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th These are the proceedings of SIROCCO 2009: the 16 annual
Colloquium on Structure, Information, Communication, and
Complexity. SIROCCO is devoted
tothestudyoftheinterplayandtrade-o?sbetweenthee?ciencyofdecentralized
algorithms and systems and the availability of information. Over
the years, the colloquium has become a widely recognizedforum, bri-
ing together researchers interested in the fundamental principles
underlying the interplay between local knowledge and global
complexity. It has a tradition of interesting and productive
scienti?c meetings in a relaxed and pleasant at- sphere, attracting
leading researchers in a variety of ?elds which exhibit such
interplay. This means that SIROCCO addresses topics in areas such
as distributed computing, parallel computing, game theory, social
networks, networking, - bile computing, peer to peer systems,
communication complexity, combinatorial optimization, etc. Some of
the topics in these areasarecompact data structures,
informationdissemination, informative labeling schemes, distributed
scheduling, wireless networks and scheduling of transmissions,
routing, broadcasting, loc- ization, and others. SIROCCO 2009 was
held in Piran, Slovenia, on the Adriatic. There were 53
contributions submitted to SIROCCO 2009.The submissions underwent a
th- ough refereeing process, where each submission was reviewed by
four members of the Program Committee. After in-depth discussions,
the Program Comm- tee selected 23 high-quality contributions for
presentationat the colloquium and
publicationinthisvolume.Separately,
fourposterswerealsopresented(butthey
arenotincludedintheseproceedings).Wethanktheauthorsofallthesubmitted
papers, the Program Committee members, and the external reviewers.
Without their dedication, we could not have prepared a program of
such quality. There were two invited speakers: Israel Cidon (the
Technion) and Leszek A. Gasieniec (University of Liverpo
This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the 12th
International Symposium on Distributed Computing, DISC'98, held in
Andros, Greece, in September 1998.
The 28 revised papers presented were carefully reviewed and
selected from a total of 87 submissions. Also included are one
invited paper and two abstracts of invited contributions. The
papers address all currect issues of distributed systems, in
particular Internet-based computing, shared-memory systems, ATM
networks, security aspects, Java process coordination, network
protocols, wait-free systems, shared objects, resource allocation,
and distributed objects.
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