Friday, 12p, Sherrerd 306 - Paul Schmitt, UC Santa Barbara on Mobile Networking in Syrian Refugee Camps
Mobile Networking in Resource-Limited Environments Paul Schmitt (http://cs.ucsb.edu/~pschmitt/), UC Santa Barbara Friday, January 13, 12p Sherrerd Hall 306 (Conference Room) Abstract: Modern networks face an unrelenting demand for high-bandwidth Internet and cellular connectivity. The challenges of providing such connectivity are exacerbated in resource-limited environments, where infrastructure improvement or augmentation is often economically infeasible. Without access to adequate connectivity, the information and technology digital divide between the ‘haves’ and ‘have-nots’ widens. In order for wireless and mobile networks to maintain pace with demand, and achieve global connectivity, we must empirically study existing resource-constrained networks and leverage those findings to inform new system designs across the telecommunications hierarchy. In this talk, I will present a cellular measurement study conducted in a Syrian refugee camp in Jordan and a hybrid cellular system, informed by the measurement campaign, designed to alleviate user-facing resource congestion on commercial cellular networks using a non-cooperative local cellular network. Signup to chat with Paul: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1Y6YPmVBk8aUce_a5IUGgqBkE9enH1dc_d-fV...
Reminder. Talk will be starting soon. Free lunch, too!
Begin forwarded message:
From: Nick Feamster
Subject: Friday, 12p, Sherrerd 306 - Paul Schmitt, UC Santa Barbara on Mobile Networking in Syrian Refugee Camps Date: January 11, 2017 at 1:46:04 PM EST To: talks@lists.cs.princeton.edu Mobile Networking in Resource-Limited Environments Paul Schmitt (http://cs.ucsb.edu/~pschmitt/), UC Santa Barbara Friday, January 13, 12p Sherrerd Hall 306 (Conference Room)
Abstract: Modern networks face an unrelenting demand for high-bandwidth Internet and cellular connectivity. The challenges of providing such connectivity are exacerbated in resource-limited environments, where infrastructure improvement or augmentation is often economically infeasible. Without access to adequate connectivity, the information and technology digital divide between the ‘haves’ and ‘have-nots’ widens. In order for wireless and mobile networks to maintain pace with demand, and achieve global connectivity, we must empirically study existing resource-constrained networks and leverage those findings to inform new system designs across the telecommunications hierarchy.
In this talk, I will present a cellular measurement study conducted in a Syrian refugee camp in Jordan and a hybrid cellular system, informed by the measurement campaign, designed to alleviate user-facing resource congestion on commercial cellular networks using a non-cooperative local cellular network.
Signup to chat with Paul: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1Y6YPmVBk8aUce_a5IUGgqBkE9enH1dc_d-fV...
participants (1)
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Nick Feamster