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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Slicing home networks

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TLDR
This paper proposes four requirements for slicing home networks: bandwidth and traffic isolation between slices, independent control of each slice, and the ability to modify and improve the behavior of a slice.
Abstract
Despite the popularity of home networks, they face a number of systemic problems: (i)Broadband networks are expensive to deploy; and it is not clear how the cost can be shared by several service providers; (ii) Home networks are getting harder to manage as we connect more devices, use new applications, and rely on them for entertainment, communication and work|it is common for home networks to be poorly managed, insecure or just plain broken; and (iii) It is not clear how home networks will steadily improve, after they have been deployed, to provide steadily better service to home users.In this paper we propose slicing home networks as a way to overcome these problems. As a mechanism, slicing allows multiple service providers to share a common infrastructure; and supports many policies and business models for cost sharing. We propose four requirements for slicing home networks: bandwidth and traffic isolation between slices, independent control of each slice, and the ability to modify and improve the behavior of a slice. We explore how these requirements allow cost-sharing, outsourced management of home networks, and the ability to customize a slice to provide higher-quality service. Finally, we describe an initial prototype that we are deploying in homes.

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References
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NOX: towards an operating system for networks

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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Augmenting mobile 3G using WiFi

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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Can the production network be the testbed

TL;DR: A way to build a testbed that is embedded in--and thus grows with--the network, and if unmodified hardware supports some basic primitives, then a worldwide testbed can ride on the coat-tails of deployments, at no extra expense is described.
Book ChapterDOI

The work to make a home network work

TL;DR: Findings from an empirical study of households containing complex networks of computer and audio/visual technologies find that home networks require significant household effort not just to coordinate their use, but also their set up and maintenance.
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