This file was created by the TYPO3 extension bib --- Timezone: CEST Creation date: 2024-04-26 Creation time: 13-11-04 --- Number of references 5 inproceedings 200606LandsiedelRatWatch Rat Watch: Using Sensor Networks for Animal Observation 2006 6 19 1 1--2 In an attempt to employ sensor network technology for animal observation, in particular of wild rats, we identified several restrictive shortcomings in existing sensor network research, which we discuss in this paper. (Poster and Abstract) RatPack fileadmin/papers/2006/2006-06-Landsiedel-RatWatch.pdf http://www.sics.se/realwsn06/program.html Online Pedro José Marron and Thiemo Voigt SICS
Uppsala, Sweden
ACM Workshop on Real-World Wireless Sensor Networks (RealWSN) in conjunction with ACM MobiSys, Uppsala, Sweden ACM Uppsala, Sweden ACM Workshop on Real-World Wireless Sensor Networks, REALWSN'06 June 19, 2006 en 1 OlafLandsiedel Jó AgilaBitsch Link KlausWehrle JohannesThiele HanspeterMallot
inproceedings 200602LandsiedelEWSNModularSN Modular Communication Protocols for Sensor Networks 2006 2 13 507 22 -- 23 In this paper we present our ongoing work on modular communication protocols for sensor networks. Their modularity allows recomposing a protocol dynamically at runtime and adapting it to the changing needs of a sensor network. Compared to existing work, our componentization is fine grained and protocol independent, enabling a high degree of component reusability. (Poster and Abstract) fileadmin/papers/2006/2006-02-Landsiedel-EWSN-ModularSN.pdf ftp://ftp.inf.ethz.ch/pub/publications/tech-reports/5xx/507.pdf Technical Report Online Kay Römer and Holger Karl and Friedemann Matterns Department of Computer Science, ETH Zurich
Zurich, Switzerland
Technical Report ETH Zurich / Dept. of Computer Science European Workshop on Wireless Sensor Networks (EWSN 2006), Zurich Switzerland EWSN Zurich, Switzerland 3rd European Workshop on Wireless Sensor Networks (EWSN 2006) February 13-15, 2006 en 1 OlafLandsiedel Jó AgilaBitsch Link KatharinaDenkinger KlausWehrle
conference 200607landsiedelfgsnmodular When Modularity Matters 2006 In an attempt to employ sensor network technology for animal observation, in particular of wild rats, we identified several restrictive shortcomings in existing sensor network research. In this paper, we present modular and flexible communication protocols as an efficient substrate to address these shortcomings. Their modularity allows recomposing a protocol dynamically at runtime and adapting it to the changing needs of a deployed sensor network. 5th GI/ITG KuVS Fachgespräch "Wireless Sensor Networks", Stuttgart, Germany OlafLandsiedel KlausWehrle conference 200607landsiedelngimodels Towards flexible and modular simulation models 2006 In this talk we discuss the increasing need for flexible and modular simulation models and our ongoing work in this area. Although a huge number of simulation models are available today, these models do not interoperate and cannot be easily combined to form a full protocol simulation stack. Visions of Future Generation Networks, Würzburg, Germany OlafLandsiedel LeoPetrak KlausWehrle inproceedings 200608landsiedelp2p06scalablemobility Towards Scalable Mobility in Distributed Hash Tables 2006 203-209 For the use in the Internet domain, distributed hash tables (DHTs) have proven to be an efficient and scalable approach to distributed content storage and access. In this paper, we explore how DHTs and mobile ad-hoc networks (MANETs) fit together. We argue that both share key characteristics in terms of self organization, decentralization, redundancy requirements, and limited infrastructure. However, node mobility and the continually changing physical topology pose a special challenge to scalability and the design of a DHT for mobile ad-hoc networks. In this paper, we show that with some local knowledge we can build a scalable and mobile structured peer-to-peer network, called Mobile Hash Table (MHT). Furthermore, we argue that with little global knowledge, such as a map of the city or whatever area the nodes move in, one can even further improve the scalability and reduce DHT maintenance overhead significantly, allowing MHT to scale up to several ten thousands of nodes. https://www.comsys.rwth-aachen.de/fileadmin/papers/2006/2006-landsiedel-p2p-mobility.pdf print IEEE
Washington, DC, USA
print Proceedings of the Sixth IEEE International Conference on Peer-to-Peer Computing (P2P'06), Cambridge, UK IEEE Cambridge, UK Sixth IEEE International Conference on Peer-to-Peer Computing (P2P'06) 2006-09-06 en 0-7695-2679-9 10.1109/P2P.2006.46 1 OlafLandsiedel StefanGötz KlausWehrle