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DCC 2013 - 2013 Workshop on Distributed Cloud Computing

Date2013-12-09 - 2013-12-12

Deadline2013-07-21

VenueDresden, Germany Germany

Keywords

Websitehttps://sites.google.com/site/dcc2013workshop/

Topics/Call fo Papers

Workshop on
Distributed Cloud Computing (DCC)
https://sites.google.com/site/dcc2013workshop/
held in Dresden, Germany
December 9-12
co-located with 6th IEEE/ACM International Conference on Utility and Cloud
Computing (UCC)
DATES
Abstracts due: 21 July 2013
Submissions due: 21 July 2013
Notification of acceptance: 10 September 2013
Camera-ready papers due: 27 September 2013
WORKSHOP GOAL
The workshop is interdisciplinary and touches both distributed systems as
well as networking and cloud computing. It is intended as a forum where
people with different backgrounds can learn from their respective field and
expertise. We want to attract both industry relevant papers as well as papers
from academic researchers working on the foundations of the distributed
cloud.
DCC 2013 accepts high-quality papers related to the distributed cloud which
fall into at least one of the following categories:
- Novel ideas on how to design and operate/manage the distributed cloud
- Principles and foundations of distributed cloud computing; algorithmic
solutions (resource management, scheduling, embedding, elasticity, brokering)
- Architectural models, prototype implementations and applications (content
distribution, games, social networks, scientific computing, business)
- Virtualization technology and enablers (network virtualization,
software-defined networking)
- Experience with existing deployments and measurements (private, public,
hybrid, federated, aggregated clouds)
- Service and resource specification, languages, and formal verification
- Economic, robustness, and energy aspects of the distributed cloud (e.g.,
pricing and service models)
SYNOPSIS
Most of the focus in public cloud computing technology over the last 10 years
has been on deploying massive, centralized data centers with thousands or
hundreds of thousands of servers. The data centers are typically replicated
with a few instances on a continent wide scale in semi-autonomous zones. This
model has proven quite successful in economically scaling cloud service, but
it has some drawbacks. Failure of a zone can lead to service dropout for
tenants if the tenants do not replicate their services across zones. Some
applications may need finer grained control over network latency than is
provided by a connection to a large centralized data center, or may benefit
from being able to specify location as a parameter in their deployment.
Nontechnical issues, such as the availability of real estate, power, and
bandwidth for a large mega data center, also enter into consideration.
Another model that may be useful in many cases is to have many micro or even
nano data centers, interconnected by medium to high bandwidth links, and the
ability to manage these data centers and interconnecting links as if they
were one larger data center. This distributed cloud model is perhaps a better
match for private enterprise clouds, which tend to be smaller than the large,
public mega data centers, and it also has attractions for public clouds run
by telcom carriers which have facilities in geographically diverse locations,
with power, cooling, and bandwidth already available. It is attractive for
mobile operators as well, since it provides a platform on which applications
can be deployed and easily managed that could benefit from a tighter coupling
to the wireless access network. The two models are not mutually exclusive:
for instance a public cloud operator with many large data centers distributed
internationally could manage its network of data centers like a distributed
cloud. The distinguishing characteristic from federated clouds is that the
component data centers are more integrated, especially with respect to
authentication and authorization, so that the computation, storage, and
networking resources are as tightly managed as if they were in a single large
data center.
SUBMISSION AND PUBLICATION
Submissions are single-blind and should not exceed 6 pages in length (in IEEE
format). For an accepted paper, at least one author must attend the workshop
(all participants must pay the UCC 2013 workshop and conference fee).
Submissions will be handled by EasyChair.
The DCC 2013 workshop proceedings will be published as part of the UCC 2013
proceedings volume.
CHAIRS
James Kempf, Ericsson Research, San Francisco, USA
Stefan Schmid, Telekom Innovation Laboratories (T-Labs) & TU Berlin, Germany
TPC:
Chen Avin, Ben Gurion Uni, Israel
Raouf Boutaba, Uni Waterloo, Canada
David Breitgand, IBM Research Tel Aviv, Israel
Marco Canini, T-Labs & TU Berlin, Germany
Yvonne Coady, Uni Victoria, Canada
Paolo Costa, Microsoft Research Cambridge & Imperial College, United Kingdom
György Dán, KTH, Sweden
Xiaoming Fu, Uni Goettingen, Germany
Pan Hui, HKUST, Hong Kong
Holger Karl, Uni Paderborn, Germany
Wolfgang Kellerer, TU Munich, Germany
Hermann de Meer, Uni Passau, Germany
Ruben S. Montero, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Spain
Djamel F. H. Sadok, UFPE, Brazil
Arunabha Sen, Arizona State University, USA
Srini Seetharaman, T-Labs Silicon Valley, USA
Azimeh Sefidcon, Ericsson Research, Sweden
Upendra Sharma, IBM T. J. Watson Research Center, USA
Soren Telfer, AT&T Palo Alto, USA
Benoit Tremblay, Ericsson Research, Canada
Christian Tschudin, Uni Basel, Switzerland
VENUE:
DCC 2013 will take place in the Dorint Hotel Dresden, in the center of the
lively capital of Saxony. Dresden offers much more than the historic center
with its opera house, the 'Semperoper', and the ‘Frauenkirche’ church. Dotted
along the approximately 30 km long stretch of the Elbe River which runs
through the city, you will find many treasures: castles, villas, vineyards,
historic funiculars, and steamboats that are up to 130 years old. During the
conference week, the 579th annual Striezelmarkt will welcome all conference
participants for a unique artisanal and culinary experience.

Last modified: 2013-06-13 06:57:06