Sunday, April 27, 2008

Technical Reports


http://www.eecs.case.edu/laboratory/nasa-iip/software.html

Satellite/Planetary Analysis and Visualization

Link Description
STK Satellite Tool Kit (STK), by AGI, is an impressive suite of commercial software tools with many space applications, such as: orbit propagation, mission analysis and more.

STK website
SaVi SaVi is open-source software for satellite constellation visualization.
Celestia Celestia: A 3D Space Simulator


Network Emulation

Link Description
ONE “ONE (the Ohio Network Emulator) is a tool that enables researchers to emulate a network between a pair of interfaces on a single Solaris-based workstation.”
Emulab Emulab is a network emulation testbed at the University of Utah
NET The Network Emulation Testbed (NET) at the University of Stuttgart, Germany provides an emulation testbed for the testing of protocols. The NETShaper emulator resources are here as well.


Network Simulation

Link Description
ns-2 ns-2 is a discrete event simulator for computer networking research. ns-2 is free, open-source software. Hosted at Information Sciences Institute at USC.
OPNET OPNET Technologies produces commerical software called OPNET for network modeling and simulation. We are participating in OPNET's University program. Here is a web page describing our work with OPNET.
OMNeT++ OMNeT++ is a public-source simulation environment with primary application to the simulation of communication networks.
QualNet Scalable Network Technologies develops the QualNet network simulation commercial software.

External Links

Description
InterPlanetary Internet Special Interest Group This site contains many papers and technical infromation regarding the InterPlanetary Internet. "The objective of the Interplanetary Internet project is to define the architecture and protocols necessary to permit interoperation of the Internet resident on Earth with other remotely located internets resident on other planets or spacecraft in transit."
CCSDS CCSDS Home Page. The "Consultative Committee for Space Data Systems (CCSDS) is composed of space agencies and industrial associates worldwide, working together to provide well-engineered, standardized solutions for common space data handling needs."

INFORMS MEETINGS

NFORMS meetings offer you the ultimate in networking—the opportunity to exchange information, ideas, and perspectives with your colleagues, person to person and face to face.

INFORMS Conference Calendar »
Comprehensive listing of current and past INFORMS conferences, INFORMS Subdivision conferences, and non-INFORMS conference


INFORMS
Annual Meeting

Meeting

The INFORMS Annual Meeting, with more than 800 sessions and 3,000 papers, covers the broad landscape of OR research and practice. Many events organized by INFORMS communities and committees are held during the meeting. Scheduled annually in the fall.

2008
October 12-15, 2008
Marriott Wardman Park Hotel & Omni Shoreham Hotel
Washington, DC
Chair: Hani Mahmassani,
Northwestern University
Conference Website »

2009
October 11-14, 2009
San Diego Convention Center
Hilton San Diego
San Diego, CA
Chair: Soheila Jorjani, California State Univ.-San Marcos

2010
November 7-10, 2010
Austin Convention Center
Hilton Austin
Austin, TX
Chair: Jonathan Bard,
University of Texas at Austin

International
Meeting

meeting

Organized solely by INFORMS or in conjunction with other OR societies, International Meetings attract about 1,000 researchers and practitioners, with tracks on the full range of OR specialties. Held two out of every three years, typically during the summer. As a member of IFORS (International Federation of Operational Research Societies), INFORMS participates in the IFORS Triennial every third year.

2008
No INFORMS International Meeting. IFORS 2008, the 18th Triennial Conference of the International Federation of Operational Research Societies, will be held July 14-18, in Sandton, South Africa (http://www.ifors.org/)

2009
June 14-17, 2009
CORS/INFORMS Joint International Toronto
Westin Harbour Castle
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Chair: Liping Fang, Ryerson University

Conference on OR
Practice

meeting

This conference on “Applying Science to the Art of Business” features presentations on real-world applications of analytic solutions, presented by industry and university leaders. Highlights include the Franz Edelman Competition for excellence in applied OR, methodology and software tutorials, and facilitated networking. Held annually in the spring.

2008
April 13-15, 2008
Baltimore Marriott Waterfront
Baltimore, MD
Chair: Karl Kempf, Intel Corp.
Conference Website »


Teaching Effectiveness Colloquium


The Colloquium, previously held as a free-standing workshop in the summer, is now part of the 2008 INFORMS Annual Meeting. This colloquium brings together a focused group of participants and a faculty of experts, with the goal of improving teaching effectiveness. The colloquium provides a practical background in learning theory, communicates effective strategies for teaching management science, and creates an ongoing learning community for monitoring and sharing pedagogical experiments.

2008
October 12-15, 2008
Washington, DC

Dates and locations for future years to be announced

ACM SIGCOMM

Mission

SIGCOMM is the flagship annual conference of the Special Interest Group on Data Communication (SIGCOMM), a vital special interest group of the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM).

