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Proceedings of the 5th International Conference on Networking

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TLDR
It is believed that the ICN-2006 papers offered a large panel of solutions to key problems in all areas of networking and set challenging directions for industrial research and development.
Abstract
Networking became the key economical factor in bridging countries and cultures, speeding the economy, and synchronizing the research topics across multi-national groups and universities. The International Conference on Networking (ICN) held in Mauritius, April 23-28, 2006 became now a reference in the networking community and provided an international forum for discussions between researchers, practitioners and students interested in new developments targeting all areas of networking. ICN 2006 was the 5th conference of this successful series and was organized and technically co-sponsored by the IEEE, IEE and IARIA organizations with proceedings published by the IEEE Computer Society Press. As with the previous editions, this event continued to be very competitive in its selection process and very well perceived by the international networking community. As such, it is attracting excellent contributions and active participation from all over the world. This year more than 390 submissions were reviewed by the members of the technical program committee and about 40% were finally accepted for presentation at the conference. We were very pleased to receive a large amount of top quality contributions. The accepted papers cover a wide range of networking related topics spanning from VoIP, NAT and SIP to OLSR, DDoS, H.264, QoS, policy traffic management and routing. We believe that the ICN-2006 papers offered a large panel of solutions to key problems in all areas of networking and set challenging directions for industrial research and development.

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Citations
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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Interference Measurements on Performance Degradation between Colocated IEEE 802.11g/n and IEEE 802.15.4 Networks

TL;DR: Measurements show that high levels of network traffic interference from either of these technologies has disastrous impact on the performance of IEEE 802.15.4 in the 2.4 GHz ISM band, which indicates that low-power building automation, consumer electronics and sensor networks may be vulnerable to the interference from the future IEEE802.11n high-data rate WLAN deployments.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Bandwidth Scheduling and Path Computation Algorithms for Connection-Oriented Networks

TL;DR: These algorithms for bandwidth scheduling are based on extending the classical breadth-first search, Dijkstra, and Bellman-Ford algorithms, and a bandwidth management system for UltraScience Net is described that incorporates implementations of these algorithms.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Dynamic Tree Bitmap for IP Lookup and Update

TL;DR: A data structure-dynamic tree bitmap-for the representation of dynamic IP router tables that must support very high lookup and update rates and is very competitive with other structures-tree bitmap and BaRT-proposed earlier for dynamic tables.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

A Transmission Power Control MAC Protocol for Wireless Sensor Networks

TL;DR: This paper proposes a transmission power control MAC protocol in wireless sensor networks (transmission Power control in SMAC, PSMAQ) based on Sensor MAC (SMAC) protocol, and shows that the protocol has improved a lot in the delay of packets, reception rate, energy consumption and throughput of the networks.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

WiMAX Performance Evaluation

Pavel Mach, +1 more
TL;DR: This paper is aimed at 802.16-2004 standard that is intend to fixed broadband wireless access, and its basic capabilities, such as the number of supported subscriber per BS or transferred data rate that may be delivered.
References
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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Interference Measurements on Performance Degradation between Colocated IEEE 802.11g/n and IEEE 802.15.4 Networks

TL;DR: Measurements show that high levels of network traffic interference from either of these technologies has disastrous impact on the performance of IEEE 802.15.4 in the 2.4 GHz ISM band, which indicates that low-power building automation, consumer electronics and sensor networks may be vulnerable to the interference from the future IEEE802.11n high-data rate WLAN deployments.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Bandwidth Scheduling and Path Computation Algorithms for Connection-Oriented Networks

TL;DR: These algorithms for bandwidth scheduling are based on extending the classical breadth-first search, Dijkstra, and Bellman-Ford algorithms, and a bandwidth management system for UltraScience Net is described that incorporates implementations of these algorithms.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Dynamic Tree Bitmap for IP Lookup and Update

TL;DR: A data structure-dynamic tree bitmap-for the representation of dynamic IP router tables that must support very high lookup and update rates and is very competitive with other structures-tree bitmap and BaRT-proposed earlier for dynamic tables.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

A Transmission Power Control MAC Protocol for Wireless Sensor Networks

TL;DR: This paper proposes a transmission power control MAC protocol in wireless sensor networks (transmission Power control in SMAC, PSMAQ) based on Sensor MAC (SMAC) protocol, and shows that the protocol has improved a lot in the delay of packets, reception rate, energy consumption and throughput of the networks.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

WiMAX Performance Evaluation

Pavel Mach, +1 more
TL;DR: This paper is aimed at 802.16-2004 standard that is intend to fixed broadband wireless access, and its basic capabilities, such as the number of supported subscriber per BS or transferred data rate that may be delivered.
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