Tue, 30 Dec 2003 14:37:59 GMT
PRELIMINARY ANNOUNCEMENT and CALL FOR PAPERS MobiQuitous 2004 http://www.mobiquitous.org The First Annual International Conference on Mobile and Ubiquitous Systems: Networking and Services August 22-25, 2004 Boston, Massachusetts, USA (ACM sponsorship pending) *********************************************************************** The combination of mobile and ubiquitous computing is emerging as a promising new paradigm with the goal to provide computing and communication services all the time, everywhere, transparently and invisibly to the user, using devices embedded in the surrounding physical environment. In this context, the communication devices, the objects with which they interact, or both may be mobile. The implementation of such a paradigm requires advances in wireless network technologies and devices, development of infrastructures supporting cognitive environments, and discovery and identification of ubiquitous computing applications and services. The first ACM Annual International Conference on Mobile and Ubiquitous Systems: networking and services (Mobiquitous 04) will cover all these aspects, representing a forum where practitioners and researchers coming from the many areas involved in ubiquitous solutions design and deployment will be able to interact exchanging the cross-layer experiences needed to build the overall ubiquitous systems. Areas addressed by the conference include: applications, service-oriented computing, middleware, networking, agents, knowledge management and databases. PAPERS: Technical papers describing original, previously unpublished research, not currently under review by another conference or journal, are solicited. The conference is interested in contributions addressing all the areas associated with mobile and ubiquitous architectures, infrastructure and services. Technical works clearly identifying how the specific contributions fit to an overall working solution are particularly of interest. Topics include, but are not limited to, the following feature topics: * Ubiquitous architectures and systems * Wearable computing and personal area network * Wireless technologies for mobile and ubiquitous communications (Bluetooth, ZigBee, 802.15.x, WiFi) * Wireless Internet access in ubiquitous systems * Reconfigurability and personalization of wireless network * Service discovery mechanisms, knowledge discovery, matching and composition mechanisms * Wireless/mobile service management and delivery * Security, privacy and social issues of mobile and ubiquitous systems * Peer-to-peer knowledge management * Emerging industrial/business scenarios * Multimodal interfaces (speech, video kinetic, tactile) * Smart spaces * Ad hoc and sensor networking * Localization and tracking * Context and location aware application * Multimedia encoding and transcoding * Middleware services * Agent technologies in ubiquitous, wearable, and mobile systems * Hardware and software platforms for ubiquitous systems, and testbeds * User interfaces * Toolkits, development environments, and languages for ubiquitous computing * Ontologies for mobile and ubiquitous computing SUBMISSION INSTRUCTIONS: All paper submissions will be handled electronically (see the conference web page for details). Authors should prepare a Portable Document Format (PDF) or postscript version of their full paper. Papers must not exceed 8 pages double column (US Letter size, 8.5 x 11 inches) including text, figures and references. The font size must be at least 10 points. PUBLICATION: All submitted papers will be rigorously reviewed by technical program committee members. Accepted papers will be published in the conference proceedings. Papers of particular merit will be proposed for publication in the ACM/Kluwer Wireless Networks journal. TUTORIALS: Proposals for tutorials are solicited. Evaluation of tutorial proposals will be based on the expertise and experience of the instructors, and on the relevance of the subject matter. Potential instructors are requested to submit a tutorial proposal of at most 5 pages, including a biographical sketch, to the Tutorial Chair by March 1, 2004. DEMOS: Proposals for research and industrial demos are solicited. A maximum of 3 pages should be submitted which include a description of the demo and needed equipment. Proposals should be submitted to the Demo Chair, which will be announced shortly. *********************************************************************** IMPORTANT DATES *********************************************************************** Paper submission due: FEBRUARY 1 2004 Notification of acceptance: APRIL 30 2004 Camera-ready version due: MAY 15 2004 **********************************************************************
December 30, 2003 No Comments
Tue, 30 Dec 2003 14:35:03 GMT
Papers Written by Googlers. Papers Written by Googlers
http://labs.google.com/papers.html
A partial list of papers written by people now at Google, showing the range of backgrounds of people in Google Engineering. Very interesting resource of papers in the information retrieval and related fields! [Marcus P. Zillman, M.S., A.M.H.A. Author/Speaker]
——-
some interesting research here.
December 30, 2003 No Comments
Tue, 30 Dec 2003 14:25:02 GMT
Osama Fin Laden. The fish that threatened national security. Lara Hayhurst, a student at Pace University, needed to take one small thing through the checkpoint at LaGuardia Airport: her pet beta fish MJ. This was, however, an apparent threat to the security of the airport and Lara's flight home to Pittsburgh for winter break. Flush the fish or become a felon? Read about Lara's decision and how the TSA forced her hand.
Remember, when 2″ long tropical fish can freely gain access to our airliners, the terrorists have… yada yada. [MetaFilter]
December 30, 2003 No Comments
Tue, 30 Dec 2003 14:23:14 GMT
International Computers and Philosophy
Conferences — proposal deadline for next summer's conference in Italy
is in January. [A blog doesn't need a clever name]
December 30, 2003 No Comments
Tue, 30 Dec 2003 14:21:07 GMT
Call For Submissions: Digital Media Project. Can a digital rights management (DRM) standard support the rights that users have in traditional media? The Digital Media Project is planning the first conference to bring DRM architects and user rights experts together. [Linux Journal]
December 30, 2003 No Comments
ascii campaign against html email and microsoft attachments
here are some links that i just shared with the uwebd group when someone asked about sending an html email. as everyone knows, i hope, I'm against html email .
http://www.favreau.info/display.php?page=html_email
http://www.georgedillon.com/web/html_email_is_evil_still.shtml
http://www.metacon.ca/ascii/
http://www.geocities.com/thduggie/ascii/asciitxt.txt
December 30, 2003 No Comments
Tue, 30 Dec 2003 12:58:13 GMT
Short of a really serious, all-stakes-on-the-table World War (which is not an option, nor thinkable, really) …
the only way that there will be real and substantive change to the current plutocracy's rule of both the USA and (by economic domination) the rest of the world will be through purposeful and concerted action enabled by wired-together people and information.
Any other form of real change that conceivably could happen involves collapse, I think – of the economy, or the environment. And neither of these should be the target of purposeful and concerted causative action.
December 30, 2003 No Comments
it is true, i've always been a 'theory slut'
You are a Theory Slut. The true elite of the
postmodernists, you collect avant-garde
Indonesian hiphop compilations and eat journal
articles for breakfast. You positively live
for theory. It really doesn't matter what
kind, as long as the words are big and the
paragraph breaks few and far between.
What kind of postmodernist are you!?
brought to you by Quizilla
December 30, 2003 No Comments