Experience
PAPER SUBMISSION
----------------
Paper submissions must present original, unpublished research or
experiences. Late-breaking advances and work-in-progress reports from
ongoing research are also encouraged to be submitted to DSOM 2005.
Papers under review elsewhere MUST NOT be submitted to DSOM 2005.
Authors are requested to submit either long papers or short papers
(work-in-progress reports):
* Long papers (up to 12 single-spaced single-column pages)
* Short papers describing work-in-progress (up to 4 pages)
Submissions exceeding the above mentioned paper size will not be
reviewed and returned to the authors. Papers must be submitted online
in PDF format via the "Paper Submission" link that can be found on the
the DSOM 2005 web page.
PROCEEDINGS
-----------
The DSOM 2005 proceedings will be published in Springer-Verlag's
Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS) series. For that reason we
recommend that the PDF file of each paper be generated using LaTeX and
the LNCS style available from Springer-Verlag. For more information
regarding manuscript format please visit the author's instruction
links at LNCS: <http://www.springer.de/comp/lncs/authors.html>
IMPORTANT DEADLINES
-------------------
Submission: May 8th 2005
Notification: July 18th 2005
Camera ready: August 8th 2005
PROGRAM COMMITTEE CHAIRS
------------------------
Juergen Schoenwaelder, International University Bremen, Germany
Joan Serrat, Universitat Politecnica de Catalunya, Spain
TECHNICAL PROGRAM COMMITTEE
---------------------------
- Ehab Al-Shaer, DePaul University, Chicago, USA
- Raouf Boutaba, University of Waterloo, Canada
- Nevil Brownlee, The University of Auckland, CAIDA, New Zealand
- Marcus Brunner, NEC Europe, Germany
- Mark Burgess, University College Oslo, Norway
- Omar Cherkaoui, Universite du Quebec a Montreal, Canada
- Alexander Clemm, Cisco, California, USA
- Luca Deri, ntop.org, Italy
- Metin Feridun, IBM Research, Switzerland
- Olivier Festor, LORIA-INRIA, France
- Alex Galis, University College London, UK
- Lisandro Z. Granville, Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil
- Takeo Hamada, Fujitsu Labs of America, USA
- Heinz-Gerd Hegering, Institut fuer Informatik der LMU, Germany
- Joseph L Hellerstein, IBM T.J. Watson Research Center, USA
- James Won-Ki Hong, POSTECH, Korea
- Cynthia Hood, Illinois Institute of Technology, USA
- Alexander Keller, IBM T.J. Watson Research Center, USA
- Lundy Lewis, Lundy Lewis Associates, USA
- Antonio Liotta, University of Essex, UK
- Emil Lupu, Imperial College London, UK
- Hanan Lutfiyya, University of Western Ontario, Canada
- Yoshiaki Kirha, NEC, Japan
- J.P. Martin-Flatin, CERN, Switzerland
- Jose Marzo, Universitat de Girona, Spain
- Jose M. Nogueira, Federal University of Minas Gerais, Brazil
- George Pavlou, University of Surrey, UK
- Aiko Pras, University of Twente, The Netherlands
- Juergen Quittek, NEC Europe, Germany
- Chris Ramming, DARPA, USA
- Danny Raz, Technion, Israel
- Gabi Dreo Rodosek, Leibniz Supercomputing Center, Germany
- Akhil Sahai, HP Laboratories, USA
- Adarshpal Sethi, University of Delaware, USA
- Rolf Stadler, KTH, Sweden
- Radu State, LORIA-INRIA, France
- Burkhard Stiller, UniBW Munich, Germany & ETH Zurich, Switzerland
- Frank Strauss, TU Braunschweig, Germany
- Joe Sventek, University of Glasgow, UK
- John Vicente, Intel, USA
- Victor Villagra, Universidad Politecnica de Madrid, Spain
- Vincent P. Wade, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland
- Felix Wu, University of California at Davis, USA
- Makoto Yoshida, The University of Tokyo, Japan
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