Difference between revisions of "QTNA 2009"

From Openresearch
Jump to: navigation, search
(Event created)
 
(vREAGdphEgDjBB)
 
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Event
+
This atrcile keeps it real, no doubt.
| Acronym = QTNA 2009
 
| Title = 4th International Conference on Queueing Theory and Network Applications
 
| Type = Conference
 
| Series =
 
| Field = Computer networking
 
| Homepage = www.qtna2009.org
 
| Start date = Jul 29, 2009
 
| End date =  Jul 31, 2009
 
| City= Singapore
 
| State =
 
| Country = Singapore
 
| Abstract deadline =
 
| Submission deadline = Apr 12, 2009
 
| Notification =
 
| Camera ready = Jun 30, 2009
 
}}
 
 
 
<pre>
 
The Internet is evolving at a frenetic pace, driven by exciting developments (in search, business, games, telephony, social networking, etc.) and in turn driving changes in traditional telecommunication networks. There is also an explosive proliferation of wireless devices (cellphones, sensors, etc.) that require network support. These have led to a rapid growth in the design and development of network-related hardware and software.
 
 
 
Networks thus provide a rich source of problems for theoretical research. Conversely, they can benefit from the knowledge derived from theory. This conference seeks to facilitate such cross fertilization between theory and application.
 
 
 
QTNA2009 aims to achieve impact through focus, in two ways: Each submission must promote queueing theory or related techniques, and demonstrate a relationship between theory and its application; any topic that satisfies these two requirements would be of interest. This conference is thus focused, yet broad.
 
 
 
QTNA started as an Asia-Pacific Symposium, and the first three meetings were in Korea (2006), Japan (2007) and Taiwan (2008). The success of these symposia led to its elevation to an International Conference for 2009.
 
 
 
All authors are required to register the title and abstract of the paper by 2 April 2009. The paper must have an introduction that explains how it is relevant to the focus for QTNA2009. For example, a paper on queueing theory may explain how the results are relevant to network applications, and a paper on network applications may explain how queueing theory influences its design. Any double submissions detected will be immediately rejected.
 
 
Accepted papers will be published by the ACM and archived in the ACM Digital Library.
 
 
 
Submission instructions can be found on the conference website.
 
</pre>This CfP was obtained from [http://www.wikicfp.com/cfp/servlet/event.showcfp?eventid=4882&amp;copyownerid=3548 WikiCFP]
 

Latest revision as of 09:52, 23 July 2011

This atrcile keeps it real, no doubt.