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George Xylomenos
Researcher at Athens University of Economics and Business
Publications - 126
Citations - 3736
George Xylomenos is an academic researcher from Athens University of Economics and Business. The author has contributed to research in topics: The Internet & Multicast. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 121 publications receiving 3519 citations. Previous affiliations of George Xylomenos include University of California, San Diego.
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Journal ArticleDOI
A Survey of Information-Centric Networking Research
George Xylomenos,Christopher N. Ververidis,Vasilios A. Siris,Nikos Fotiou,Christos Tsilopoulos,Xenofon Vasilakos,Konstantinos V. Katsaros,George C. Polyzos +7 more
TL;DR: A survey of the core functionalities of Information-Centric Networking (ICN) architectures to identify the key weaknesses of ICN proposals and to outline the main unresolved research challenges in this area of networking research.
Journal ArticleDOI
TCP performance issues over wireless links
TL;DR: The problems arising when the TCP/IP protocol suite is used to provide Internet connectivity over existing and emerging wireless links are discussed, including degraded TCP performance due to mistaking wireless errors for congestion.
Proceedings ArticleDOI
TCP and UDP performance over a wireless LAN
TL;DR: This work presents a comprehensive set of measurements of a 2.4 GHz DSSS wireless LAN and examines issues such as host and interface heterogeneity, bidirectional traffic and error modeling, that have not been previously analyzed.
Journal ArticleDOI
IP multicast for mobile hosts
TL;DR: This work examines local multicasting mechanisms, focusing on a group membership protocol that is optimized for wireless point-to-point links and describes proposals for integrating multicasting and mobility in the Internet architecture.
Journal ArticleDOI
MultiCache: An overlay architecture for information-centric networking
TL;DR: This work designed MultiCache, an information-centric architecture aiming at the efficient use of network resources, which exploits overlay multicast as a means for content delivery and takes advantage of multicast forwarding information to locate nearby caches that have been themselves fed via multicast.