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Distinguished Experts Panel
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Panel Chair
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Nobuo Fujii (NTT Cyber Solutions Laborarotries, Japan)
He received the B.E. and M.E degrees in applied physics from Osaka University, Suita, Japan in 1977 and 1979, respectively. In 1979, he joined the Electrical Communication Laboratories, Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Public Corporation (now NTT), Yokosuka, Japan. Since then, he has been working on network management and operations technologies R&D. Subjects to management are, digital cross-connect systems, transport networks, multipoint video conferencing services and home networks and services. He is a member of IEEE and IEICE of Japan. He is a chairman of the technical committee on telecommunication management of IEICE and a vice-chairman of ITU-T SG4.
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| Panelists
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Murcus
Brunner (NEC Europe, Germany)
Dr. Marcus Brunner is chief researcher at the Network Laboratories of NEC Europe Ltd. in Heidelberg, Germany. He received his Ph.D. from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH Zurich), while working in the Computer Engineering and Networks Laboratory (TIK) of the Electrical Engineering Department. He got his M.S. in Computer Science from ETH Zurich in 1994. Aside from the involvement in different national and international projects, his primary research interests include network architectures (fixed and mobile), programmability in networks, network and service management. He is a leading member of the network management research community with being in the Organization and Technical Program Committees of major network management conferences such as NOMS, IM, DSOM, Policy Workshop, IPOM. Also in the networking area he is in the TPCs of IEEE Globecom, ICC, LCN. He is currently IEEE Globecom symposium chair on Autonomic Networking and in the editorial board of the IEEE Transactions on Network and Service Management and the Journal of Network and systems Management.
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Al
Vincent (NTIA, USA)
Al Vincent joined ITS as its Director on November 4, 2002. He is responsible for technical leadership and promotion of the Institute's telecommunications research and engineering mission nationally and internationally. As the chief research and engineering arm of the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA), the Institute for Telecommunication Sciences (ITS) supports such NTIA telecommunications objectives as promotion of advanced telecommunications and information infrastructure development in the United States, enhancement of domestic competitiveness, improvement of foreign trade opportunities for U.S. telecommunications firms, and facilitation of more efficient and effective use of the radio spectrum. ITS also serves as a principal Federal resource for solving the telecommunications concerns of other Federal agencies, state and local governments, private corporations and associations, and international organizations. Prior to his appointment at ITS, Mr. Vincent was a Telecom Systems Architect and responsible for the management and technical strategy for the integration of diverse telecommunications and operational support systems. This included the integration architecture for a number of major service providers in Asia, North America, and Europe. Mr. Vincent has been a Director, Architect, and Developer in Telecom Systems Engineering for over 25 years, with the last 15 being exclusively in the management of telecommunications systems and technology, for numerous large telecommunications service providers. Currently his agency focuses on the areas of interoperable communications, Next Generation Networks (NGN), UWB/Wi-Fi/WiMAX/LMR/satellite devices, and issues of spectrum efficiency and interference. Mr. Vincent has a B.S. / M.S. in Mathematics / Theoretical Mechanics from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.
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Yoshimi
Teshigawara (Soka University, Japan)
Dr. Yoshimi Teshigawara is a Professor of Department of Information Systems Science, Faculty of Engineering at Soka University since 1995, and currently the Dean of Graduate School of Engineering. He began his professional career in 1970 at NEC Corporation, engaged in the design and developments of network architecture and its related products. From 1974 to 1976, Dr. Teshigawara was a Visiting Research Affiliate with ALOHA System at the University of Hawaii where he did research on packet radio and satellite networks. He engaged in the design and development of computer systems via satellite using VSAT. In addition, he worked on standardization of network management as the chairmen of AOW (Asia Oceania Workshop) NM SIG, INTAP NM Committee and TTC Subcommittee. He served as a general co-chair for APNOMS 2001. His current interests are context-aware and network services, network security and traffic management including QoS and SLA in wireless networks. Dr. Teshigawara received his PhD from Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan, in 1970.
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Dongsik Yun (KT, Korea)
Dongsik Yun received his BS in electrical and electronic engineering from Hankook Aviation College and his MS in electrical and electronic engineering from Korea Advanced Institute Science and Technology (KAIST), Korea in 1986 and 1988, respectively. In 1988 he joined KT, where he worked on an N-ISDN and B-ISDN field trial project. From 1993 to 1994, he researched TINA-C service management architecture as a Visiting Researcher of core-team member at NJ, USA. From 1997 to 1999, he was a Director of development for KT broadband multi-service (ATM, FR, and IP) and the network control and management system. From 2000 to 2001, he was a Director of development for KT ADSL service delivery management system. From 2001 to 2004, he was a Director of project coordinate and development for KT new integrated Operations Support System (NeOSS). Now, he is a Managing Director of the NeOSS project, especially he take a charge of NeOSS To-Be Architecture. His research interests include ATM, xDSL and IP services and network/service management architecture in a distributed processing environment (Web Service/BPM/EAI environments), fault-tolerant management for distributed components in the inter-domain and heterogeneous networks, wireless internet access technology, and policy-based network management.
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