ICCS members win best paper award
17 October 2018
Members of the Institute of Communications and Connected Systems have recently won the best paper award at a leading network architecture conference.
础耻迟丑辞谤听 Dr Micha艂 Kr贸l, Research Fellow
Network architecture | Future internet | Information-Centric Networks聽
Research fellow Micha艂 Kr贸l along with his supervisor Dr聽Ioannis Psaras has recently been awarded the best paper prize at a leading international聽network architecture conference.聽
The pair attended the Association of Computing聽Machinery (ACM) conference on Information-Centric聽Networks (ICN) last month in Boston,聽USA. Presenting their paper, "RICE: Remote Method Invocation in ICN".
Kr贸l and Psaras, members of the Institue of Communications and Connected Systems聽(ICCS), co-authored the paper along with聽Karim Habak (GeorgiaTech), Dirk Kutscher (Huawei) and Dave Oran (MIT, Network Research&Design).
The ACM ICN conference is one of the most highly regarded聽in the field of future networking architectures and each year selects a single prize paper that was the most appreciated by the reviewers.
Expressing their admiration for the work聽the judges said:
鈥RICE is a very well reasoned and strongly presented paper that describes a pragmatic 鈥2nd generation鈥 system for remote computation (method invocation) in the ICN environment.
鈥The work demonstrates a serious depth of understanding of both architectural and pragmatic issues in its problem domain, and builds on that understanding to propose a system that addresses several real-world requirements while retaining architectural coherence and clarity.
ICN is a network architecture that allows extremely efficient content retrieval (such as video files). However, up until now, more complicated interactions between network nodes (such as WEB/HTML) remained difficult to implement.
In RICE, we proposed a set of techniques allowing to easily translate current, IP-based applications and deploy them within the future Internet. Kr贸l and Psaras hope that the paper will increase adaptation of future Internet architectures and speed up their deployment.