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Ad Hoc Networking

TLDR
In this article, the authors present a series of technical papers about ad hoc networks from a variety of laboratories and experts, and explain the latest thinking on how mobile devices can best discover, identify, and communicate with other devices in the vicinity.
Abstract
Ad hoc networks are to computing devices what Yahoo Personals are to single people: both help individuals communicate productively with strangers while maintaining security. Under the rules of ad hoc networking--which continue to evolve--your mobile phone can, when placed in proximity to your handheld address book, establish a little network on its own and enable data sharing between the two devices. In Ad Hoc Networking, Charles Perkins has compiled a series of technical papers about networking on the fly from a variety of laboratories and experts. The collection explains the latest thinking on how mobile devices can best discover, identify, and communicate with other devices in the vicinity. In this treatment, ad hoc networking covers a broad swath of situations. An ad hoc network might consist of several home-computing devices, plus a notebook computer that must exist on home and office networks without extra administrative work. Such a network might also need to exist when the people and equipment in normally unrelated military units need to work together in combat. Though the papers in this book are much more descriptive of protocols and algorithms than of their implementations, they aim individually and collectively at commercialization and popularization of mobile devices that make use of ad hoc networking. You'll enjoy this book if you're involved in researching or implementing ad hoc networking capabilities for mobile devices. --David Wall Topics covered: The state-of-the-art in protocols and algorithms to be used in ad hoc networks of mobile devices that move in and out of proximity to one another, to fixed resources like printers, and to Internet connectivity. Routing with Destination-Sequenced Distance Vector (DSDV), Dynamic Source Routing (DSR), Ad hoc On-Demand Distance Vector (AODV), and other resource-discovery and routing protocols; the effects of ad hoc networking on bandwidth consumption; and battery life.

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Key Management in Ad Hoc Networks

Klas Fokine
TL;DR: This thesis covers the issue of securing ad hoc networks and describes a number of characteristics that make such a task challenging.
Book ChapterDOI

A routing protocol based on trust for MANETs

TL;DR: Results show that the trust level is used as knowledge for routing and the model can improve the performance of DSR route discovery and is a promising trust routing algorithm for MANETs.
Book

Unicast routing techniques for mobile ad hoc networks

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors survey the techniques adopted for the case of unicast routing, i.e., when it is required to send a packet from a source node to a destination node, by illustrating how they are introduced into the main representative protocols.

A Review of Constraint-Based Routing Algorithms

TL;DR: This paper aims to give a thorough, concise and fair evaluation of the most important constraintbased routing algorithms known today and provides a descriptive overview of restricted shortest path algorithms and multi-constrained path algorithms.
Posted Content

On the Cost of Participating in a Peer-to-Peer Network

TL;DR: The notion of social optimum with respect to the proposed cost model is discussed, and how the model applies to a few proposed routing geometries for distributed hash tables (DHTs) is shown.