Changes between Version 42 and Version 43 of GEC9DemoSummary
- Timestamp:
- 11/01/10 12:57:28 (13 years ago)
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GEC9DemoSummary
v42 v43 165 165 Offloading is a widely proposed solution for coping with the increased demands emerging mobile applications place on these resource constrained defines. However, existing systems have not been widely adopted because (i) they lack mechanisms to ensure data privacy, and (ii) they pay little attention to the decision of where to offload. We have developed an enterprise framework to opportunistically leverage available computational resources and offer both security guarantees and performance/energy improvements to smartphone users. Our demonstration showcases our central controller which assigns offloading tasks based on resource availability and an administrator specified security policy. We show security is maintained and available resources are maximally leveraged. 166 166 167 == OpenFlow Campus Trials at University of Wisconsin (OFUWI) == 168 169 ''Affiliation:'' University of Wisconsin 170 171 (Poster with optional demo via laptop display) The demo presents network coding processing on NetFPGA nodes as part of the GENI experiment project on "Mobile Gigabit Wireless Access". The demo will be conducted across three PCs in laboratory at UW-Madison. 167 Network Coding (poster with optional demo via laptop display): The demo presents network coding processing on NetFPGA nodes as part of the GENI experiment project on "Mobile Gigabit Wireless Access". The demo will be conducted across three PCs in laboratory at UW-Madison. 172 168 173 169 == Deploying a Vertically Integrated GENI “Island”: A Prototype GENI Control Plane (ORCA) for a Metro-Scale Optical Testbed (BEN) (ORCABEN) == … … 188 184 189 185 ''Demo Participants:'' John Hartman, Scott Baker [[BR]] 190 ''Affilation:'' University of Arizona 186 ''Affilation:'' University of Arizona 191 187 192 188 We will demo the Raven tool suite for experiment management, including the Raven tool for publishing an experiment's software and configuration packages, the Tempest tool for installing those packages on the proper slices and slivers, and the Owl tool for monitoring the experiment's progress and results.