Keynote Talks

Name Affiliation Title
Univ. Prof. Mag. Dr. Gabriele Kotsis Johannes Kepler Universität Linz
AUSTRIA
The Evolution of the Web: Information – Communication – Cooperation
Prof. Won Kim Kyungwon University
KOREA
Adoption Issues for Cloud Computing
Prof. Stephan Olariu Old Dominion University
Virginia, USA
An Architecture for Traffic Incident Detection
Dr. F. Dignum Utrecht University
THE NETHERLANDS
Organizing Web Services to develop Dynamic, Flexible, Distributed Systems
Dr. Dzaharudin Mansor Microsoft National Technology Officer
MALAYSIA
Moving to the Cloud; Patterns, Integration Challenges and Opportunities

The Evolution of the Web:
Information – Communication – Cooperation

Univ. Prof. Mag. Dr. Gabriele Kotsis
Department of Telecooperation
Johannes Kepler Universität Linz
Altenberger Strasse 69, 4040 Linz, Austria
gabriele.kotsis_AT_jku.ac.at
http://www.tk.uni-linz.ac.at

Slides: Keynote_iiWAS2009_GabrieleKotsis.pdf

Abstract

What we call the world wide web nowadays has its origins in a system designed to share and distribute information among scientists. It took less then a decade and "the web" evolved into an omnipresent medium for information sharing, communication and even collaboration and cooperation. A multitude of new standards, protocols, and services has been proposed, some of them became a success, others died even before they had the chance to lift up.

In this talk, we are going to reflect on the evolution of the web from an information medium over a communication medium up to a wide-spread cooperation medium used in many application domains. We will specifically address the question whether this growth in size and scope is adequately met by the offered protocols and services from a functional as well as qualitative and quantitative point of view.

Supporting such cooperation (beyond pure communication) via shared artefacts, multi-user awareness and virtual presence raises a variety of both, technical as well as organizational questions.

From a technical point of view, the success of the web as cooperation medium will depend on the quality of service (QoS) level at which it can be operated. The gap between the QoS demands of cooperative applications and the QoS that the underlying technologies are able to deliver raises the need for QoS modeling and evaluation. In the main part of this presentation, I will focus on performance evaluation techniques based on a user-oriented approach for characterising the load in cooeprative environments as a potential solution to this problem. Automated mechanisms for translating from a user-oriented view of the workload in the system to a resource oriented view will be presented and their importance for QoS mechanisms such as scheduling, admission control, loadsharing, flow identification and traffic engineering will be assessed. Traditional traffic modelling approaches (from queueing theory and analytical performance engineering) will be contrasted with innovative techniques, including probabilistic attributed context free grammars as well as an event-based hierarchical modelling framework, which supports the integration of various modelling approaches (e.g. user behaviour graphs, markovian models, or process algebras). Appropriateness of this framework will be demonstrated in an application scenario, where a simulation model is used to evaluate QoS in terms of user satisfaction in a video-conferencing environment.


Short Biography

Gabriele Kotsis is holding a full professor position in computer science at Johannes Kepler Universität Linz. She is chairing the Department of Telecooperation with a research focus in mobile computing, multimedia and hypermedia systems as well as cooperative and collaborative systems. Research in those areas includes the investigation of methods, techniques and tools for system development as well as evaluation and analysis with focus on performance evaluation. The Department is participating in numerous national and international projects, including CRUISE, a European network of excellence in sensor networks, EuroFGI, a network of excellence on Future Generation Internet, the AustrianGrid project, or ModelCVS a project on semantics in SW and system modelling, and actively involved in the organisation of international conferences, including for example iiWAS and MoMM.

Gabriele Kotsis, born on October 29th, 1967, in Vienna, Austria, started her scientific career at the University of Vienna. She received her masters degree (1991, honored with the Award of the Austrian Computer Society), her PhD (1995, honored with the Heinz-Zemanek Preis) and the venia docendi in computer science (2000) from the University of Vienna. Before joining JKU Linz in October 2002, she was working as a researcher and teacher at the University of Vienna (1991-2001), at the Vienna University for Economics and Business Administration (2001) and at the Copenhagen Business School (2002).

