(Apologies for multiple postings)
FOMC 2014 Call for Papers
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--
Boldness has genius, power and magic in it.
--
Boldness has genius, power and magic in it.
*Final call for papers*
**Extended deadline**
Abstract Registration due: May 5, 2014
Full Paper Submission due: May 12, 2014
*EDAS Servers are open for submission*Abstract Registration due: May 5, 2014
Full Paper Submission due: May 12, 2014
FOMC 2014 Call for Papers
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The Tenth ACM International Workshop on Foundations of Mobile Computing
(Formerly known as DIALM-POMC)
Philadelphia, PA, USA
August 11, 2014
[Co-located with ACM MobiHoc 2014]
***ACM MobiHoc is the premier international symposium dedicated to addressing challenges emerging from wireless ad hoc networking and computing.This co-location gives a unique opportunity for mobile computing theoreticians and practitioners to come together. ***
Conference Site: http://fomc2014.cs.drexel.edu/
Two Tracks!
1. Regular Paper Track
2. Position Paper Track
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(Formerly known as DIALM-POMC)
Philadelphia, PA, USA
August 11, 2014
[Co-located with ACM MobiHoc 2014]
***ACM MobiHoc is the premier international symposium dedicated to addressing challenges emerging from wireless ad hoc networking and computing.This co-location gives a unique opportunity for mobile computing theoreticians and practitioners to come together. ***
Conference Site: http://fomc2014.cs.drexel.edu/
Two Tracks!
1. Regular Paper Track
2. Position Paper Track
*****************************************************
IMPORTANT DATES:
*Extended Abstract Registration due: May 5, 2014
*Extended Full Paper Submission due: May 12, 2014
Author Notification: June 14, 2014
Workshop Date: August 11, 2014
*****************************************************
Overview:
-------------
With the growing ubiquity of mobile communication devices in our daily lives, mobile computing is emerging as an important new field in computer science. This increasing interaction between mobility, communication and computing has generated a number of challenging algorithmic issues in diverse areas, including coverage, mobility, routing, cooperation, capacity planning, scheduling, and power control.
The Foundations of Mobile Computing (FOMC) workshop is dedicated to these issues. It covers contributions both in the design and analysis of discrete/distributed algorithms, and in the system modeling of mobile, wireless and similarly dynamic networks. It aims to bring together the practitioners and theoreticians of the field to foster cooperation between research in mobile computing and algorithms.
Details:
----------
FOMC 2014 will be held on August 11, 2014 in Philadelphia, PA, USA, and will be co-located with the 15th ACM International Symposium on Mobile Ad Hoc Networking and Computing (MobiHoc 2014). Previous workshops (under the name DIALM-POMC through 2010) have been co-located with the Annual Symposium on Principles of Distributed Computing (PODC), the International Conference on Mobile Computing and Networking (MOBICOM), and the International Symposium on Distributed Computing (DISC).
Submissions can be submitted to one of two tracks:
1. The regular paper track solicits technical papers describing original, previously unpublished research, not currently under review.
2. The position paper track solicits descriptions of creative and compelling new research directions concerning the convergence of discrete/distributed algorithms and mobile computing.
Topics:
---------
FOMC covers all areas related to mobile and wireless computing and communications where discrete algorithms and methods are used. Specific topics include, but are not limited to the following:
➢ Models of mobility and dynamic networks, and algorithmic aspects of mobility, including:
● autonomous agents
*Extended Abstract Registration due: May 5, 2014
*Extended Full Paper Submission due: May 12, 2014
Author Notification: June 14, 2014
Workshop Date: August 11, 2014
*****************************************************
Overview:
-------------
With the growing ubiquity of mobile communication devices in our daily lives, mobile computing is emerging as an important new field in computer science. This increasing interaction between mobility, communication and computing has generated a number of challenging algorithmic issues in diverse areas, including coverage, mobility, routing, cooperation, capacity planning, scheduling, and power control.
The Foundations of Mobile Computing (FOMC) workshop is dedicated to these issues. It covers contributions both in the design and analysis of discrete/distributed algorithms, and in the system modeling of mobile, wireless and similarly dynamic networks. It aims to bring together the practitioners and theoreticians of the field to foster cooperation between research in mobile computing and algorithms.
Details:
----------
FOMC 2014 will be held on August 11, 2014 in Philadelphia, PA, USA, and will be co-located with the 15th ACM International Symposium on Mobile Ad Hoc Networking and Computing (MobiHoc 2014). Previous workshops (under the name DIALM-POMC through 2010) have been co-located with the Annual Symposium on Principles of Distributed Computing (PODC), the International Conference on Mobile Computing and Networking (MOBICOM), and the International Symposium on Distributed Computing (DISC).
Submissions can be submitted to one of two tracks:
1. The regular paper track solicits technical papers describing original, previously unpublished research, not currently under review.
2. The position paper track solicits descriptions of creative and compelling new research directions concerning the convergence of discrete/distributed algorithms and mobile computing.
