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Future Internet

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Title:

Future Internet: New Network Architectures and Technologies

Download the Tutorial Material (Part 1)

Download the Tutorial Material (Part 2)

Download the Tutorial Material (Part 3)

Instructors:

Antônio Marcos Alberti, Christian Esteve Rothenberg and Tânia Regina Tronco

Abstract:

The Internet has invaded most aspects of life and society, changing our lifestyle, work, communication and social interaction and giving us expectations about new forms of interactions and access to global knowledge. Application and user demands on the Internet are increasing with mobile technologies and media content. Nevertheless, the Internet today is a complex agglomerate of protocols that inherits the grown legacies of decades of patchwork solutions.

There is a common consensus that the Internet needs improvement. Nevertheless, there is not yet a shared vision on how this may happen. As a direct consequence research programs have started worldwide to re-think traditional Internet design principles and to come up with new architectural concepts for the so-called Future Internet (FI).

The Future Internet Tutorial provides an overview of Future Internet research directions and trends. It presents the Future Internet research initiatives around the world and the efforts to establish experimental facilities for FI research. The tutorial gives an introduction to new Future Internet architectures that are currently under discussion and related technologies. Among the approaches discussed are addressing and routing concepts, adaptability, autonomicity, self-*, *-aware and manageability, virtualization, neutrality, openness, diversity, extendibility, flexibility and evolvability. The tutorial also presents some interdisciplinary aspects related to artificial general intelligence and bio-inspired ICT.

Topics covered
· Motivation for Future Internet Research

· Review of Principles of Internet Architecture

· Evolution of Internet architecture
- IPv6, MPLS, IP Mobility and Multi-Homing, etc.

· Scenarios of Evolution for a Future Internet Architecture

· Overview of Future Internet Recent and Ongoing Projects
- Overview of selected projects from the EU Framework Programs, US FIND, AKARI (Japan), etc.
- Experimental Facilities for Future Internet research
- PlanetLab, FIRE, GENI, G-Lab, etc.

· Future Network Architectures: Technological Challenges and Trends
- Capacity, Ubiquity, Scalability and Virtualization
- Information-centrism, Semantic, Context, Identification, Mobility, Naming, Indirection Resolution and Routing
- Adaptability, Autonomicity, Self-*, *-Aware and Manageability
- Security, Privacy, Trust, Transparency and Anonymity
- Service-centrism, Neutrality, Openness, Diversity, Extendibility, Flexibility and Usability
- Simplicity, Sustainability and Evolvability
- Artificial General Intelligence and Bio-inspired ICT

Main Reference

[1] New Network Architectures: The Path to the Future Internet, Springer, Series: Studies in Computational Intelligence, Vol. 297, Tronco, Tania (Ed.), 1st Edition, 2010, 250 p., ISBN: 978-3-642-13246-9.

 

Instructors CVs:

 

alberti

Antonio Marcos Alberti received the degree in Electrical Engineering from Santa Maria Federal University (UFSM), Santa Maria, RS, Brazil, in 1986, and the M.Sc. and Ph.D. degrees in Electrical Engineering from Campinas State University (Unicamp), Campinas, SP, Brazil, in 1998 and 2003, respectively. In February 2004 he joined the Instituto Nacional de Telecomunicações (INATEL), as an Adjunct Professor. He has experience in teaching more than 8 post-graduation disciplines, including Analysis and Performance Evaluation of Communication Networks, Optimization Methods Applied to Telecommunications and Convergent Networks. He is a member of the editorial board of the INATEL telecommunications magazine. He was member of the technical committee of Globecom, TEMU, ICDT and ANSS conferences. In 2010, wrote a book chapter entitled "Future Network Architectures: Technological Challenges and Trends" that discusses technological requirements, challenges and trends towards future network architectures. His main working area is communication networks, where he has expertise in project, modeling, simulation, performance evaluation and optimization of such networks. His current interests include future networks design, cognitive and autonomic networks, indirection resolution, entities identification, virtualization and future enabling technologies.

 

christian1

Christian Esteve Rothenberg is a Research Scientist in the areas of IP systems and networking at Fundação Centro de Pesquisa e Desenvolvimento (CPqD), Campinas, Brazil. His current research interests span Internet routing and packet forwarding, data center networks, NGN/IMS, OpenFlow, and named data networking. He received his Ph.D. in Electrical and Computer Engineering from University of Campinas (UNICAMP) in 2010. In his doctoral studies he worked on probabilistic data structures applied to packet forwarding in content-oriented networks. He was a visiting researcher at Ericsson Research Nomadiclab, Helsinki, Finland, and contributed to the EU FP7 Publish/Subscribe Internet Routing Paradigm (PSIRP) project.
He holds the Telecommunication Engineering degree from the Technical University of Madrid (ETSIT - UPM), Spain, and the M.Sc. (Dipl. Ing.) degree in Electrical Engineering and Information Technology from the Darmstadt University of Technology (TUD), Germany, 2006. During his master thesis at Deutsche Telekom he worked on IMS-based fixed mobile convergence and mobility management, and was engaged in R&D activities on converged access networks (ScaleNet) and self-optimizing radio access networks.

tania1

Tania Regina Tronco Received the Electrical Engineering degree from the School of Engineering of São Carlos in 1985, the M.Sc. degree in Electrical Engineering from the State University of Campinas (UNICAMP) in 1992 and, in 1995-1996, participated of a doctorate program at ENST- Paris, France. Since 1987 she is a telecom researcher at Centro de Pesquisa e Desenvolvimento (CPqD) and has being worked with R&D activities, consultancy, teaching and coordinating projects in networks technologies. Current activities include the coordination of a future Internet project sponsored by FUNTTEL at CPqD Foundation named ARCMIP (ARchitectures for Mobile IP). In 2006 published a book named "Redes de Nova Geração" by "Editora Érica" and, in 2010, act as editor of a book named "New Network Architectures: The Path to the Future Internet" by Springer publishing.