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Rade Stanojevic

Researcher at Khalifa University

Publications -  59
Citations -  1378

Rade Stanojevic is an academic researcher from Khalifa University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Internet traffic & The Internet. The author has an hindex of 22, co-authored 59 publications receiving 1222 citations. Previous affiliations of Rade Stanojevic include Hamilton Institute & Telefónica.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Understanding individual routing behaviour.

TL;DR: While individual routing choices are not captured by path optimization, their spatial bounds are similar, even for trips performed by distinct individuals and at various scales, having an impact on several applications, such as infrastructure planning, routing recommendation systems and new mobility solutions.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

On economic heavy hitters: shapley value analysis of 95th-percentile pricing

TL;DR: This paper proposes a metric for evaluating the contribution each individual user has on the peak demand, that is based on Shapley value, a well known game-theoretic concept and uses a Monte Carlo method for approximating it with reasonable accuracy.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

From Cells to Streets: Estimating Mobile Paths with Cellular-Side Data

TL;DR: The technique is to devise path segmentation, de-noising, and inference procedures to estimate the device stationary location, as well as its mobility path between stationary positions, and it is shown that mobility path accuracy improves with its length and speed, and counter to the intuition, accuracy appears to improve in suburban areas.
Journal ArticleDOI

Delay-tolerant bulk data transfers on the internet

TL;DR: This paper proposes transmitting multiterabyte data through commercial ISPs by taking advantage of already-paid-for off-peak bandwidth resulting from diurnal traffic patterns and percentile pricing, and shows that between sender-receiver pairs with small time-zone difference, simple source scheduling policies are able to take advantage of most of the existing off- peak capacity.
Journal ArticleDOI

A critique of recently proposed buffer-sizing strategies

TL;DR: This paper reviews several papers that suggested that it may be possible to achieve high utilisation with small network buffers under general circumstances, and investigates the utility of these recommendations.