Topics:
---------
FOMC covers all areas related to mobile and wireless computing and communications where discrete algorithms and methods are used. Specific topics include, but are not limited to the following:
➢ Models of mobility and dynamic networks, and algorithmic aspects of mobility, including:
● autonomous agents
● population protocols
● natural algorithms for mobile agents
● dynamic graph algorithms
● local algorithms
● distributed optimization
➢ Game-theoretic and economic aspects of mobility:
● incentives and cooperation
➢ Cryptographic and combinatorial methods for mobility
➢ Gossiping and information diffusion
➢ Communication protocols, including routing, multicast and broadcast
➢ Scheduling and network capacity
➢ Data link protocols:
● MAC
● Channel allocation
● Cognitive Radio networks
➢ Topology discovery, localization and clock synchronization
➢ Location- and context-aware distributed applications, sensor networks
➢ Emerging networks, including delay-tolerant networks, mobile social applications, vehicular networks
➢ Fault tolerance and security
➢ Energy saving methods and protocols
Submissions
---------------------
Authors must submit their papers electronically, following the guidelines available on the FOMC web page. Submissions should use letter-size paper with at least 11-point font and 1-inch margins, and no longer than 10 pages for the regular paper track, and no longer than 6 pages for the position paper track. The page restrictions do not include figures, tables, and references. Additional details may be included in a clearly marked appendix, which will be read at the discretion of the program committee
Publication
---------------
The Proceedings of the workshop will be published in the ACM Digital Library.
Committees
----------------
Program Committee Chairs:
Jared Saia (University of New Mexico)
Maxwell Young (Drexel University)
Publicity Chair:
Amitabh Trehan (Queen's University Belfast)
Program Committee:
Alex Cornejo (Harvard University)
Jeremy Fineman (Georgetown University)
Majid Ghaderi (University of Calgary)
Seth Gilbert (National University of Singapore)
Wenbo He (McGill University)
Valerie King (University of Victoria)
Darek Kowalski (University of Liverpool)
Rami Langar (UPMC - Sorbonne Université )
Chul-Ho Lee (North Carolina State University)
Hyunyoung Lee (Texas A&M University)
Mahnush Movahedi (University of New Mexico)
Calvin Newport (Georgetown University)
Gopal Pandurangan (Nanyang Technological University, Brown University)
Yvonne-Anne Pignolet (ABB Corporate Research)
Peter Robinson (Nanyang Technological University)
Jared Saia (University of New Mexico)
Christian Scheideler (University of Paderborn)
Siddhartha Sen (Microsoft Research)
Chiu C. Tan (Temple University)
Amitabh Trehan (Queen's University Belfast)
Maxwell Young (Drexel University)
Steering Committee:
Maurizio Bonuccelli (University of Pisa)
Errol L. Lloyd (University of Delaware)
Nancy Lynch (MIT)
Thomas Moscibroda (Microsoft Research)
Andrea Richa (Arizona State University)
Andre Schiper (EPFL)
Arunabha Sen (Arizona State University)
Nitin Vaidya (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign)
Jennifer L. Welch (Texas A&M University)
***************************************************************************************
● local algorithms
● distributed optimization
➢ Game-theoretic and economic aspects of mobility:
● incentives and cooperation
➢ Cryptographic and combinatorial methods for mobility
➢ Gossiping and information diffusion
➢ Communication protocols, including routing, multicast and broadcast
➢ Scheduling and network capacity
➢ Data link protocols:
● MAC
● Channel allocation
● Cognitive Radio networks
➢ Topology discovery, localization and clock synchronization
➢ Location- and context-aware distributed applications, sensor networks
➢ Emerging networks, including delay-tolerant networks, mobile social applications, vehicular networks
➢ Fault tolerance and security
➢ Energy saving methods and protocols
Submissions
---------------------
Authors must submit their papers electronically, following the guidelines available on the FOMC web page. Submissions should use letter-size paper with at least 11-point font and 1-inch margins, and no longer than 10 pages for the regular paper track, and no longer than 6 pages for the position paper track. The page restrictions do not include figures, tables, and references. Additional details may be included in a clearly marked appendix, which will be read at the discretion of the program committee
Publication
---------------
The Proceedings of the workshop will be published in the ACM Digital Library.
Committees
----------------
Program Committee Chairs:
Jared Saia (University of New Mexico)
Maxwell Young (Drexel University)
Publicity Chair:
Amitabh Trehan (Queen's University Belfast)
Program Committee:
Alex Cornejo (Harvard University)
Jeremy Fineman (Georgetown University)
Majid Ghaderi (University of Calgary)
Seth Gilbert (National University of Singapore)
Wenbo He (McGill University)
Valerie King (University of Victoria)
Darek Kowalski (University of Liverpool)
Rami Langar (UPMC - Sorbonne Université )
Chul-Ho Lee (North Carolina State University)
Hyunyoung Lee (Texas A&M University)
Mahnush Movahedi (University of New Mexico)
Calvin Newport (Georgetown University)
Gopal Pandurangan (Nanyang Technological University, Brown University)
Yvonne-Anne Pignolet (ABB Corporate Research)
Peter Robinson (Nanyang Technological University)
Jared Saia (University of New Mexico)
Christian Scheideler (University of Paderborn)
Siddhartha Sen (Microsoft Research)
Chiu C. Tan (Temple University)
Amitabh Trehan (Queen's University Belfast)
Maxwell Young (Drexel University)
Steering Committee:
Maurizio Bonuccelli (University of Pisa)
Errol L. Lloyd (University of Delaware)
Nancy Lynch (MIT)
Thomas Moscibroda (Microsoft Research)
Andrea Richa (Arizona State University)
Andre Schiper (EPFL)
Arunabha Sen (Arizona State University)
Nitin Vaidya (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign)
Jennifer L. Welch (Texas A&M University)
***************************************************************************************
--
Then indecision brings its own delays,
And days are lost lamenting over lost days.
Are you in earnest? Seize this very minute;
What you can do, or dream you can do, begin it; Boldness has genius, power and magic in it.
-- John Anster, from a "very free translation" of Goethe's Faust
--
Then indecision brings its own delays,
And days are lost lamenting over lost days.
Are you in earnest? Seize this very minute;
What you can do, or dream you can do, begin it; Boldness has genius, power and magic in it.
-- John Anster, from a "very free translation" of Goethe's Faust