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Colloquium Series 2005

The Advanced Networks Colloquium Series is a technical seminar series presented by the Center for Satellite and Hybrid Communication Networks, the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, and the Institute for Systems Research at the University of Maryland.

The colloquium series invites prominent academic and industrial researchers in the fields of networking, computer communications, and telecommunications to present their work to the University audience.

It is the aim of the colloquium series committee to offer seminars which help University faculty and students keep abreast of the latest research in networking and foster greater contact with both industry and the rest of academia.


Directions:             Driving Directions

16 December, 2005 Diagnosing Network-Wide Traffic Anomalies
Dr. Mark Crovella, Boston University
11:00 a.m. in Room 3117, CSIC Building

9 December, 2005 From statistical physics to information systems
Dr. Massimo Franceschetti, University of California-San Diego
11:00 a.m. in Room 3117, CSIC Building

2 December, 2005 Secure Overlay Services: Combating Denial of Service Attacks Without Changing the Internet
Dr. Angelos Keromytis, Columbia University
11:00 a.m. in Room 3117, CSIC Building

11 November, 2005 A DECISION THEORETIC FRAMEWORK FOR REAL-TIME COMMUNICATION
Dr. Tsachy Weissman, Stanford University
11:00 a.m. in Room 3117, CSIC Building

8 November, 2005 Managing Open Spectrum Systems
Dr. Haitao Zheng, University of California-Santa Barbara
3:00 p.m. in Room 2168, A.V. Williams Building

7 November, 2005 Delay, Feedback, and Interaction
Dr. Anant Sahai, University of California-Berkeley
11:00 a.m. in Room 3117, CSIC Building

28 October, 2005 A DECISION THEORETIC FRAMEWORK FOR REAL-TIME COMMUNICATION
Dr. Demosthenis Teneketzis, University of Michigan
11:00 a.m. in Room 3117, CSIC Building

21 October, 2005 On the Power of Distributed Network Telescopes
Dr. Andreas Terzis, John Hopkins University
11:00 a.m. in Room 3117, CSIC Building

14 October, 2005 In-Situ Key Management in Sensor Networks
Dr. Xiuzhen (Susan) Cheng, The George Washington University
11:00 a.m. in Room 3117, CSIC Building

7 October, 2005 Designing Fast Distributed Iterations via Semidefinite Programming
Dr. Stephen Boyd, Stanford University
11:00 a.m. in Room 3117, CSIC Building

30 September, 2005 Adaptive Optimization of IEEE 802.11 DCF Based on Bayesian Estimation of the Number of Competing Terminals
Dr. Xiaodong Wang, Columbia University
11:00 a.m. in Room 3117, CSIC Building

26 September, 2005 Network Coding Theory
Dr. Raymond Yeung, Chinese University of Hong Kong
2:00 p.m. in Room 2460, AVW Building

23 September, 2005 Implications of Autonomy for Expressiveness of Policy-Based Routing
Dr. Ramesh Johari, Stanford University
11:00 a.m. in Room 3117, CSIC Building

16 September, 2005 Computer security meets pervasive computing -- Security by, and for, converged mobile devices
Dr. Mike Reiter, Carnegie Mellon University
11:00 a.m. in Room 3117, CSIC Building

9 September, 2005 Realizing the Benefits of User-Level Channel Diversity
Dr. Roch Guerin, University of Pennsylvania
11:00 a.m. in Room 3117, CSIC Building

6 June, 2005 CLEO - the Cisco router in Low Earth Orbit
Dr. Lloyd Wood, CISCO
11:00 a.m. in Room 2168, AVW Building

20 May, 2005 JPEG 2000: A family of standards for image access, communication, interactivity and of course compression
Dr. Michael Gormish, R&D Department at Ricoh
11:00 a.m. in Room 2460, AVW Building

12 May, 2005 Scheduling and admission control in cellular data networks under dynamic traffic
Dr. Thomas Boland, France Telecom R&D and ENS Paris, France
11:00 a.m. in Room 1122, CSIC Building

6 May, 2005 Time Encoding Machines and Algorithms for Signal Recovery
Dr. Aurel Lazar, Columbia University
11:00 a.m. in Room 2460 AVW Building

29 April, 2005 Cross-layer design of wireless ad-hoc networks: is it better to be robust, quick, or responsive?
Dr. Andrea Goldsmith, Stanford University
11:00 a.m. in Room 2460, AVW Building

22 April, 2005 Selfish Routing and the Price of Anarchy
Dr. Tim Roughgarden, Stanford University
11:00 a.m. in Room 3120, CSIC

15 April, 2005 Energy-aware Wireless Sensor and Actuator Networks
Dr. Mani Srivastava, University of California – Los Angeles
11:00 a.m. in Room 3120, CSIC

8 April, 2005 Homeland Security: Networking, Security, and Policy
Dr. Douglas Maughan, Department of Homeland Security
11:00 a.m. in Room 2460 AVW Building

1 April, 2005 Design and Modeling Issues for Mobile Wireless Data: An introduction to Flash OFDM
Dr. Tom Richardson, Flarion Technologies
11:00 a.m. in Room 3120, CSIC

18 March, 2005 Smart networks of "dumb" sensor nodes using distributed signal processing and coding
Dr. Kannan Ramchandran, University of California – Berkeley
11:00 a.m. in Room 2460, AVW Building

11 March, 2005 Robust overload response during traffic or network misbehavior in wireless ad-hoc networks
Dr. Leandros Tassiulas, University of Thessaly
11:00 a.m. in Room 3120, CSIC

4 March, 2005 Efficient Routing in Intermittently Connected Mobile Networks
Dr. Konstantinos Psounis, University of Southern California
11:00 a.m. in Room 3120, CSIC

25 February, 2005 Random Access Networks: Transmission Costs, Selfish Nodes, and Portocol Design
Dr. Peter Marbach, University of Toronto
11:00 a.m. in room 2460, AVW Building.

4 February, 2005 Constraint Solving for Protocol Analysis
Dr. Jonathan Millen, MITRE Corporation
11:00 a.m. in room 2460, AVW Building.