IPTPS '10 2010 - IPTPS '10 9th International Workshop on Peer-to-Peer Systems
Topics/Call fo Papers
IPTPS '10 Call for Papers
9th International Workshop on Peer-to-Peer Systems
(IPTPS '10)
April 27, 2010
San Jose, CA
Sponsored by USENIX, the Advanced Computing Systems Association
IPTPS '10 will be co-located with the 7th USENIX Symposium on Networked Systems Design and Implementation (NSDI '10), which will take place April 28?30, 2010.
Important Dates
Submissions due: Friday, December 18, 2009, 11:59 p.m. EST
Notification of acceptance: Sunday, February 28, 2010
Demo proposals due: Monday, March 15, 2010
Electronic files due: Monday, March 29, 2010
Workshop Organizers
Program Co-Chairs
Michael J. Freedman, Princeton University
Arvind Krishnamurthy, University of Washington
Program Committee
Brian Cooper, Yahoo! Research
Roger Dingledine, Tor Project
Christophe Diot, Thomson
Dejan Kostić, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne
Karthik Lakshminarayanan, Conviva
Baochun Li, University of Toronto
Jinyang Li, New York University
Boon Thau Loo, University of Pennsylvania
Bruce Maggs, Duke University and Akamai
Sue Moon, KAIST
Thomas Moscibroda, Microsoft Research
KyoungSoo Park, University of Pittsburgh
Michael Piatek, University of Washington
Rodrigo Rodrigues, Max Planck Institute for Software Systems
Pablo Rodriguez, Telefónica Research
Antony Rowstron, Microsoft Research
Ion Stoica, University of California, Berkeley
Robbert van Renesse, Cornell University
Maarten van Steen, VU University Amsterdam
Xiaowei Yang, Duke University
Haifeng Yu, National University of Singapore
Steering Committee
John R. Douceur, Microsoft Research
Emin Gün Sirer, Cornell University
Geoffrey M. Voelker, University of California, San Diego
Ben Y. Zhao, University of California, Santa Barbara
Overview
The 9th International Workshop on Peer-to-Peer Systems (IPTPS '10) provides a forum for researchers to engage in a lively discussion of current and future trends in peer-to-peer systems. Co-located with NSDI '10 in San Jose, CA, this one-day workshop provides a venue in which to present and discuss peer-to-peer technologies, applications, and systems and to identify key research issues and challenges that lie ahead.
This year, the workshop's charter will be expanded to include topics relating to self-organizing and self-managing distributed systems. This is in response to recent trends where self-organizing techniques proposed in early peer-to-peer systems have found their way into more managed settings such as datacenters, enterprises, and ISPs to help deal with growing scale, complexity, and heterogeneity. In the context of this year's workshop, peer-to-peer systems are defined to be large-scale distributed systems that are mostly decentralized, are self-organizing, and might or might not include resources from multiple administrative domains.
Topics of interest include but are not limited to:
Network and system support for peer-to-peer systems
Self-organizing and self-managing distributed systems
Adaptive algorithms and architectures for large-scale distributed systems
New applications and protocols for peer-to-peer systems
Availability, robustness, performance, and scaling
Security, privacy, anonymity, anti-censorship, and incentives
Lessons drawn from experience with deployed peer-to-peer systems
Measurement, modeling, and workload characterization
Papers will be selected based on originality, likelihood of spawning insightful discussion, and technical merit. The program will include presentations of position papers along with plenty of time for lively discussion among the participants, as well as a demo session for working systems.
Submission Guidelines
Author names and affiliations should appear on the title page (reviewing is not blind). Please do not submit abbreviated versions of journal or conference papers. In particular, submissions to IPTPS must not be concurrent with a substantially similar submission to a conference, including condensed versions of work that has been submitted to a conference and is currently under review. Paper submissions should follow these guidelines:
5 or fewer pages, including appendices and references
Two columns
10-point type on 12-point leading ("single-spaced")
Pages should be numbered
PDF or PostScript format
Papers must be submitted via the Web submission form, which will be available here soon.
All papers will be available online to registered attendees before the workshop. If your accepted paper should not be published prior to the event, please notify production-AT-usenix.org. The papers will be available online to everyone beginning on the day of the workshop, April 27, 2010.
Papers accompanied by nondisclosure agreement forms will not be considered. Accepted submissions will be treated as confidential prior to publication on the USENIX IPTPS '10 Web site; rejected submissions will be permanently treated as confidential.
Simultaneous submission of the same work to multiple venues, submission of previously published work, or plagiarism constitutes dishonesty or fraud. USENIX, like other scientific and technical conferences and journals, prohibits these practices and may take action against authors who have committed them. See the USENIX Conference Submissions Policy for details. Questions? Contact your program chairs, iptps10chairs-AT-usenix.org, or the USENIX office, submissionspolicy-AT-usenix.org.
