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This volume contains the proceedings of the Seventh Mediterranean
Ad Hoc Networking Workshop (Med-Hoc-Net'2008), celebrated in Palma
de Mallorca (llles Balears, Spain) during June 25-27, 2008. This
IFIP TC6 Workshop was organized by the Universitat de les Illes
Balears in cooperation with the Asociaci6n de Tdcnicos de lnform
tica and sponsored by the following Working Groups: WG6.3
(Performance of Computer Networks) and WG6.8 (Mobile and Wireless
Communications). The rapid evolution of the networking industry
introduces new exciting challenges that need to be explored by the
research community. Aside the adoption of Internet as the global
network infrastructure these last years have shown the growing of a
set of new network architectures without a rigid and known a priori
architecture using wireless techniques, like sensor and ad-hoc
networks. These new types of networks are opening the possibility
to create a large number of new applications ranging from domestic
to nature surveying. These new networks are generating new
technical challenges like the capability of auto-reconfiguration in
order to give the network an optimal configuration, the energy
saving need when the nodes have not a source of energy other than a
small battery, new protocols to access the network and to convey
the information across the network when its structure is not
completely known or should be discovered, new paradigms for keeping
the needed information security and privacy in a quite uncontrolled
environment, and others.
This volume contains the proceedings of the Seventh Mediterranean
Ad Hoc Networking Workshop (Med-Hoc-Net'2008), celebrated in Palma
de Mallorca (llles Balears, Spain) during June 25-27, 2008. This
IFIP TC6 Workshop was organized by the Universitat de les Illes
Balears in cooperation with the Asociaci6n de Tdcnicos de lnform
tica and sponsored by the following Working Groups: WG6.3
(Performance of Computer Networks) and WG6.8 (Mobile and Wireless
Communications). The rapid evolution of the networking industry
introduces new exciting challenges that need to be explored by the
research community. Aside the adoption of Internet as the global
network infrastructure these last years have shown the growing of a
set of new network architectures without a rigid and known a priori
architecture using wireless techniques, like sensor and ad-hoc
networks. These new types of networks are opening the possibility
to create a large number of new applications ranging from domestic
to nature surveying. These new networks are generating new
technical challenges like the capability of auto-reconfiguration in
order to give the network an optimal configuration, the energy
saving need when the nodes have not a source of energy other than a
small battery, new protocols to access the network and to convey
the information across the network when its structure is not
completely known or should be discovered, new paradigms for keeping
the needed information security and privacy in a quite uncontrolled
environment, and others.
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