Future Internet - FIS 2010

Berre, Arne J.

Future Internet - FIS 2010 Third Future Internet Symposium, Berlin, Germany, September 20-22, 2010. Proceedings / [recurso electrónico] : edited by Arne J. Berre, Asunción Gómez-Pérez, Kurt Tutschku, Dieter Fensel. - XII, 157p. 45 illus. online resource. - Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 6369 0302-9743 ; . - Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 6369 .

German-Lab Experimental Facility -- Design and Evaluation of a Socket Emulator for Publish/Subscribe Networks -- Publish/Subscribe on Top of DHT Using RETE Algorithm -- Experimental Testing in the Future Internet PERIMETER Project -- An Economic Case for End System Multicast -- Towards a Secure Rendezvous Network for Future Publish/Subscribe Architectures -- Mobile Botnet Detection Using Network Forensics -- Towards Linked Open Services and Processes -- Energy Consumption Information Services for Smart Home Inhabitants -- Knowledge Management in Sensor Enabled Online Services -- Managing On-Demand Business Applications with Hierarchical Service Level Agreements -- Controlling Access to RDF Graphs -- An Authoring Tool for User Generated Mobile Services -- A Provenance-Based Compliance Framework -- Network Virtualization - Opportunities and Challenges for Operators -- Cloud Computing and the Impact on Enterprise IT.

The current Internet has undergone an essential transformation: it has changed from a network of networks that enables access to remote machines by a cons- tentprotocolsuite(TCP/IP),toanetworkofcontent,applications,andservices. Thus, it has become a modern commodity for everyone. The Future Internet(FI) is destinedtocontinue this developmentandto p- videimprovedfeaturesandusabilityforindividualsandbusiness.Itsapplications are expected to originate from areas such as entertainment, health, energy grid, utilities and the environment, transport, mobility, and logistics. Tight economic constraints, however, require the Future Internet to consolidate and converge application-speci?c networks and support for the Internet of Services (IoS), the Internet of Things (IoT), and the Internet of Content (IoC) in a homogenous and, if possible, a single system. A simple investigation of network performance requirements of the ant- ipated FI applications reveals a set of contrary needs that have challenged research on network architectures and protocols for decades. Only a few - plications have been successful, e.g., P2P systems, which can adapt easily to heterogeneousenvironments.Similarly, semantic technologyhas providedme- ingful relationships of content, but has failed when it has come to manageability and performance in universal and heterogeneous network systems.

9783642158773


Computer science.
Computer Communication Networks.
Information systems.
Database management.
Information storage and retrieval systems.
Information Systems.
Computer Science.
Computer Communication Networks.
Information Systems Applications (incl.Internet).
Information Storage and Retrieval.
Database Management.
Management of Computing and Information Systems.
Information Systems and Communication Service.

TK5105.5-5105.9

004.6

Con tecnología Koha