Advanced Topics in Mobile Communications (Summer 2012): Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Line 46: | Line 46: | ||
**** 0-1. [http://www.sigmobile.org/awards/mobicom2011-1.pdf E-MiLi: energy-Minimizing Idle Listening in Wireless Networks], MobiHoc 2011 | **** 0-1. [http://www.sigmobile.org/awards/mobicom2011-1.pdf E-MiLi: energy-Minimizing Idle Listening in Wireless Networks], MobiHoc 2011 | ||
**** 0-2. [http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=2107531&preflayout=tabs Utility Optimal Scheduling in Energy Harvesting Networks], Mobicom 2011 | **** 0-2. [http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=2107531&preflayout=tabs Utility Optimal Scheduling in Energy Harvesting Networks], Mobicom 2011 | ||
* 25.5.2012 [Session | * 25.5.2012 [Session 5] | ||
** Applications | ** Applications | ||
**** 0-1. [http://www.hotmobile.org/2012/papers/HotMobile12-final66.pdf WalkSafe: A Pedestrian Safety App for Mobile Phone Users Who Walk and Talk While Crossing Roads], HotMobile 2012 | **** 0-1. [http://www.hotmobile.org/2012/papers/HotMobile12-final66.pdf WalkSafe: A Pedestrian Safety App for Mobile Phone Users Who Walk and Talk While Crossing Roads], HotMobile 2012 |
Revision as of 09:03, 5 June 2012
Details
Workload/ECTS Credits: | 180h, 6 ECTS |
Module: | M.Inf.223: Seminar Telematik III -or- M.Inf.224: Seminar Computernetzewerke II |
Lecturer: | {{{lecturer}}} |
Teaching assistant: | Yuan Zhang |
Time: | Fridays, 10.15 - 11.45 |
Place: | IfI 3.101 |
UniVZ | [1] |
Course Overview
The purpose of this seminar is to discuss some advanced concepts in mobile communication. Each week we will select several fancy papers from some top tier conferences/journals. Students are supposed to read the papers ahead of time and give your review of each paper. The aim of the course is to help the early stage MS/PhD students to develop the required skills of research as well as to get your hand wet on the cut-edge work on mobile communications.
Selected Topics
We are primarily going to cover the following topics in our seminar:
- Smart phones, mobile cloud computing
- Energy issues with mobile computing
- Use cases, applications (location tracking, wireless network planning, crowd-sourcing)
- DTN, opportunity networking and mobile social networks
Grading Policy
The grad consists of four parts
- Homework
- Attendance, participation, and enthusiasm
- Final presentation
- Final report
Schedule
- 20.4.2012 [Session 0]
- Course Introduction (how to read, write....)
- General reading
- 0-1. Anatomizing Application Performance Differences on Smartphones, Mobisys 2010
- General reading
- Course Introduction (how to read, write....)
- 27.4.2012 [Session 1]
- Smartphones
- 0-1. Anatomizing Application Performance Differences on Smartphones, Mobisys 2010
- Smartphones
- 4.5.2012 [Session 2]
- Mobile cloud
- 11.5.2012 [Session 3]
- Smartphones, mobile cloud
- 0-1. Identifying Diverse Usage Behaviors of Smartphone Apps, IMC 2011
- 0-2. AmbiStream: A Middleware for Multimedia Streaming on Heterogeneous Mobile Devices, Middleware 2011
- Smartphones, mobile cloud
- 18.5.2012 [Session 4]
- Energy issue
- 0-1. E-MiLi: energy-Minimizing Idle Listening in Wireless Networks, MobiHoc 2011
- 0-2. Utility Optimal Scheduling in Energy Harvesting Networks, Mobicom 2011
- Energy issue
- 25.5.2012 [Session 5]
- Applications
Please also send the review to yuan.zhang@informatik.uni-goettingen.de
- 25.5.2012 [Session 4]
- Applications II
Requirements
- Each participant is required to read the selected paper before the seminar and prepare the review of the paper, which should include the following parts:
- Summary of the paper
- pros AND cons of the paper (your conclusion)
- NOTE!! Every participant should provide the paper review BEFORE the seminar (23:59 Wednesday). => the review form is available at [Paper_Review_Form_ATCN_WS201112.doc]
- During the seminar, one is chosen for giving the overview of the paper. And the list of pros and cons is discussed by all the participant.
- In the end of the semester, everyone is requested to pick a topic (about 4 papers) and prepare:
- presentation (each for ~20 minutes, plus ~10 minutes discussions)
- essay (12~15 pages) Template:[2]