Special
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Special Session 1: Mobile & Wireless Communication Technologies for Ubiquitous Society
Thursday, Sept. 29, 2005, 16:55 ~ 19:00, Room A1
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The current status and the future direction of DMB (Digital Multimedia Broadcasting) technology
Chieteuk Ahn (ETRI, Korea)
Chieteuk Ahn is vice-president and a principal member of technical staff in the Digital Broadcasting Research Division of ETRI (Electronics and Telecommunications Research Institute), Korea. He received BE and ME from Seoul National University, Korea, in Feb. 1980 and 1982, respectively, and Ph. D. from University of Florida, U. S. A. in Aug. 1991. Since he joined ETRI in 1982 he has been involved in developing digital switching system, MPEG standardization and broadcasting technologies. His recent work has been focused on MPEG technology as well as on developing multidimensional interactive multimedia technologies in broadcasting and communications. He has served as an HOD of MPEG Forum Korea and SC29-Korea since 1996. His main interests are in the areas of multimedia signal processing, broadcasting systems and internet.
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Towards a European Next Generation Mobile Network
Dr. Marcus 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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Introduction of WiBro (Mobile WiMax)
Han-Seok Kim (SAMSUNG Electronics, Korea)
He received BS and MS from Seoul National University in 1990 and 1992, and PhD from Purdue University in 2003, all in Electrical Engineering. He worked for LG Electronics from 1992 until he started his PhD program in 1998.
He has been with Samsung Electronics since 2003. He is in charge of WiBro system design and his research area includes flow control and resource management.
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Overview of IEEE802.11s - Wireless Aware L2 Mesh Networks
Yoichi Matsumoto (Intel KK, Japan)
Yoichi Matsumoto is managing director of communications business development group in Intel KK, Japan. His responsibility includes business development associated with advanced communications technologies ranging from communications client devices to IT infrastructures. Prior to the current work, at the several esteemed research centres, he had been bestowed various research opportunities to purse digital wireless communications, most recently, wireless mesh networking technologies. He received his M.S. degree from University of Tokyo, Japan in 1989 in Mechanical Engineering, and M.S. degree from Stanford University, USA in 1996 in Electrical Engineering, respectively. He received his Ph.D from University of Tokyo, in 1998.
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Overview of RFID Technologies for Ubiquitous Services
Masashi Shimizu (NTT, Japan)
He received the B.E. and M.E. degrees in mechanical engineering from Keio University, Yokohama, in 1986, 1988 respectively. In 1988, he joined NTT Wireless System Laboratories, Yokosuka, Japan. He has been engaged in research on pointing control for deployable space antenna and surface error compensation by feed distribution control. His recent interest is active RFID and its applications. He is member IEICE and AUTO-ID Labs. Japan Research Fellow.
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Special Session 2:
Standardization, New Service and Computing Technologies for Ubiquitous Society
Friday, Sept.
30, 2005, 13:30 - 15:35, Room B1
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NGN Standardization in ITU-T FGNGN
Chul-Soo Kim (Charles Kim)
(INJE University, Korea)
Dr. Kim is a professor in the School of Computer Engineering of INJE University in GimHae, Korea. He received Ph.D. from the Pusan National University (Pusan, Korea) and worked for ETRI(Electronics and Telecommunication research Institute) from 1985 - 2000 as senior researcher for developing TDX exchange. Aside from the involvement in various national and international projects, his primary research interests include network protocols, traffic management, OAM issue, and NGN charging. He is a member of ITU-T SG3, SG11, SG13 and a Rapporteur of ATM Lite from 1998 - 2002, and CEO in WIZNET from 2000 - 2001. He is currently the chairperson of BcN Reference Model in Korea, and a Rapporteur of ITU-T SG3 NGN Charging.
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Octave Project of KT
Hong-Beom Cheon (KT, Korea)
Hongbeom Jeon is responsible for leading the KT Group strategy on technology and developing new business models. His role includes realizing the Octave project, which is to build highly controllable IP network and deliver value added application services to customers in KT. He had been working for technical specifications for procurement during past several years. He has experiences in developing ATM switching system, designing broadband networking architecture and planning for next generation network evolution.Dr. Jeon received his BS from Electrical Engineering from Seoul National University, and MS and Ph.D. degrees from the dept. of Electrical and Electronics Engineering of KAIST (Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology).
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Seamless Mobility – A Compelling Blending of Ubiquitous Computing and Autonomic Computing
John Strassner (Motorola Labs, USA)
John works as a Fellow of the Technical Staff and Director of Autonomic Computing in Motorola Labs, where he directs work in modeling, ontology and other forms of knowledge engineering, policy management, and autonomic computing. He was formally the Chief Strategy Officer of Intelliden Corporation and a Fellow at Cisco Systems. He has over 30 years of industry experience. Technical highlights include both hardware and software patents, as well as inventing a new paradigm (DEN, or Directory Enabled Networks) for managing and provisioning networks and networked applications. John currently chairs the Shared Information and Data model, Policy, and Metamodel working groups of the TMF, and is active in ETSI, ITU-T, and OSS/J. John received the 2005 Daniel A. Stokesbury memorial award from IEEE/IFIP in network management. He was elected as an Advisor to the TMF Board of Directors, and also serves on the Industry Advisory Board for University of California Davis. Finally, he is an Associate Professor at Waterford Institute of Technology, Ireland for Autonomic Computing and Computer Science.
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Network Operations Visibility - Real Time Dashboard that Connects the Field and Business Management
Yoshie Hashima (SL Japan, Japan)
Yoshie Hashima has been the President and Representative Director of SL Japan since its foundation in 1998, a Japan subsidiary of Sherrill-Lubinski (SL) Corporation in the USA – A leading provider of dynamic graphics for the monitoring and display of real-time information. For many years, she has been responsible for incorporating the visualization requirements from the Japanese major industries related to network management and other real-time operation monitoring systems, into SL’s product road maps and releases. She started her career as a software product management engineer at Yokogawa Hewlett-Packard (now Hewlett-Packard Japan) where she worked during the 1980’s as the leader of the company’s HP-UX (UNIX) and AI (Artificial Intelligence) marketing programs, which led her after 10 years, to manage independent software businesses in the 1990’s. She received her BA degree as a Physical Chemistry major from International Christian University transferring from University of California, Berkeley. She has been very active in the Japan Management Team (JMT) of TeleManagement Forum (TMF), reporting her experiences through SL’s contributions in the TMF activities.
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