The draft for the Technical Program has been posted on the Nano-Net 2008 Website at: http://www.nanonets.org/files/Technical_Program_v2.1.pdf including times for workshop and tutorial sessions on the Sunday before the conference (September 14).
Also, we have added a Presenter Info section at: http://www.nanonets.org/presenter.shtml
with guidelines for presenters of full/invited and short papers.
Look forward to seeing you in September!
Showing posts with label technical program committee. Show all posts
Showing posts with label technical program committee. Show all posts
Tuesday, July 22, 2008
Monday, July 7, 2008
Paul Bogdan - New TPC Member
Labels:
CMU,
nanonets,
Paul Bogdan,
technical program committee,
TPC
Tuesday, May 6, 2008
Yaakov (Kobi) Benenson - new TPC member
We are pleased to announce another TPC member, Yaakov (Kobi) Benenson from Harvard. He has a Ph.D. from the Departments of Computer Science & Applied Mathematics and Biological Chemistry of the Weizmann Institute of Science, Israel. He is involved in the Laboratory for Molecular Automata and the FAS Center for Systems Biology at Harvard University. He is currently the Principal Investigator for a grant titled: "Synthetic implementation of biological control modules" and participates as a program committee member in several conferences including the International Meeting on DNA-Based Computers and the
International Conference on Computational Intelligence, Robotics and Autonomous Systems.
International Conference on Computational Intelligence, Robotics and Autonomous Systems.
Monday, April 7, 2008
Wei Wang - New TPC Member
We are pleased to annouce our new Technical Program Committee member, Wei Wang from the University at Albany, State University of New York College of Nanoscale Science and Engineering. He received his PhD in Electrical and Computer Engineering from Concordia University in Montreal, Canada in 2002 and is currently an Assistant Professor.
His research interests include modeling and simulation of nanoscale devices and interconnects, CMOS-nano hybrid circuits, 3D IC, FPGA and ASIC design, and computer arithmetic and cryptography. Dr. Wang has over 90 journal and conference publications and two US patents. He is an editor of Journal of Computer Science and Technology and Journal of Computers and was a Section Chair of IWSOC04 and SPND 2004 conferences and also served at the technical committee of IEEE IWSOC 04, Great Lake VLSI 2005, 2007, ISCAS 2007, 2008 and NanoArch 2008 conferences.
Dr. Wang is also a member of IEEE. He is a technical committee (TC) member of IEEE Nano and Giga TC and IEEE VLSI System Design TC. He served as a panelist for NSF NIRT program. He was the executive committee member of IEEE Central Indiana Section and helped organize IEEE Indiana Workshop in June 2006.
~Damira (Nano-Net Webmaster)
His research interests include modeling and simulation of nanoscale devices and interconnects, CMOS-nano hybrid circuits, 3D IC, FPGA and ASIC design, and computer arithmetic and cryptography. Dr. Wang has over 90 journal and conference publications and two US patents. He is an editor of Journal of Computer Science and Technology and Journal of Computers and was a Section Chair of IWSOC04 and SPND 2004 conferences and also served at the technical committee of IEEE IWSOC 04, Great Lake VLSI 2005, 2007, ISCAS 2007, 2008 and NanoArch 2008 conferences.
Dr. Wang is also a member of IEEE. He is a technical committee (TC) member of IEEE Nano and Giga TC and IEEE VLSI System Design TC. He served as a panelist for NSF NIRT program. He was the executive committee member of IEEE Central Indiana Section and helped organize IEEE Indiana Workshop in June 2006.
~Damira (Nano-Net Webmaster)
Labels:
nanonets,
technical program committee,
TPC,
Wei Wang
Monday, March 17, 2008
Ralph Droms - New TPC Member
We would like to welcome the newest Technical Program Committee member to Nano-Net 2008 - Ralph Droms from Cisco Systems, Inc. Ralph Droms received his Ph.D. from Purdue University in 1986. Three years later, he organized the Dynamic Host Configuration Working Group (DHCWG) with Phil Gross and has chaired the working group since its inception. Also he serves as editor of the DHCP RFCs. He is a key contributor to the design, development, and evolution of DHCP.
Since joining Cisco in 2000, Ralph has continued his work on DHCP and network management. Previously, he was a member of the Computer Science Department faculty at Bucknell University, where he guided students through the study of TCP/IP internetworking, operating systems, and computer architecture. Ralph has also been a member of the computer science faculty at Pennsylvania State University, and he was on the research staff at IBM and Burroughs (now Unisys).
As a consultant in network architecture and infrastructure design, Ralph has worked with large and small companies on a variety of TCP/IP issues, including network architecture, server strategies and configurations, and the use of DHCP, DNS, and other technologies in network management. Ralph served as co-director of the computer center at Bucknell, where he supervised the design and implementation of the campuswide multiprotocol network.