Prof. Kotsis is author of numerous publications in international conferences and journals and is co-editor of several books. She is member of the OCG, the ACM and IEEE. From April 2003 to April 2007 she was president of the Austrian Computer Society.

Since October 2008 she is Vice Rector for Research at the Johannes Kepler University, Linz.

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Adoption Issues for Cloud Computing

Prof. Won Kim
Lifetime Professor and IT Vice President
Kyungwon University
Email: wonkimtx_AT_gmail.com

Abstract

Cloud computing is already being used by tens of millions of people in various manifestations, including free email services and free office productivity applications, and subscription-based SaaS services and managed computing services. Cloud computing allows users to use only a Web browser to receive computing services from remote data centers via the Internet. Users only need to pay for the services they actually use, and in principle, do not need to maintain on-premises computing facilities. It appears that a wide adoption of cloud computing in the foreseeable future is inevitable, and its adoption will bring about a sea change in the pricing and distribution practices for both software and hardware. There are, however, various issues that will impede adoption of cloud computing. Most of them can be solved. I will discuss the status of cloud computing today, various adoption issues, and architecture for enterprise cloud computing. I will also outline various research issues in cloud computing.


Short Biography

Won Kim is currently a lifetime professor and IT vice president at the Kyungwon University in S. Korea. He is also a senior advisor with Xener Systems, Inc. in Seoul, S. Korea. He received a Ph.D. in computer science from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He received a B.S. and M.S. from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He is best-known as one of the pioneers of object-oriented and object-relational database technologies. He led the ORION object-oriented database systems project at MCC, Austin, Texas in the late 1980s. He founded UniSQL and created the world's first commercial object-relational database system in the early 1990s. On the side, he founded and served as Chair of ACM's SIGKDD data mining society, and as Editor-in-Chief of ACM's Transactions on Internet Technology journal. He also served as Chair of ACM's SIGMOD data management society, and as Editor-in-Chief of ACM's Transactions on Database Systems. He is an ACM Fellow, and received such awards as ACM's Distinguished Services Award, ACM SIGMOD Test of Time Research Award, VLDB Ten Year Best Paper Award, etc. His current research umbrella is social computing architecture, which includes such subjects as social Web sites, Internet search engine architecture, Web mining, cloud computing, networked embedded systems, and HCI usability.

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An Architecture for Traffic Incident Detection

Prof. Stephan Olariu
Old Dominion University
Norfolk, Virginia, USA
Email: olariu_AT_cs.odu.edu
WWW: http://www.cs.odu.edu/~olariu/

Slides: Keynote_MoMM2009_StephanOlariu.pdf

Abstract

Road and traffic safety can be improved if the drivers have the ability to see further down the road and can be informed of relevant traffic events, including collisions and slow-downs. The recently proposed VANETs (Vehicular Ad hoc Networks) are expected to enable both vehicle-to-vehicle (V2V) and vehicle-to-roadside (V2R) communications. Virtually all the papers published in the literature assume that V2V communications will rely on a strong roadside infrastructure. Unfortunately, the roadside infrastructure, is very likely to be the target of theft, vandalism and other similar activities that will jeopardize their intended functionality. Worse yet, one can easily contemplate a scenario where the roadside infrastructure may be hacked and injected with malicious code, rendering it not only useless but, downright dangerous.

However, all the VANET systems proposed thus far are afflicted with serious security and privacy problems. Indeed, the way current systems are set up, the driver of a car that participates in the traffic will not be able to preserve their privacy and may be subject to impersonation or Sybil attacks. The problem stems from the fact that V2V communication can be traced back to an individual car. Even if several pseudonyms are used, detecting the true identity of the driver and, therefore, invading their privacy appears to be unavoidable.

