CITRIS Research Exchange - Lessons Learned from the Internet Project
- October 24, 2007: 12:00pm - 1:00pm
- Location: 290 Hearst Memorial Mining Building, the Maria & Dado Banatao Conference Room, UC Berkeley
Douglas Comer, VP of Research, Cisco, and Distinguished Professor of Computer Science, Purdue University (on leave)
Part of the CITRIS Research Exchange at UC Berkeley. The complete schedule for the fall semester is online at RE-Fall2007. Sponsored by Infineon Technologies.
Abstract:
The Internet ranks among the greatest achievements of
20th century Computer Science. The basic technology was so
well conceived that it has remained virtually unchanged
despite completely new applications and dramatic growth in the
number of connected computers and traffic. This eclectic
talk presents a series of lessons drawn from the Internet
experience that may help us better understand how to proceed
with new research. It considers the design of protocols,
general principles, technologies, the underlying architecture,
the effect of economics on networking research, and ways that experimental research projects can be organized to ensure success.
Speaker Bio:
Douglas Comer is VP of Research Collaboration at Cisco systems, and
Distinguished Professor of Computer Science at Purdue University,
where he is currently on an extended leave. An internationally
recognized expert on computer networking, Comer has been involved
in Internet research since the late 1970s. His series of
ground-breaking textbooks have been translated into 16 languages,
and are used by professional engineers and students around th
world. For twenty years, Comer was editor-in-chief of the journal
Software -- Practice And Experience. He is a Fellow of the ACM.
Last Updated: March 21, 2008 - 10:53am