Look for more updates on Nano-Net next Monday!
~Damira (Nano-Net Webmaster)
Since joining Cisco in 2000, Ralph has continued his work on DHCP and network management. Previously, he was a member of the Computer Science Department faculty at Bucknell University, where he guided students through the study of TCP/IP internetworking, operating systems, and computer architecture. Ralph has also been a member of the computer science faculty at Pennsylvania State University, and he was on the research staff at IBM and Burroughs (now Unisys).
As a consultant in network architecture and infrastructure design, Ralph has worked with large and small companies on a variety of TCP/IP issues, including network architecture, server strategies and configurations, and the use of DHCP, DNS, and other technologies in network management. Ralph served as co-director of the computer center at Bucknell, where he supervised the design and implementation of the campuswide multiprotocol network.
Look for more updates on Nano-Net next Monday!
~Damira (Nano-Net Webmaster)
Labels:
CISCO,
DHCP,
nano-net conference,
nanonets,
networking,
Ralph Droms,
technical program committee,
TPC
Monday, March 3, 2008
Subir Biswas - New TPC Member
We would like to welcome our newest Technical Program Committee Member, Subir Biswas. Dr. Biswas is an Associate Professor and the founding director of Networked Embedded and Wireless Systems (NEEWS) laboratory at the Electrical and Computer Engineering Department of Michigan State University.
He has a Ph.D. from the University of Cambridge, UK, and before joining Michigan State, he was the Principal Architect at Tellium Optical Systems, where he was a lead researcher on optical network restoration modeling, fault tolerant network design, network management, and advanced application development. Before Tellium, he worked at NEC Research Institute in Princeton, New Jersey, where his work was focused on wireless ATM, IP multicast and IP traffic engineering problems. Prior to that, Dr. Biswas has worked in AT&T Laboratories, Cambridge, where his primary responsibilities were to design and develop mobility signaling and MAC layer protocols for wireless ATM networks.
Dr. Biswas has more than 10 years of research experience in networking industry and has published over 70 peer-reviewed journal/conference articles and book chapters and is a co-inventor of 5 U.S. patents (granted and pending). Subir is a senior member of IEEE and a fellow of Cambridge Philosophical Society. His current research interests include the broad area of wireless data networking, low-power network protocols, application-specific sensor networks and wireless network security.
Look for more updates on Nano-Net next Monday!
~Damira (Nano-Net Webmaster)
He has a Ph.D. from the University of Cambridge, UK, and before joining Michigan State, he was the Principal Architect at Tellium Optical Systems, where he was a lead researcher on optical network restoration modeling, fault tolerant network design, network management, and advanced application development. Before Tellium, he worked at NEC Research Institute in Princeton, New Jersey, where his work was focused on wireless ATM, IP multicast and IP traffic engineering problems. Prior to that, Dr. Biswas has worked in AT&T Laboratories, Cambridge, where his primary responsibilities were to design and develop mobility signaling and MAC layer protocols for wireless ATM networks.
Dr. Biswas has more than 10 years of research experience in networking industry and has published over 70 peer-reviewed journal/conference articles and book chapters and is a co-inventor of 5 U.S. patents (granted and pending). Subir is a senior member of IEEE and a fellow of Cambridge Philosophical Society. His current research interests include the broad area of wireless data networking, low-power network protocols, application-specific sensor networks and wireless network security.
Look for more updates on Nano-Net next Monday!
~Damira (Nano-Net Webmaster)
Monday, February 25, 2008
Welcome to the Nano-Net Conference Blog
Welcome to the official Nano-Net Conference Blog. This will serve as the main site to discuss the newest happenings and goings on for the Nano-Net Conference, which will be held in Boston, MA on September 15-17, 2008.
We are lucky to have the participation of many talented and influential people who are setting the standard for how to bring nano-technologies and networking theory together as either part of our organizing committee and technical program committee.
We are also pleased to have Create-Net, ICST, EU (IST-FET), and ENIAC as our sponsors.
We look forward to getting some discussion on the topic and suggestions from the general community on what topics you would be interested in seeing discussed to help make the conference experience the most valuable it can be.
Look for more updates soon!
~Damira (Nano-Net Webmaster)
We are lucky to have the participation of many talented and influential people who are setting the standard for how to bring nano-technologies and networking theory together as either part of our organizing committee and technical program committee.
We are also pleased to have Create-Net, ICST, EU (IST-FET), and ENIAC as our sponsors.
We look forward to getting some discussion on the topic and suggestions from the general community on what topics you would be interested in seeing discussed to help make the conference experience the most valuable it can be.
Look for more updates soon!
~Damira (Nano-Net Webmaster)
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