Events agenda

27 Sep
2017

Two Approaches for the Performance Evaluation of Queueing Systems: Pricing and Scaling

Josu Doncel Vicente, Assistant Professor, Department of Applied Mathematics and Statistics, Faculty of Science and Technology, University of the Basque Country (UPV/EHU), Spain
Queueing theory, the set of probabilistic techniques that study waiting lines or queues, is a fundamental tool to analyze the performance of modern telecommunication networks. In this talk, we present the results of the performance analysis of two queueing systems.
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27 Jul
2017

Guarantees for Automation Networks despite Lossy Communication Links

Yvonne-Anne Pignolet, Principal Scientist, ABB Corporate Research, Switzerland
Over the past decades, large-scale and decentralized cyber-physical systems (CPS) have emerged, benefiting from the commoditization of computation, sensing and communication.
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24 Jul
2017

OTFS: A New Generation of Modulation Addressing the Challenges of 5G

Christian Ibars Casas, Principal Engineer, Cohere Technologies, Santa Clara, CA, USA
A new two-dimensional modulation technique called Orthogonal Time Frequency Space (OTFS) modulation designed in the delay-Doppler domain is introduced as a waveform ideally suited to new 5G use cases. Through this design, which exploits full diversity over time and frequency, OTFS coupled with equalization converts the fading, time-varying wireless channel experienced by modulated signals such as OFDM into a time-independent channel with a complex channel gain that is roughly constant for all symbols. Thus, transmitter adaptation is not needed. This extraction of the full channel diversity allows OTFS to greatly simplify system operation and significantly improves performance, particularly in systems with high Doppler, short packets, and large antenna arrays. Simulation results indicate at least several dB of block error rate performance improvement for OTFS over OFDM in all of these settings which translates to significant spectral efficiency improvements.
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19 Jul
2017

SoftAir: A Software-Defined Networking Architecture for 5G Wireless Systems

Prof. Ian F. Akyildiz, Broadband Wireless Networking Lab, School of Electrical and Computer Engineering Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA, USA
SoftAir is a new wireless software-defined architecture with network function virtualization (NFV) solutions for 5G wireless systems. The concept of SDN has been proposed to efficiently create centralized network abstraction with the provisioning of programmability over the entire network.
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27 Jun
2017

Towards a Future Multi-Service Mobile Network Architecture

Mahesh Marina, Reader, School of Informatics, University of Edinburgh, Scotland
5G is on the horizon. In this talk, I will take a service-oriented perspective of 5G aimed at supporting a wide range of services, differing significantly in their service requirements and device types (including machine-type devices).
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21 Jun
2017

Recent advances on hybrid Open-Flow/All-Path switches and Path Discovery protocols (AOSS, TCP-Path, Multiple Disjoint Paths)

Joaquin Alvarez-Horcajo, Diego Lopez-Pajares, and Isaias Martinez-Yelmo with an introduction by Guillermo Ibañez, researchers from the GIST Netserv Group of Telematic Engineering at University of Alcalá, Madrid (Spain)
After a number of years of its launch, OpenFlow does not yet provide deployable alternatives but it has fully changed the conceptual approach to manage and control networks.
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19 Jun
2017

5G – Standardization, current state and evolution

Ignacio Berberana, Senior Research Engineer, IMDEA Networks Institute & 5TONIC
The seminar will cover the current status of the standardization in 3GPP of the new 5G radio interface (NR) and core network (NGC), including the steps undertaken for the acceleration process recently approved, that will allow for early implementations by the end of 2018. 
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14 Jun
2017

Internet Reliability, from Addresses to Outages

John Heidemann, Senior Project Leader, University of Southern California/Information Sciences Institute (USC/ISI); Research Professor in Computer Science, USC, USA
The Internet is central to our lives, but we know astoundingly little about it. How big is the Internet?  How reliable? How is it evolving over months?  How does it change over the course of a day?
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9 Jun
2017

PhD Thesis defense: Analytical characterization of in-band and out-band D2D communications for network access

Christian Vitale, PhD Student, IMDEA Networks Institute and University Carlos III of Madrid
Cooperative short-range communication schemes provide powerful tools to solve interference and resource shortage problems in wireless access networks. With such schemes, a mobile node with excellent cellular connectivity can momentarily accept to relay traffic for its neighbors experiencing poor radio conditions and use Device-to-Device
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