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Originally published in 1995. The WWW, a global information system
which revolutionized the world of information search and browsing
via the Internet, was a new phenomenon in the 1990s. This book
acted as an authoritative introduction to the concepts and design.
It includes a brief history of the origin of the www and
information on running pages in HTML as well as specific case
studies in projects from academic and commercial projects. A
fascinating insight into the early days of widespread internet use,
this look at a new communication mechanism showcases the
discussions underway at the time about the uses and future of the
www.
Originally published in 1995. The WWW, a global information system
which revolutionized the world of information search and browsing
via the Internet, was a new phenomenon in the 1990s. This book
acted as an authoritative introduction to the concepts and design.
It includes a brief history of the origin of the www and
information on running pages in HTML as well as specific case
studies in projects from academic and commercial projects. A
fascinating insight into the early days of widespread internet use,
this look at a new communication mechanism showcases the
discussions underway at the time about the uses and future of the
www.
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Bio-Inspired Computing and Communication - First Workshop on Bio-Inspired Design of Networks, BIOWIRE 2007 Cambridge, UK, April 2-5, 2007, Revised Papers (Paperback, 2008 ed.)
Pietro Lio, Eiko Yoneki, Jon Crowcroft, Dinesh Chandra Verma
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R1,584
Discovery Miles 15 840
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This volume contains the papers from BIOWIRE 2007, the first in a
series of wo- shops on the bio-inspired design of networks, and
additional papers contributed from the research area of
bio-inspired computing and communication. The workshop took place
at the University of Cambridge during April 2-5, 2007 with
sponsorship from the US/UK International Technology Alliance in
Network and Information Sciences. Its objective was to present,
discuss and explore the recent developments in the field of
bio-inspired design of networks, with particular regard to wireless
networks and the self-organizing properties of biological networks.
The workshop was organized by Jon Crowcroft (University of
Cambridge), Don Towsley (University of Massachusetts), Dinesh Verma
(IBM T. J. Watson Research Center), Vasilis Pappas (IBM T. J.
Watson Research Center), Ananthram Swami (ARL), Tom McCutcheon
(DSTL) and Pietro Lio (University of Cambridge). The program for
BIOWIRE 2007 included 54 speakers covering a diverse range of
topics, categorized as follows: 1. Self-organized communication
networks in insects 2. Neuronal communications 3. Bio-computing 4.
Epidemiology 5. Network theory 6. Wireless and sensorial networks
7. Brain: models of sensorial integration The BIOWIRE workshop
focuses on achieving a common ground for knowledge sharing among
scientists with expertise in investigating the application domain
(e. g. , biological, wireless, data communication and
transportation networks) and scientists with relevant expertise in
the methodology domain (e. g. , mathematics and statistical physics
of networks).
This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the Third International COST264 Workshop on Networked Group Communication, NGC 2001, held in London, UK, in November 2001.The 14 revised full papers presented were carefully reviewed and selected from 40 submissions. All current issues in the area are addressed. The papers are organized in topical sections on application-level aspects, group management, performance topics, security, and topology.
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Quality of Future Internet Services - Second COST 263 International Workshop, Qofis 2001, Coimbra, Portugal, September 24-26, 2001. Proceedings (Paperback, 2001 ed.)
Mikhail I. Smirnov, Jon Crowcroft, James Roberts, Fernando Boavida
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R1,668
Discovery Miles 16 680
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the Second International Workshop on Quality of Future Internet Services, QofIS 2001, organized by the European COST Action 263, in Coimbra, Portugal, in September 2001.The 22 revised full papers presented were carefully selected during a competitive reviewing process from a total of 87 submissions. The book offers topical sections on quality of service for multimedia communication, admission control, QoS routing, differentiated services networks, QoS monitoring and mapping, and traffic engineering.
The papers in this book present various viewpoints on the design
and - plementation of techniques for QoS engineering for Internet
services.They were selected from more than 70 submissions to the
1st International workshop on "Quality of future Internet services"
(QofIS) organized by COST Action 263. The main focus of the papers
is on the creation, con?guration and deployment of end-to-end
services over a QoS assured Internet using the IntServ (Integrated
Services) and Di?Serv (Di?erentiated Services) models. The main
technical p- gramme was completed by two keynote talks: IETF Chair
Fred Baker opened the workshop with a discussion on major Internet
development directions and Andrew M. Odlyzko of AT&T Labs
Research gave the closing talk on Internet charging issues. The
presentation of papers was organised in 9 sessions. The emphasis of
Session 1 is on an assessment of the essential building blocks for
a QoS assured Internet, i.e., queueing and scheduling, which
basically de?nes the space for end-to-end services. The papers of
this session discuss the bounds we may expect from these building
blocks, the issues of queueing and scheduling management, and the
parameters we need to tune in a dynamic implementation. Flow
control and congestion control cannot be considered without regard
to the dominating impact of TCP. The keyword of Session 2 is,
therefore, Intern- friendly adaptation. Four papers in this session
are complementary and together present an emerging understanding of
a basic optimal area for such adaptation.
Mobile Multi-hop Ad Hoc Networks are collections of mobile nodes
connected together over a wireless medium. These nodes can freely
and dynamically self-organise into arbitrary and temporary,
"ad-hoc" network topologies, allowing people and devices to
seamlessly internetwork in areas with no pre-existing communication
infrastructure, (e.g., disaster recovery environments). The aim of
this book is to present some of the most relevant results achieved
by applying an experimental approach to the research on multi-hop
ad hoc networks. The unique aspect of the book is to present
measurements, experiences and lessons obtained by implementing ad
hoc networks prototypes.
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