scispace - formally typeset
C

Christian Dannewitz

Researcher at University of Paderborn

Publications -  26
Citations -  2824

Christian Dannewitz is an academic researcher from University of Paderborn. The author has contributed to research in topics: The Internet & Network architecture. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 26 publications receiving 2631 citations.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

A survey of information-centric networking

TL;DR: This work compares and discusses design choices and features of proposed ICN architectures, focusing on the following main components: named data objects, naming and security, API, routing and transport, and caching.
Journal ArticleDOI

Network of Information (NetInf) - An information-centric networking architecture

TL;DR: The results suggest that a scalable NRS for 10^1^5 and more objects with resolution latencies (well) below 100ms is possible, implying that a global Network of Information that removes the need for today's application-specific overlay solutions is feasible.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Design considerations for a network of information

TL;DR: The design considerations for a re-architected global networking architecture which delivers dissemination and non-dissemination objects only to consenting recipients, reducing unwanted traffic, linking information producers with consumers independently of the hosts involved, and connects the digital with the physical world are presented.

NetInf: An Information-Centric Design for the Future Internet

TL;DR: A new, information-centric network architecture called Network of Information (NetInf) is developed in the context of the FP7 EU-funded 4WARD project which can significantly improve large scale information distribution and supports future mobile networks in situations with intermittent and heterogeneous connectivity.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

MDHT: a hierarchical name resolution service for information-centric networks

TL;DR: The evaluation indicates that a non-hierarchical namespace can be adopted on a global scale, opening up several design alternatives for information-centric network architectures.