Mark Berman is GENI project director. Mark works with the GENI community, which spans dozens of universities, government and industry partners, to ensure that GENI is well designed, technically feasible, and satisfies its research requirements. Mark’s research interests are in the area of complex distributed systems and their usability.
Michael Jarschel is working as a research engineer in the area of Network Softwarization at Nokia in Munich, Germany. He finished his Ph.D. thesis, titled “An Assessment of Applications and Performance Analysis of Software Defined Networking'', at the University of Würzburg in 2014. His main research interests are in the applicability of SDN and NFV concepts to next generation mobile networks.
Rick McGeer is a Principal Investigator at the Communications Design Group of SAP America Labs, Chief Scientist of US Ignite, and an Adjunct Professor at the University of Victoria, Victoria, BC, Canada. Over the past few years, he has worked extensively in the areas of distributed infrastructures and applications over distributed infrastructures, leading the GENICloud, InstaGENI, and GENI Experiment Engines projects, and the Ignite Distributed Collaborative Visualization Project. He is the author of over 100 technical papers and one book in the fields of computer-aided design of integrated circuits, formal verification, programming languages, and distributed systems.
Short Description of the area
The demo session
invites both full (up to 9 pages) and short (3-4 pages) papers in any of the
ITC topic areas. The demo session is
distinguished only in presentation format; “demo papers” are simply papers
whose content is best understood by an audience if the material is demonstrated
rather than presented in a slideshow (in the experience of the program
committee, this is true for many working systems). Authors are encouraged to consider a demo
submission if, in their opinion, the
research presented in their papers will be best illuminated by a live
demonstration. Submissions to the demo session should include all components of
a standard paper submission plus a brief statement of what will actually be
demonstrated during the session.
All
accepted demos must be presented at the conference by one of the authors.
List of Topics
- Area 1: Smart cities and IoT
- Area 2: Cloud services and
networking
- Area 3: Mobile, wireless and 5G
- Area 4: Next generation and future
Internet architectures
- Area 5: Network and traffic
management
- Area 6: Network planning and
optimization
- Area 7: Network measurements and
analysis
- Area 8: Networked applications
TPC Members
- Andy Bavier, Princeton University, US
- Justin Cappos, NYU Polytechnic, US
- Chip Elliott, GPO/BBN, US
- Deniz Gurkan, University of Houston, US
- Marc Körner, TU Berlin, Germany
- Thanasis Korakis, NYU Polytechnic, US
- Robert Krahn, Communications and Design Group, US
- Joe Mambretti, Northwestern University, US
- Sebastian Meier, University of Stuttgart, Germany
- Hausi Muller, University of Victoria, US
- Akihiro Nakao, University of Tokyo, Japan
- Simon Oechsner, NEC Laboratories Europe, Germany
- Max Ott, NICTA, Australia
- Subharthi Paul, Cisco, US
- Rastin Pries, Nokia Munich, Germany
- Glenn Ricart, US Ignite, US
- Niky Riga, Geni Project Office, US
- Christian Esteve Rothenberg, University of Campinas, Brazil
- Charalampos Rotsos, University of Lancaster, UK
- Paul Ruth, RENCI, US
- Dennis Schwerdel, University of Kaiserslautern, Germany
- James Sterbenz, University of Kansas, US