9th International Workshop on Peer-to-Peer Systems
(IPTPS '10)
April 27, 2010
San Jose, CA
Sponsored by USENIX, the Advanced Computing Systems Association
IPTPS '10 will be co-located with the 7th USENIX Symposium on Networked Systems Design and Implementation (NSDI '10), which will take place April 28?30, 2010.
Important Dates
Submissions due: Friday, December 18, 2009, 11:59 p.m. EST
Notification of acceptance: Sunday, February 28, 2010
Demo proposals due: Monday, March 15, 2010
Electronic files due: Monday, March 29, 2010
Workshop Organizers
Program Co-Chairs
Michael J. Freedman, Princeton University
Arvind Krishnamurthy, University of Washington
Program Committee
Brian Cooper, Yahoo! Research
Roger Dingledine, Tor Project
Christophe Diot, Thomson
Dejan Kostić, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne
Karthik Lakshminarayanan, Conviva
Baochun Li, University of Toronto
Jinyang Li, New York University
Boon Thau Loo, University of Pennsylvania
Bruce Maggs, Duke University and Akamai
Sue Moon, KAIST
Thomas Moscibroda, Microsoft Research
KyoungSoo Park, University of Pittsburgh
Michael Piatek, University of Washington
Rodrigo Rodrigues, Max Planck Institute for Software Systems
Pablo Rodriguez, Telefónica Research
Antony Rowstron, Microsoft Research
Ion Stoica, University of California, Berkeley
Robbert van Renesse, Cornell University
Maarten van Steen, VU University Amsterdam
Xiaowei Yang, Duke University
Haifeng Yu, National University of Singapore
Steering Committee
John R. Douceur, Microsoft Research
Emin Gün Sirer, Cornell University
Geoffrey M. Voelker, University of California, San Diego
Ben Y. Zhao, University of California, Santa Barbara
Overview
The 9th International Workshop on Peer-to-Peer Systems (IPTPS '10) provides a forum for researchers to engage in a lively discussion of current and future trends in peer-to-peer systems. Co-located with NSDI '10 in San Jose, CA, this one-day workshop provides a venue in which to present and discuss peer-to-peer technologies, applications, and systems and to identify key research issues and challenges that lie ahead.
This year, the workshop's charter will be expanded to include topics relating to self-organizing and self-managing distributed systems. This is in response to recent trends where self-organizing techniques proposed in early peer-to-peer systems have found their way into more managed settings such as datacenters, enterprises, and ISPs to help deal with growing scale, complexity, and heterogeneity. In the context of this year's workshop, peer-to-peer systems are defined to be large-scale distributed systems that are mostly decentralized, are self-organizing, and might or might not include resources from multiple administrative domains.
Topics of interest include but are not limited to:
Network and system support for peer-to-peer systems
Self-organizing and self-managing distributed systems
Adaptive algorithms and architectures for large-scale distributed systems
New applications and protocols for peer-to-peer systems
Availability, robustness, performance, and scaling
Security, privacy, anonymity, anti-censorship, and incentives
Lessons drawn from experience with deployed peer-to-peer systems
Measurement, modeling, and workload characterization
Papers will be selected based on originality, likelihood of spawning insightful discussion, and technical merit. The program will include presentations of position papers along with plenty of time for lively discussion among the participants, as well as a demo session for working systems.
Submission Guidelines
Author names and affiliations should appear on the title page (reviewing is not blind). Please do not submit abbreviated versions of journal or conference papers. In particular, submissions to IPTPS must not be concurrent with a substantially similar submission to a conference, including condensed versions of work that has been submitted to a conference and is currently under review. Paper submissions should follow these guidelines:
5 or fewer pages, including appendices and references
Two columns
10-point type on 12-point leading ("single-spaced")
Pages should be numbered
PDF or PostScript format
Papers must be submitted via the Web submission form, which will be available here soon.
All papers will be available online to registered attendees before the workshop. If your accepted paper should not be published prior to the event, please notify production-AT-usenix.org. The papers will be available online to everyone beginning on the day of the workshop, April 27, 2010.
Papers accompanied by nondisclosure agreement forms will not be considered. Accepted submissions will be treated as confidential prior to publication on the USENIX IPTPS '10 Web site; rejected submissions will be permanently treated as confidential.
Simultaneous submission of the same work to multiple venues, submission of previously published work, or plagiarism constitutes dishonesty or fraud. USENIX, like other scientific and technical conferences and journals, prohibits these practices and may take action against authors who have committed them. See the USENIX Conference Submissions Policy for details. Questions? Contact your program chairs, iptps10chairs-AT-usenix.org, or the USENIX office, submissionspolicy-AT-usenix.org.
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Last modified: 2010-06-04 19:32:22