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Computer Communication Review (ACM SIGCOMM), Volume 33
Volume 33, Number 1, January 2003
- Lakshminarayanan Subramanian, Ion Stoica, Hari Balakrishnan, Randy H. Katz:
OverQoS: offering Internet QoS using overlays. 11-16 - Robert Braden, Theodore Faber, Mark Handley:
From protocol stack to protocol heap: role-based architecture. 17-22 - Christian F. Tschudin, Richard Gold:
Network pointers. 23-28 - Sally Floyd, Eddie Kohler:
Internet research needs better models. 29-34 - Konstantinos Psounis, Rong Pan, Balaji Prabhakar, Damon Wischik:
The scaling hypothesis: simplifying the prediction of network performance using scaled-down simulations. 35-40 - David L. Alderson, John Doyle, Ramesh Govindan, Walter Willinger:
Toward an optimization-driven framework for designing and generating realistic Internet topologies. 41-46 - Brian White, Jay Lepreau, Shashi Guruprasad:
Lowering the barrier to wireless and mobile experimentation. 47-52 - Mark Handley, Orion Hodson, Eddie Kohler:
XORP: an open platform for network research. 53-57 - Larry L. Peterson, Thomas E. Anderson, David E. Culler, Timothy Roscoe:
A blueprint for introducing disruptive technology into the Internet. 59-64 - Timothy Roscoe, Steven Hand, Rebecca Isaacs, Richard Mortier, Paul W. Jardetzky:
Predicate routing: enabling controlled networking. 65-70 - Dapeng Zhu, Mark Gritter, David R. Cheriton:
Feedback based routing. 71-76 - Venkata N. Padmanabhan, Daniel R. Simon:
Secure traceroute to detect faulty or malicious routing. 77-82 - Douglas S. J. De Couto, Daniel Aguayo, Benjamin A. Chambers, Robert Tappan Morris:
Performance of multihop wireless networks: shortest path is not enough. 83-88 - Chunqiang Tang, Zhichen Xu, Mallik Mahalingam:
pSearch: information retrieval in structured overlays. 89-94 - Edith Cohen, Amos Fiat, Haim Kaplan:
A case for associative peer to peer overlays. 95-100 - Marcel Waldvogel, Roberto Rinaldi:
Efficient topology-aware overlay network. 101-106 - Mayank Bawa, Hrishikesh Deshpande, Hector Garcia-Molina:
Transience of peers & streaming media. 107-112 - Pablo Molinero-Fernández, Nick McKeown, Hui Zhang:
Is IP going to take over the world (of communications)? 113-118 - Cyriel Minkenberg, Ronald P. Luijten, François Abel, Wolfgang E. Denzel, Mitchell Gusat:
Current issues in packet switch design. 119-124 - Thomas E. Anderson, Scott Shenker, Ion Stoica, David Wetherall:
Design guidelines for robust Internet protocols. 125-130 - Werner Vogels, Robbert van Renesse, Kenneth P. Birman:
The power of epidemics: robust communication for large-scale distributed systems. 131-135 - Scott Shenker, Sylvia Ratnasamy, Brad Karp, Ramesh Govindan, Deborah Estrin:
Data-centric storage in sensornets. 137-142 - Deepak Ganesan, Deborah Estrin, John S. Heidemann:
Dimensions: why do we need a new data handling architecture for sensor networks? 143-148 - Jeremy Elson, Kay Römer:
Wireless sensor networks: a new regime for time synchronization. 149-154 - Badri Nath, Dragos Niculescu:
Routing on a curve. 155-160
Volume 33, Number 2, April 2003
- David L. Mills:
A brief history of NTP time: memoirs of an Internet timekeeper. 9-21 - Rong Pan, Lee Breslau, Balaji Prabhakar, Scott Shenker:
Approximate fairness through differential dropping. 23-39 - Marwan Fayed, Paul L. Krapivsky, John W. Byers, Mark Crovella, David Finkel, Sidney Redner:
On the emergence of highly variable distributions in the autonomous system topology. 41-49 - Pasi Sarolahti, Markku Kojo, Kimmo E. E. Raatikainen:
F-RTO: an enhanced recovery algorithm for TCP retransmission timeouts. 51-63 - Robert Ricci, Chris Alfeld, Jay Lepreau:
A solver for the network testbed mapping problem. 65-81 - Tom Kelly:
Scalable TCP: improving performance in highspeed wide area networks. 83-91 - Arunesh Mishra, Minho Shin, William A. Arbaugh:
An empirical analysis of the IEEE 802.11 MAC layer handoff process. 93-102 - Peifang Zheng:
Tradeoffs in certificate revocation schemes. 103-112
Volume 33, Number 3, July 2003
