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Rajkumar Buyya

Researcher at University of Melbourne

Publications -  1143
Citations -  108162

Rajkumar Buyya is an academic researcher from University of Melbourne. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cloud computing & Grid computing. The author has an hindex of 133, co-authored 1066 publications receiving 95164 citations. Previous affiliations of Rajkumar Buyya include Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research & Infosys.

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Internet of Things (IoT): A vision, architectural elements, and future directions

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a cloud centric vision for worldwide implementation of Internet of Things (IoT) and present a Cloud implementation using Aneka, which is based on interaction of private and public Clouds, and conclude their IoT vision by expanding on the need for convergence of WSN, the Internet and distributed computing directed at technological research community.
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Cloud computing and emerging IT platforms: Vision, hype, and reality for delivering computing as the 5th utility

TL;DR: This paper defines Cloud computing and provides the architecture for creating Clouds with market-oriented resource allocation by leveraging technologies such as Virtual Machines (VMs), and provides insights on market-based resource management strategies that encompass both customer-driven service management and computational risk management to sustain Service Level Agreement (SLA) oriented resource allocation.
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CloudSim: a toolkit for modeling and simulation of cloud computing environments and evaluation of resource provisioning algorithms

TL;DR: The result of this case study proves that the federated Cloud computing model significantly improves the application QoS requirements under fluctuating resource and service demand patterns.
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Energy-aware resource allocation heuristics for efficient management of data centers for Cloud computing

TL;DR: An architectural framework and principles for energy-efficient Cloud computing are defined and the proposed energy-aware allocation heuristics provision data center resources to client applications in a way that improves energy efficiency of the data center, while delivering the negotiated Quality of Service (QoS).
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Market-Oriented Cloud Computing: Vision, Hype, and Reality for Delivering IT Services as Computing Utilities

TL;DR: The need for convergence of competing IT paradigms for delivering the 21st century vision of computing is concluded.