In a sharp departure from the common wisdom we propose to look at vehicle-to-vehicle (V2V) and vehicle-to-roadside (V2R) communications from a different perspective. Instead of relying on the roadside infrastructure that is vulnerable to attacks, we propose to embed in the asphalt covering the surface of the roads sensor belts. Each belt consists of a collection of pressure sensors, optionally equipped with piezo-electric elements. The belts can detect and interact with passing cars.

In this talk we discuss in detail NOTICE our architecture for traffic incident detection and show that it can be easily extended to cover many problems of interest in infotainment and peer-to-peer content delivery. One important application of NOTICE is with planned evaluations when optimal use must be made of available transportation resource.


Short Biography

Professor Stephan Olariu is a full professor in Computer Science at Old Dominion University, Norfolk, Virginia. He is a world-renowned technologist in the areas of parallel and distributed systems, parallel and distributed architectures and networks. He was invited and visited more than 120 universities and research institutes around the world lecturing on topics ranging from wireless networks and mobile computing, to biology-inspired algorithms and applications, to telemedicine, to wireless location systems, and demining. Professor Olariu is the Director of the Sensor Networks Research Group at Old Dominion University.

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Organizing Web Services to develop Dynamic, Flexible, Distributed Systems

Dr. F. Dignum
Intelligent Systems Group
Institute of Information and Computing Sciences
Utrecht University
THE NETHERLANDS

Abstract

Web services are increasingly behaving as nodes in a digital, dynamic ecosystem. On the one hand, this new situation requires flexible, spontaneous and opportunistic collaboration activities to be identified and established among (business) parties. On the other hand, it also requires engineering approaches able to integrate new functionalities and behaviours into running systems and active, distributed, interdependent processes. In this paper we present a multi-level architecture, combining organisational and coordination theories with model driven development, for the implementation, deployment and management of dynamic, flexible and robust service-oriented business applications.


Short Biography

Dr. F. Dignum is an authority in the area of deontic logic and computer science, agent technology and agents for serious games. He is well known for his work on formal frameworks for normative behaviour. These frameworks are incorporated in agent based simulations involving normative behaviour. They are also used in the area of flexible and robust service oriented architectures to facilitate business transactions. He is technical coordinator of EU projects and (co-)organizer of several international workshops and conferences in this area. He has given keynotes in conferences around the world as well as courses and seminars in summer schools.

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Moving to the Cloud; Patterns, Integration Challenges and Opportunities

Dr. Dzaharudin Mansor
Microsoft National Technology Officer
MALAYSIA

Abstract

There has been great interest in cloud computing in recent days with companies like Amazon, Microsoft, Google and others roll out cloud computing infrastructure. Cloud computing offers a number of benefits, organizations and enterprise are hesitant due to concerns on security, control and access to data. The author is of the opinion that customers will be pragmatic and adopt a hybrid approach that will leverage on the best of both approaches. The presentation shares some patterns in the thought process when considering where applications should reside, and sheds some insights into the technical challenges when implementing such hybrid architecture.


Short Biography

Dr. Dzahar received an Honors Degree in Computer Systems Engineering and completed his PhD in Computer Science in 1988. Dr Dzahar joined Microsoft in 2005 and has more than 22 years of professional experience in ICT and telecommunications. He started his career as a lecturer at the department of Computer Science, La Trobe University, and moved on to as a R&D engineer at Telecom Australia Research Laboratories. On returning to Malaysia, he was appointed as the R&D manager at Celcom and left the company as the Vice President for R&D and IT divisions. He subsequently worked at HP in Singapore, Vsource (M) Sdn. Bhd. and Object Innovations (M) Sdn. Bhd. in R&D, operations as well as leadership positions.
He also presently holds, and has held several associate positions including as an Adjunct Professor at UTHM, Associate Professor at UPM, Senior Management Associate of the Malaysia Industry -Government Group for High Technology (MIGHT), a councilor at PIKOM and academic advisor at several public and private Universities.
Dr. Dzahar is passionate about technology and aspires to contribute towards the nation's Knowledge Economy initiative.

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