- Brent N. Chun, David E. Culler, Timothy Roscoe, Andy C. Bavier, Larry L. Peterson, Mike Wawrzoniak, Mic Bowman:
PlanetLab: an overlay testbed for broad-coverage services. 3-12 - David G. Andersen, Hari Balakrishnan, M. Frans Kaashoek, Robert Tappan Morris:
Experience with an evolving overlay network testbed. 13-19 - Paul Barford, Lawrence H. Landweber:
Bench-style network research in an Internet Instance Laboratory. 21-26
- Garrett R. Yaun, David W. Bauer, Harshad L. Bhutada, Christopher D. Carothers, Murat Yuksel, Shivkumar Kalyanaraman:
Large-scale network simulation techniques: examples of TCP and OSPF models. 27-41 - Fang Hao, Pramod V. Koppol:
An Internet scale simulation setup for BGP. 43-57 - Daniel G. Waddington, Fangzhe Chang, Ramesh Viswanathan, Bin Yao:
Topology discovery for public IPv6 networks. 59-68 - Matthew Mathis, John Heffner, Raghu Reddy:
Web100: extended TCP instrumentation for research, education and diagnosis. 69-79
- Thomas Karagiannis, Michalis Faloutsos, Mart L. Molle:
A user-friendly self-similarity analysis tool. 81-93 - Michael Welzl, Max Mühlhäuser:
CAVT: a congestion avoidance visualization tool. 95-101 - John W. Lockwood, Christopher E. Neely, Christopher K. Zuver, David Lim:
Automated tools to implement and test Internet systems in reconfigurable hardware. 103-110 - Mark Carson, Darrin Santay:
NIST Net: a Linux-based network emulation tool. 111-126 - Florian Baumgartner, Torsten Braun, Eveline Kurt, Attila Weyland:
Virtual routers: a tool for networking research and education. 127-135
- Grenville J. Armitage:
Maximising student exposure to networking using FreeBSD virtual hosts. 137-143 - Stefan Zimmerli, Marc-Alain Steinemann, Torsten Braun:
Resource management portal for laboratories using real devices on the Internet. 145-151
Volume 33, Number 4, October 2003
- David D. Clark, Karen R. Sollins, John Wroclawski, Theodore Faber:
Addressing reality: an architectural response to real-world demands on the evolving Internet. 247-257
- Jon Crowcroft, Steven Hand, Richard Mortier, Timothy Roscoe, Andrew Warfield:
Plutarch: an argument for network pluralism. 258-266 - Karen R. Sollins:
Designing for scale and differentiation. 267-276
- Hema Tahilramani Kaur, Shivkumar Kalyanaraman, Andreas Weiss, Shifalika Kanwar, Ayesha Gandhi:
BANANAS: an evolutionary framework for explicit and multipath routing in the internet. 277-288 - Nick Feamster, Hari Balakrishnan:
Towards a logic for wide-area Internet routing. 289-300 - Xiaowei Yang:
NIRA: a new Internet routing architecture. 301-312
- David D. Clark, Robert Braden, Aaron Falk, Venkata K. Pingali:
FARA: reorganizing the addressing architecture. 313-321 - Wu-chang Feng:
The case for TCP/IP puzzles. 322-327 - Micah Beck, Terry Moore, James S. Plank:
An end-to-end approach to globally scalable programmable networking. 328-339
Volume 33, Number 5, October 2003
- Chen-Nee Chuah, Lakshminarayanan Subramanian, Randy H. Katz:
DCAP: detecting misbehaving flows via collaborative aggregate policing. 5-18 - Nick Feamster, Jay C. Borkenhagen, Jennifer Rexford:
Guidelines for interdomain traffic engineering. 19-30 - James Scott, Glenford E. Mapp:
Link layer-based TCP optimisation for disconnecting networks. 31-42 - Zoltán Richard Turányi, András Gergely Valkó, Andrew T. Campbell:
4+4: an architecture for evolving the Internet address space back toward transparency. 43-54 - Geoff Coulson, Gordon S. Blair, David Hutchison, Ackbar Joolia, Kevin Lee, Jo Ueyama, Antônio Tadeu A. Gomes, Yimin Ye:
NETKIT: a software component-based approach to programmable networking. 55-66
- Karen R. Sollins:
Network research: exploration of dimensions and scope. 67-74 - Vinay Aggarwal, Olaf Maennel, Jeffrey C. Mogul, Allyn Romanow:
Workshop on network-I/O convergence: experience, lessons, implications (NICELI). 75-80 - Grenville J. Armitage:
Revisiting IP QoS: why do we care, what have we learned? ACM SIGCOMM 2003 RIPQOS workshop report. 81-88 - Steven J. Bauer, Xiaowei Yang:
Future directions in network architecture (FDNA-03). 89-98
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