default search action
Computer Communication Review, Volume 25
Volume 25, Number 1, January 1995
- David Oran:
Contents of the Computer Communication Review 1970-1994. 9-32 - Leonard Kleinrock:
Research areas in computer communication. 33-35 - Leonard Kleinrock:
Nomadic computing - an opportunity. 36-40 - Franklin F. Kuo:
The ALOHA System. 41-44 - Raymond S. Tomlinson:
Selecting sequence numbers. 45-53 - John M. McQuillan, Ira Richer, Eric C. Rosen:
An overview of the new routing algorithm for the ARPANET. 54-60 - John Nagle:
Congestion control in IP/TCP internetworks. 61-65 - Phil Karn, Craig Partridge:
Improving round-trip time estimates in reliable transport protocols. 66-74 - Christopher A. Kent, Jeffrey C. Mogul:
Fragmentation considered harmful. 75-87 - Stephen E. Deering:
Multicast routing in internetworks and extended LANs. 88-101 - David D. Clark:
The design philosophy of the DARPA Internet Protocols. 102-111 - Paul V. Mockapetris, Kevin J. Dunlap:
Development of the Domain Name System. 112-122 - David R. Boggs, Jeffrey C. Mogul, Christopher A. Kent:
Measured capacity of an Ethernet: myths and reality. 123-136 - K. K. Ramakrishnan, Raj Jain:
A binary feedback scheme for congestion avoidance in computer networks with a connectionless network layer. 138-156 - David R. Boggs, Jeffrey C. Mogul, Christopher A. Kent:
Errata for "Measured capacity of an Ethernet: myths and reality". 138 - Van Jacobson:
Congestion avoidance and control. 157-187 - Srinivasan Keshav:
A control-theoretic approach to flow control. 188-201 - Will E. Leland, Walter Willinger, Murad S. Taqqu, Daniel V. Wilson:
On the self-similar nature of Ethernet traffic. 202-213 - Jim Adams:
In memory of Walt Kosinski. 214
Volume 25, Number 2, April 1995
- Kai-Yeung Siu, Raj Jain:
A brief overview of ATM: protocol layers, LAN emulation, and traffic management. 6-20 - Burkhard Stiller:
A survey of UNI signaling systems and protocols for ATM networks. 21-33 - Grenville J. Armitage:
Multicast and multiprotocol support for ATM based Internets. 34-46 - Thomas R. Henderson:
Design principles and performance analysis of SSCOP: a new ATM adaptation layer protocol. 47-59 - Hiroyuki Ohsaki, Masayuki Murata, Hiroshi Suzuki, Chinatsu Ikeda, Hideo Miyahara:
Rate-based congestion control for ATM networks. 60-72 - Sailesh K. Rao, Mehdi Hatamian:
The ATM physical layer. 73-81 - Whay Chiou Lee:
Topology aggregation for hierarchical routing in ATM networks. 82-92 - Robert J. Simcoe, Tong-Bi Pei:
Perspectives on ATM switch architecture and the influence of traffic pattern assumptions on switch design. 93-105
Volume 25, Number 3, July 1995
- Chung-Ming Huang, Shiun-Wei Lee:
Timed protocol verification for Estelle-specified protocols. 4-32 - Dilip D. Kandlur, Debanjan Saha, Marc Willebeek-LeMair:
Protocol architecture for multimedia applications over ATM networks. 33-43 - Nikos G. Aneroussis, Aurel A. Lazar, Dimitrios E. Pendarakis:
Taming Xunet III. 44-65 - Chiung-Shien Wu, Nen-Fu Huang, Gin-Kou Ma:
A dual bus approach for LAN interworking with ATM networks. 66-85
Volume 25, Number 4, October 1995
- Stuart Wecker, David Oran:
Proceedings of the ACM SIGCOMM 1995 Conference on Applications, Technologies, Architectures, and Protocols for Computer Communication, Cambridge, MA, USA, August 28 - September 1, 1995. ACM 1995, ISBN 0-89791-711-1 [contents]
Volume 25, Number 5, October 1995
- Gregory B. White, Udo W. Pooch:
Problems with DCE security services. 5-12 - Raouf Boutaba, Simon Znaty:
An architectural approach for integrated network and systems management. 13-38 - John Day:
The (un)revised OSI reference model. 39-55 - Nedo Celandroni, Erina Ferro, Francesco Potorti, Alessandro Bellini, Franco Pirri:
Practical experiences in interconnecting LANs via satellite. 56-68 - Lawrence S. Brakmo, Larry L. Peterson:
Performance problems in BSD4. 4TCP. 69-86 - Martha Sreenstrup:
Bibliography of recent publications on computer communication. 87-96
manage site settings
To protect your privacy, all features that rely on external API calls from your browser are turned off by default. You need to opt-in for them to become active. All settings here will be stored as cookies with your web browser. For more information see our F.A.Q.