The annual SIGCOMM conference seeks papers describing significant research contributions to the field of computer and data communication networks. We invite submissions on network architecture, design, implementation, operations, analysis, measurement, and simulation.

There are two categories of paper submissions -- full papers and position papers. Full papers are no more than 14 pages long and typically report novel results firmly substantiated by experimentation, simulation, or analysis. Position papers are no more than 8 pages long and attempt to shape research directions by offering new perspectives, wisdom, and guidance rather than presenting mature work with quantitative results. Posters are one 30" x 40" (75cm x 100cm) page long, and present ongoing work. Student poster submissions will be favored.

Papers are double-blind reviewed (no author identification) by a technical program committee (TPC). Depending on the year and the program chairs, the TPC can have between 20-40 researchers. The paper acceptance ratio also varies year to year, from between 8-16%, on average accepting 30 papers out of 300 submissions.

The meeting is 3 days, single-track. It is accompanied by 2 days of tutorials and related workshops which vary each year. The conference occurs once a year in the late summer, with the location varing internationally, typically including locations in North America and Europe every three years.

Attendance is open, and there are some limited student travel grants available.

Upcoming Conference

ACM SIGCOMM 2008 will be held in Seattle, WA, USA, from August 17-22, 2008.

Previous SIGCOMM Conferences

The proceedings of the following past SIGCOMM conferences are available online:

Student Theses

Key Personnel

    Case Western Reserve University

  • Behnam Malakooti is Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at Case Western Reserve University. He obtained his Ph.D. in 1982 from Purdue University. He has consulted for numerous industries and corporations, including General Electric, Parker Hannifin, and B.F. Goodrich. He has published over 100 papers in technical journals. In his work, systems architectures, space networks, manufacturing systems, optimization, multiple criteria & intelligent decision making, trait analysis of biological systems, adaptive artificial neural networks, and artificial intelligence theories and techniques are developed and applied to solve a variety of problems.

  • Frank Merat is Associate Professor and Associate Chair of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at Case Western Reserve University. He has worked in RF and wireless systems for approximately 20 years. His recent experience includes MultiLink traffic modeling and load balancing, packet marking and traffic tracking for mitigating DDoS attacks, and wireless sensor networks. His research interests include wireless network implementation, simulation and modeling, especially for low power applications.

  • Vincenzo Liberatore is the Schroeder Assistant Professor in Computer Engineering and Networking at Case Western Reserve University. He has extensive publications in networking, theoretical computer science, and compilers. Prof. Liberatore is an expert in Networked Control Systems (http://home.cwru.edu/~vxl11/NetBots/). His work focuses on communication protocols and algorithms for the fault-tolerant, flexible, and real-time control of networked robotic units.

  • Shudong Jin joined the faculty of the EECS department at Case Western Reserve University in Spring 2004. He obtained his PhD degree in Computer Science from Boston University in 2003, where he had been a research fellow in the Web and InterNetworking Group and a teaching fellow in the Computer Science department. Before then, Shudong Jin received BS and MS degrees in Computer Science from Huazhong University of Science and Technology, Wuhan, China, and worked in an affiliated database and multimedia research lab for years. His other experiences include working at IBM T.J. Watson Research Center in summer 2000 and 2001, and receiving the IBM Ph.D. research fellowship. Shudong Jin is a member of ACM (SIGCOMM, SIGMETRICS), a member of IEEE Computer Society and IEEE Communication Society. He has published nearly twenty research papers in premier archival journals and major conferences. He has also served as a program committee member and as an external referee for various conferences and journals.

  • Limin Wang joined Case in Spring 2004. He obtained his Ph.D. from the Department of Computer Science at Princeton University in 2003. He was a member of the Network Systems Group. He received his B.S. degree of Computer Science from Peking University in 1997. His general research interests lie in the broad area of computer systems, which includes computer networks, distributed systems and operating systems. In particular, he works on improving the robustness and performance of large-scale network services, such as content distribution networks, overlay networks, peer-to-peer networks and distributed storage systems. To protect these networked systems from being impacted by Denial of Service or flash crowds, fundamentally, all the resources in these systems need to be fairly and efficiently utilized. This fair and efficient resource management can be achieved at different layers, e.g. application or transport. One element of this research is to find out the right trade-offs in different resource management contexts, and another element is to evaluate new algorithms in large-scale testbed, such as Planetlab. The goal is to gain insights into improving the resilience of network systems and to identify new research directions

