Call For Papers
Here you can download the Call For Papers in PDF.
The International Workshop on Community Networks and Bottom-up-Broadband (CNBuB 2014) is co-located with the 10th IEEE International Conference on Wireless and Mobile Computing, Networking and Communications on the 8th October 2014.
Community networking, together with the Bottom-up-Broadband initiative, is an emerging model for the Future Internet across Europe and beyond where communities of citizens build, operate and own open IP-based networks, a key infrastructure for individual and collective digital participation. Although community based networks often extend or complement the coverage of networks of commercial ISPs, they differ in several key aspects: There is usually no central authority that is responsible for a precise network planning. Support is decentralized and open, provided by the community. The network nodes are often inexpensive off the shelf equipment and the network elements exhibit a high degree of heterogeneity in the hardware, software, and capacity. The network infrastructure belongs to the user and is shared to build the network. The network is very dynamic: the number of nodes may rapidly grow and change as new members join the network, or when nodes overload or fail. These community networks are usually built with low cost point-to-point wireless links, MANET networks, and an increasing presence of optical fibre links.
In these scenarios, the networking and systems research community has the opportunity to contribute with more sustainable, adaptive, scalable, integrated, autonomic solutions for those common traits in community networks. For participation in the workshop as an author presenting a paper please refer to the author instructions.
The CNBuB 2014 workshop aims at serving as a meeting point for exchanging ideas, discussing solutions, and sharing experiences among researchers and practitioners, both from academia and community networks. The workshop solicits original papers addressing theoretical and practical challenges of community networks and bottom-up-broadband, including insights from other disciplines that contribute to the socio-technical-economic understanding of the community network operation and growth.
Topics of interest for CNBuB 2014 include, but are not limited to:
| Wireless mesh networks |
| Wireless MAC and routing protocols |
| Services and applications |
| Cross-layer designs |
| Hybrid networks with wireless and optical fibre links |
| Tools for bootstrapping and running community networks |
| Clouds for community networks |
| Interoperation of cloud-based community services |
| Performance modelling and evaluation |
| Quality of service provisioning |
| Quality of experience in community networks |
| Community network security and privacy |
| Large-scale management and data collection infrastructures |
| Incentive models for encouraging users and businesses to participate in community networks |
| Socio-technical-economic models for community networks |
Organized by
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CONFINE |
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