The KAIST Networking Seminar Series (KNSS) was launched in 2004 and co-organized by Professor Sue Moon at KAIST CS and myself. Over the course of approximately a decade, the series hosted a wide range of distinguished speakers, whose invited talks are listed below. The seminar series was concluded after this period.
New Spectrum Opportunities for the Next Wireless Internet
Edward Knightly (Rice University, USA)
Gap Sense: Lightweight Coordination of Heterogeneous Wireless Devices
Kang G. Shin (University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, USA)
Competition over Popularity in Social Networks
Eitan Altman (INRIA, France)
Wireless Sensor Networks: Protocols. Optimization and Applications
Kin K. Leung (Imperial College, UK)
Energy-Efficient Congestion Control
Anwar Walid (Bell Laboratories, Alcatel-Lucent, USA)
Overview of Smart Grid IT research at ADSC
David Yau (Purdue University, USA)
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Ashutosh Sabharwal (Rice University, USA), June 2009
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Martin Haenggi (University of Notre Dame, USA), June 2009
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Laura Cottatellucci (Eurecom, France), June 2009
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Muriel Medard (MIT, USA), June 2009
Client-Assisted Management in Large-Scale Wireless Networks
Suman Banerjee (University of Wisconsin Madison, USA)
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Ratul Mahajan (Microsoft Research Redmond, USA)
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Nuno Martins (University of Maryland, USA)
Anonymity via Networks of Mixes
Venkat Anantharam (University of California Berkeley, USA)
The Content-Pipe Divide
Mung Chiang (Princeton University, USA)
How to Control Your DTN
Daniele Miorandi (CREATE-NET, Italy)
Multihop Wireless Networks: Capacity Limits and How to Approach Them
Leandros Tassilulas (Yale University, USA)
Modeling and Analysis pf P2P Based Content Distribution
Dah-Ming Chiu (Chinese University of Hong Kong, China)
Network Architecture Research Trends or The Internet Conspiracy
Jon Crowcroft (University of Cambridge, UK)
An Optimization Framework for Practical Multipath Routing in Wireless Mesh Networks
Bodizar Radunovic (Microsoft Research Cambridge, UK)
R-BGP: Staying Connected in a Connected World
Bruce Maggs (Carnegie Mellon University, USA)
Lessons Learned from Large Scale P2P Systems and How They Apply to The Future Internet
Pablo Rodriguez (Telefonica Research, Spain)
Spamscatter: Characterizing Internet Scam Hosting Infrastructure
Geoff Voelker (University of California San Diego, USA)
EU Funded Research in Situated and Autonomic Communications
Fabrizio Sestini (European Commission, EU)
Distributed Selfish Replication/Caching for Content Networks
Ioannis Stavrakakis (University of Athens, Greece)
Feedback Strategies for MIMO-OFDM Communication Systems
Robert W. Heath Jr. (University of Texas at Austin, USA), May 19, 2005
To Spread or Not To Spread in Wireless Ad Hoc Networks?
Jeffrey Andrews (University of Texas at Austin, USA), May 19, 2005
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Gustavo de Veciana (University of Texas at Austin, USA), May 19, 2005
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Sanjay Shakkottai (University of Texas at Austin, USA), May 19, 2005
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Sriram Vishwanath (University of Texas at Austin, USA), May 19, 2005
The Intricacies of Scheduling in Wireless Networks
Anthony Ephremides (University of Maryland, USA)
Cross-layer Design of Wireless Ad-hoc Networks: Is It Better to Be Robust, Quick, or Responsive?
Andrea Goldsmith (Stanford University, USA)
A Stochastic Network Calculus for Computer Networks
Jorg Liebeherr (University of Virginia, USA)
End-system Coordination for Collaborative and Cognitive Networking in a Multi-radio Environment
Qian Zhang (Microsoft Research Asia, China)
On the Robustness of Soft-State Protocols
Vishal Misra (Columbia University, USA)
Convergence in Ad Hoc Networking Protocols
Charles E. Perkins (Nokia, USA)
Global Ubiquitous Computing
Henning Schulzrinne (Columbia University, USA)
Encrypted Search
Steve Bellovin (AT&T, USA)
Why QoS Sucks
Christophe Diot (Intel Research Cambridge, UK)
Scalable Ubiquitous Computing Systems
Jon Crowcroft (University of Cambridge, UK)
Quality of Service for VoIP - Current State of the art and Some thorny problems
David Oran (Cisco Systems, USA)