  • Vira Chankong is an Associate Professor in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at Case Western Reserve University. He has worked and taught in the area of large scale optimization and decision making under multiple criteria for more than 20 years. His textbook Multiobjective Decision-Making: Theory and Methodology, of which he is the senior author with Yacov Y. Haimes, is being revised for publication by John Wiley and Sons. He is also completing a text "Optimization for Engineers and Problem Solvers" to be published possibly by Prentice-Hall. He is a co author of Risk Assessment and Decision-Making Using Multiple Test Results published by Plenum Press. He has conducted research and published extensively in the areas of multiple objective optimization, large-scale optimization, systems methodology, and applications of decision theory, optimization and information technology to medical research and engineering design and operation problems. His areas of research interest are creative problem solving; systems modeling; large scale optimization; multi-criteria decision making, and application of optimization, systems methodology, and decision theory to engineering design, medical diagnosis, production planning, and power systems planning and operations. His current research focuses the development of specialized large scale logic-based optimization algorithms for treatment planning of Gamma Knife Radiosurgery and Intensity Modulated Radiation Therapy, data mining and supply chain management. Dr. Chankong is a senior member of Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineering (IEEE) and Institute of Industrial Engineering (IIE), and a member of Society of Industrial and Applied Mathematics (SIAM) and Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences (INFORMS).

    NASA Glenn Research Center

  • Dr. Kul B. Bhasin serves as the Manager of Space Communications for the Computer, Information and Communication Technology program in NASA's Pioneering Revolutionary Technology Program. In this position he is responsible for the development and integration of advanced space communication and network technologies to meet future needs of NASA enterprises. Prior to that he established and was Chief of the Satellite Networks and Architectures Branch at NASA Glenn Research Center, Cleveland, OH. He initiated several joint-working groups with industry and academia to develop space Internet working standards. He served on the NSF/NASA blue ribbon panel to assess the Global Satellite Communications Technology and Systems. He represented NASA in the ad hoc Satellite Industry Task Force to define the role of satellites in the Global Information Infrastructure. Dr. Bhasin is a senior member of IEEE and is an elected Fellow of the Society of International Optical Engineers (SPIE). He is a member of AIAA and also serves on the Satellite Communication Technology Committee for AIAA. He was a NASA Fellow at Cornell University in Electrical Engineering in 1985. He obtained his PhD and MS degrees from the University of Missouri and Purdue University, respectively.

  • Thong Luu is a computer engineer at NASA Glenn Research Center, Cleveland, OH. He currently serves as the lead of GRC Space Communications Emulation Facility (SCEF) and also works in the visualization tools development Team. He works extensively in the development, maintenance, and setting up of emulations of space communications scenarios. His prior projects include: developing a proof-of-concept multi-platform HLA-based Ground-Cluster distributed simulation; researching and developing tools for establishing a Networked Virtual Environment using multiple immersive desks or CAVEs; and working in the Intelligent Synthesis Environments (ISE) project. He obtained his MS and BS degrees in Electrical Engineering from Cleveland State University.

    Computer Sciences Corporation

  • Keith Hogie of Computer Sciences Corporation has an extensive background in designing and building satellite data processing systems, control centers, and networks at GSFC. He has developed ground data processing systems and control centers for over 14 spacecraft over the last 25 years at NASA/GSFC, and led the development of the NASA Internetworking Laboratory Environment in 1990. He is the technical leader of the Operating Missions as Nodes on the Internet (OMNI) project at GSFC where he is applying his networking and satellite background to develop and demonstrate new communication technologies for future space missions.

    AT&T

  • Michael Rabinovich is a Technology Consultant at AT&T Labs Research, where he works on issues of Internet performance and scalability, and participates in developing the Internet strategy for AT&T. In particular, he was instrumental in designing ICDS (AT&T's Internet Content Delivery Network), and in developing and evaluating a variety of Internet caching and content delivery technologies. He is currently working on a utility computing technology for Internet applications. As another relevant project, he is currently working on an XML-aware network, being developed as an overlay network of application-level routers that consider XML content in routing XML messages to their destinations. Dr. Rabinovich joined AT&T in 1994 after obtaining his PhD from the University of Washington. He served on program committees, organized panels, and gave invited talks and tutorials at a number of conferences including WWW, ICDCS, SIGMOD, and VLDB. He published extensively in the areas of Internet scalability and performance, distributed systems, and transaction management, and co-authored the book "Web Caching and Replication" (with O. Spatscheck, published by Addison-Wesley).

    ABB, Inc.

  • Brian Robinson is a Lead Research Engineer at ABB, Inc. in software process and in advanced industrial communications. He is also currently a Ph.D. student in Computer Science at Case Western Reserve University. He received his Masters of Engineering Degree in Computer Engineering from Case Western Reserve University, and his Bachelor's Degree in Computer Science from Ohio Northern University. His current active research areas are real-time software quality and real-time communications.