Keynotes


Keynote 1: Wed., Sept. 21, 2011, 13:15-13:55 Room 401
Taiwan's Energy Situations and Solutions
Prof. Si-Chen Lee, President of NTU and president of CIEE
Si-Chen Lee received a Bachelor’s degree in Electrical Engineering from the National Taiwan University (NTU) in 1974 and a PhD in Electrical Engineering from Stanford University in 1981. He joined the Department of Electrical Engineering, NTU in 1982 as a visiting associate professor, and is a professor now. He served as the chairman of the Department from 1988 to 1992 and the Dean of Academic Affairs from 1996 to 2002. He is now the President of NTU.
Professor Lee’s research has been remarkably distinctive. It led to the innovative development of ledge-type heterojunction bipolar transistor (HBT) in 1985 and has promoted HBT technology into an industrial application which is now used in every mobile phone. For this achievement, he received various awards and titles of recognition. He is an IEEE Fellow, and currently serves as the President of the Chinese Institute of Electrical Engineering. He also received the IEEE Third Millennium Medal for outstanding achievements and contributions in the area of semiconductor devices in 2000.
Professor Lee’s research has been remarkably distinctive. It led to the innovative development of ledge-type heterojunction bipolar transistor (HBT) in 1985 and has promoted HBT technology into an industrial application which is now used in every mobile phone. For this achievement, he received various awards and titles of recognition. He is an IEEE Fellow, and currently serves as the President of the Chinese Institute of Electrical Engineering. He also received the IEEE Third Millennium Medal for outstanding achievements and contributions in the area of semiconductor devices in 2000.
He is especially distinguished in his public service, raising the National Taiwan University to a globally competitive status during his tenure of presidency from 2005 until the present day. Under his leadership the University administration has gone through a comprehensive restructuring, focused on excellent research and teaching.
He is especially distinguished in his public service, raising the National Taiwan University to a globally competitive status during his tenure of presidency from 2005 until the present day. Under his leadership the University administration has gone through a comprehensive restructuring, focused on excellent research and teaching
 
Keynote 2: Thurs., Sept. 22, 2011, 09:00-10:00 Room 401
Transformation with Cloud Computing
Dr. Yen-Sung Lee, Senior Vice President of CHT
Dr. Lee has been Senior Vice President of Chunghwa Telecom since September 2008.
He received the PH.D. degree in Computer Science from National Chiao-Tung University in 1994.
Prior to his current position, Dr. Lee was the President of Enterprise Business Group of the Company since 2007. Dr. Lee also served as the President of Telecommunication Laboratories of the Company from April 2004 to January 2007, the President of Data Business Group (HiNet) of the Company from January 2002 to April 2004, and the Senior Managing Director of Information Division of Chunghwa Telecom from July 1996 to January 2002.
With his extensive experiences and long involvement in the development and management of telecom industry, Dr. Lee is now the Chair of Cloud Service Working Group of CCAT (Cloud Computing Association in Taiwan).
 
Keynote 3: Thurs., Sept. 22, 2011, 09:00-10:00 Room 401
Security Issues and Research Challenges in Public Cloud Computing
Dr. Seong-Choon Lee, Senior Vice President of Network R&D Lab in KT
Dr. SEONG-CHOON LEE is senior vice president of Network R&D Laboratory in KT. He has been with KT since 1985.
He began his KT career in the Quality Assurance Center where he spent six years, followed by radio communication technology and business including digital broadcasting satellite and digital wireless communication.
From 2002 to now he has been responsible for the development of WiBro based femtocell and repeater, mobile video communication, future wireless internet etc.
He is a member of IEEE 802.16 and WiMAX Forum, and also served as vice president of the WiBro standardization project group in TTA, Korea.
He holds B.S, M.S., and Ph.D. degrees from Seoul National University, Korea, all in electrical engineering.
 

Keynote 4: Fri., Sept. 23, 2011, 09:00-10:00 Room 401
Cloud Computing and New Generation Network toward ICT Paradigm Shift

Prof. Tomonori Aoyama, Professor of Keio University
Tomonori Aoyama received the B.E., M.E. and Dr. Eng. from the University of Tokyo, Japan, in 1967, 1969 and 1991, respectively. Since he joined NTT Public Corporation in 1969, he has been engaged in R&D on communication networks and systems in the NTT Laboratories. From 1973 to 1974, he stayed in MIT as a visiting scientist. In 1995 he became Director of the NTT Optical Network Systems Laboratories. In 1997, he joined the University of Tokyo as a professor. In April 2006, he moved to Keio University, and is currently Professor of Graduate School of Media and Governance. He also serve as Program Coordinator for New Generation Network in National Institute of Information & Communications Technology(NICT).
Dr. Aoyama is a member of Science Council of Japan, an IEEE Fellow and an IEICE (Institute of Electronics, Information and Communication Engineers) Fellow.
He is serving as Chair of the Global Inter Cloud Technology Forum (GICTF), Chair of Photonic Internet Forum (PIF), Vice-chair of Ubiquitous Networking Forum and New Generation Network Promotion Forum. He is also serving as President of NPO, the Digital Cinema Consortium of Japan (DCCJ).
 

Keynote 5: Fri., Sept. 23, 2011, 09:00-10:00 Room 401
Semantic, Context-Aware Management

Mr. Joel J. Fleck , Chief Architect, Head of Standards, HP Software and Solutions
Joel J. Fleck II (joel.fleck@hp.com) is Chief Architect in the HP Software CTO organization and also serves as Head of Standards for HP Software. His primary research focus is on architectures for adaptive management of distributed systems and policy based management.
Recent research activities have involved the definition of a distributed adaptive management architecture for SOA and Cloud environments using a model-driven approach starting with business vocabularies and rules, the use of semantic reasoning across ontologies to verify feasibility of inter-domain relationships, and the development of Traceability Maps, a tool which graphically represents the relationships between software artifacts throughout the software lifecycle.
Prior to joining Hewlett-Packard, he spent 16 years at Bell Laboratories and Bell Communications Research researching distributed management systems, multimedia networks and automated test systems, and at Stochos, Inc. as a software architect and designer.
Joel is a frequent speaker at conferences and has published numerous papers on the subject of distributed architectures, model-driven architectures and management of distributed architectures. Joel serves on the Board of Directors and in lead executive positions for a number of international standards bodies. He also serves as Hewlett-Packard’s principal representative to the Federated Autonomic Management of End-to-end Communications (FAME) project sponsored by the Science Foundation of Ireland (SFI) which partners leading Irish Universities with key industrial partners.
Joel graduated from the University of Michigan with a MS in Industrial and Operations Engineering and the University of Vermont with a BS in Computer Science. He is Distinguished Fellow of the TeleManagement Forum.