Riassunto:
TheInternetisamassiveglobalnetworkofover700millionusersanditisadding users at the rate of 300,000 per day. This large, distributed, and everchanging network poses a challenge to researchers: How does one study, model, or und- stand such a decentralized, constantly evolving entity? Research in large-scale networks seeks to address this question, and the unique nature of these networks calls for a range of techniques from a host of disciplines. The workshop Com- natorial and Algorithmic Aspects of Networking and the Internet (CAAN 2004) provided a forum for the exchange of ideas on these topics. The primary goals of the workshop were to bring together a diverse cro- section of researchers in an already scattered and distinct community and also to provide a snapshot of the cutting-edge research in this ?eld. We succeeded in these goals: among the participants were mathematicians, computer scientists in theory and algorithms, computer scientists in networks, physicists, and en- neers, as well as researchers from Europe and North America, participants from industry and academia, students, and established researchers; and among the papers were some new and surprising results as well as some introductions to the foundations of the ?eld. Theworkshopprogramfeatured12peer-reviewedpapersbracketedbytwoho- longinvitedsurveytalks anopeningtalkbyAshishGoelandaclosingtalkby- dreiBroder.TopicscoveredbythetalksrangedfromtheWebgraphtogametheory tostringmatching,allinthecontextoflarge-scalenetworks.Thisvolumecollects togetherthetalksdeliveredattheworkshopalongwithanumberofsurveyarticles toroundoutthepresentationandgiveacomprehensiveintroductiontothetopic.
Contenuti:
Workshop Proceedings.- Aggregating Correlated Data in Sensor Networks.- The Efficiency of Optimal Taxes.- Congestion Games, Load Balancing, and Price of Anarchy.- Bandwidth Allocation in Networks: A Single Dual Update Subroutine for Multiple Objectives.- Limits and Power Laws of Models for the Web Graph and Other Networked Information Spaces.- Cuts and Disjoint Paths in the Valley-Free Path Model of Internet BGP Routing.- A Distributed Algorithm to Find Hamiltonian Cycles in Random Graphs.- String Matching on the Internet.- k-Robust Single-Message Transmission.- Stable Local Scheduling Algorithms With Low Complexity and Without Speedup for a Network of Input-Buffered Switches.- The External Network Problem with Edge- or Arc-Connectivity Requirements.- Bipartite Graphs as Models of Complex Networks.- Traceroute-Like Exploration of Unknown Networks: A Statistical Analysis.- Invited Talk: The Many Wonders of the Web Graph.- Survey Articles.- Algorithmic Foundations of the Internet:Foreword.- A Survey of Models of the Web Graph.- You Can Get There from Here: Routing in the Internet.- Search Engines and Web Information Retrieval.- Algorithmic Foundations of the Internet: Roundup.
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