FIS 2010 - Future Internet Symposium 2010: Towards a Converged, Consolidated and Sustainable Future Internet (FIS2010)
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Website http://www.fis2010.org/ |
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Category FIS 2010
Deadline: May 03, 2010 | Date: September 20, 2010
Venue/Country: Berlin, Germany
Updated: 2010-06-04 19:32:22 (GMT+9)
Call For Papers - CFP
The current Internet has undergone an essential transformation: it changed from a network of networks that enables access to remote machines by a consistent protocol suite (TCP/IP), to a network of content, applications, and services. Thus, it became a modern commodity for everyone.The Future Internet (FI) is destined to continue this development and to provide improved features and usability for individuals and business. Its applications are expected to originate from areas such as entertainment, health, energy grid, utilities and environment, transport, mobility and logistics. Tight economic constraints however, require the Future Internet to consolidate and converge application-specific networks, and support for Internet of Services (IoS), Internet of Things (IoT) and Internet of Content (IoC) in a homogenous and, if possible, a single system.A simple investigation of network performance requirements of the anticipated FI applications reveals a set of contrary needs that have challenged research on network architectures and protocols for decades. Only a few applications have been successful, e.g. P2P systems, which can adapt easily to heterogeneous environments. Similarly, semantic technology provided meaningful relationships of content, but failed when it came to manageability and performance in universal and heterogeneous network systems. Thus Internet applications have so far been developed mainly for fitting to specific networks. Now itís time for a change. Networks should be developed for applications. The universe of these networks might be considered as the Future Internet. The future network ecosystem will be supported by a consolidated, preferably single, platform. This platform needs to include support for services, things and content on both network and application layer. The FI ecosystem has to be sustainable, meaning that applications are supported efficiently, i.e. consuming a minimal amount of required resources, e.g. capacity, electricity, etc., while providing dedicated security and sufficient performance for the applications throughout their lifetime.Classical research on network architectures and protocols, semantic technologies, service technologies, content and media, sensors and things is isolated. Thus these disciplines were unable to meet all requirements. Therefore, an interdisciplinary approach of these research areas is suggested for a sustainable Future Internet. The aim of the Future Internet Symposium is to bring together scientists and engineers from academia and industry and from various disciplines to exchange and discuss their ideas, views and research results towards a consolidated, converged and sustainable Future Internet.Topics of particular interest include, but are not limited to:Future Internet Architectures and ProtocolsNetwork Virtualization and future network infrastructuresReliability and performance of the Future InternetMobility and Ubiquity in the Future InternetSecurity, privacy, anonymity and trust in the Future InternetExperimental facilities and experimental research for the Future InternetMultimedia technologies for the Future InternetPerformance metrics and Service Level Agreements (SLAs) for the Future InternetSemantic TechnologiesEmerging semantics in sensor networks/things and content/media in the Future InternetSensor data processing for the Future InternetPrivacy, Security, Trust and Provenance models in the context of the Web of Data for the Future InternetSemantic data integration and fusion of heterogeneous data coming from legacy data sources, sensor network data streams, Web 2.0 technologies and mobile devices for the Future InternetSemantic data management for distributed data sources in mobile environments, e.g. stream-based modeling and reasoningSemantics, social communities and mobile systems for the Future InternetMultilingualism in the Future InternetInternet of Services, Things and Content:Abstractions for the Internet of Services, Things and ContentInfrastructure, Platform and Software as a ServiceCloud Computing, Service Cloud and VirtualizationIoS, IoT, IoC life cycle: description, discovery, composition and monitoringRealization of Federated, Open and Trusted platformsIoS, IoT, IoC quality, dependability, survivability, and reliabilityResource organization, management, composition and behaviorService adaptation, variability and evolution in the Future InternetVerification, validation, trust and testing for IoS, IoT and IoCIoS, IoT, IoC personalization, mobility and context awareness CommitteesCONFERENCE CHAIR:Dieter Fensel | STI Innsbruck, ATTECHNICAL PROGRAM COMMITTEE CO- CHAIRSInternet of Services, Things and Content: Arne.J.Berre | SINTEF, NONetwork Architecture and Protocols: Kurt Tutschku | University of Vienna, ATSemantic Technologies: Asun Gomez-Perez | Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, ESPublicationAll submissions will be subject to peer review by at least three members of the Technical Program Committee. Selection criteria include accuracy and originality of ideas, clarity and significance of results, and quality of presentation. For each accepted paper, at least one author is required to attend the conference to present the paper.The proceedings of FIS2010 will be published as by Springer Lecture Notes of Computer Science (LNCS). The published papers will be indexed by IEEE Xplore (pending request).Submission DetailsPapers have to be submitted electronically through the Easychair system:http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=fis2010Papers should be written in English and should be no more than 10 pages, font Times 11pt. Authors are required to follow the LNCS Style. (For more information about the Springer's Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS) please click here.) The first page should contain the title of the paper, names and addresses of all authors (including e-mail), an abstract (100-150 words) and a list of keywords. Submissions should describe original research.Papers accepted for presentation at FIS2010 cannot be presented or have been presented at another meeting with publicly available published proceedings. Papers that are being submitted to other conferences must indicate this on the title page, as must papers that contain significant overlap with previously published work. Over length or late submissions will be rejected without review. Notification of receipt and acceptance of papers will be sent to the first author.Important DatesAbstract submission: April 28, 2010Submission deadline: May 3, 2010Notification of authors: June 10, 2010Submission of camera ready papers: July 10, 2010
Keywords: Accepted papers list. Acceptance Rate. EI Compendex. Engineering Index. ISTP index. ISI index. Impact Factor.
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