期刊名称:IEEE INTERNET COMPUTING
期刊简介(About the journal)
投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)
编辑部信息(Editorial Board)
About the journal
IEEE Internet Computing is here to help computer scientists and engineers use the ever-expanding resources of the Internet. IC and IC Online publish the latest developments in Internet-based applications and supporting technologies and address the Internet's widening impact on engineering practice and society. The magazine targets the designers and developers of Internet-based applications and leading edge technologies -- the early adopters who develop tools for the web and the high-end users who want to use tools that exist on the web. IC's content reaches over 20,000 subscribers internationally, comprising leading researchers, developers and engineers (76% industry, 24% government/academia).
Instructions to Authors
IEEE Internet Computing is a bimonthly magazine about the engineering, science, and art of building (primarily programming) networks and networked applications. IC's audience primarily comprises practicing engineers and academics who are looking for material that introduces new technology and broadens familiarity with current topics.
Because a skilled developer at any architectural level must be familiar with the facilities and pragmatics of the levels below, as well as the requirements of higher levels, IC covers topics from just above the details of network protocols to just below the domain-specific details of applications.
We are also very interested in issues such as security and quality of service, which cut across layers.
IEEE Internet Computing is seeking papers for the following theme issues.
All submissions must be original manuscripts of less than 5,000 words, and must focus on Internet technologies and implementations. All manuscripts will be peer-reviewed.
Articles should be written for a readership consisting primarily of professional system and software designers and engineers (75% working in industry).
How to Submit a Manuscript
The IEEE Computer Society now employs a secure, Web-based manuscript submission and peer-reivew tracking system. Authors must use Manuscript Central to upload their submissions. First-time users must create a new account.
Please see our submission guidelines and requirements located in the Author Center.
Internationalizing the Web (March/April 2004)
Guest Editor Alex Franz Google Research Bob Frederking Carnegie Mellon University
Submission Deadline: 22 September 2003
The growth of the Internet, the global reach of corporations and academic institutions, and a world-wide user base have made the Web a truly international resource that knows no borders. The global Web requires technology and services that work across different languages, writing systems, and cultures.
This special issue will serve as a forum for academic and industrial researchers, practitioners, developers, and users to exchange ideas and results on issues related to the internationalization of the Web.
Relevant topics include, but are not limited to:
- Multilingual and cross-lingual information access
- Multilingual information extraction and data mining
- Multilingual information categorization, filtering, and routing
- Cross-lingual summarization and machine translation for the Web
- Multilingual Web information retrieval (crawling, indexing, results presentation)
- Multilingual Web search and beyond (query understanding, natural language interfaces)
- Internationalization and globalization methods for the Web
- Multilingual Web site management (infrastructure and interfaces)
- Multilingual database management
- Studies of global Web usage and growth
- Cross-cultural privacy and legal issues
To ensure timely review and publication, please let the guest editors know if you intend to submit a paper.
Submissions must still be sent to internet@computer.org.
Information Dissemination on the Web (May/June 2004)
Guest Editors Elisa Bertino University of Milan Krithi Ramamritham Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay
Submission Deadline: 31 October 2003
The Internet and World Wide Web have enabled different ways disseminating information to consumers. Besides the traditional approach, in which users explicitly request information when needed, more proactive approaches have been developed, in which the information sources automatically initiate the dissemination. Such new approaches, often combining aspects from push-based dissemination, have generated a lot of research and commercial activities — as well as controversy.
There are several outstanding issues in information dissemination, particularly those related to privacy and security. Other important issues are related to personalizing and adapting information for delivery, particularly according to contextual and historical information.
We invite researchers and practitioners to submit articles describing aspects of information dissemination technology and applications. Relevant topics include, but are not limited to
- User profiling for dissemination
- Privacy and security for dissemination systems
- Dissemination and notification services
- Publish–subscribe systems
- Information filtering and summarization
- Information transcoding and personalization
- Notification services
- Directories and metadirectories
- Proxy-based system architectures
- Network support
- Peer-to-peer systems
Wireless Grids (July/August 2004)
Guest Editors Scott Bradner Harvard University Lee McKnight Syracuse University
Submission Deadline: 2 December 2003
A computer grid is a collection of distributed resources shared among a group of users. Wireless grids range from low-power sensor networks to high-end mobile computers. The growth wireless services and technologies brings new challenges, including resource discovery, sharing in dynamic ad hoc network environments, routing, business models, and policy infrastructure. addition, issues such as middleware architectures for peer-topeer computing within wireless grids, security challenges WLANs, and innovative wireless grid applications are emerging topics of interest.
This special issue aims to introduce the technical, economic, business, and policy issues likely to arise as wireless grids progress from laboratory theory to market reality. We are interested in original work on wireless grid topics such as:
- Designs and implementations
- Power management
- Software radio
- Routing in ad hoc wireless grids
- Protocols for resource sharing
- Policy-based service, bandwidth management, and QoS control
- Trust and security mechanisms
- Mobility management
- Impact of hot-spot meshes on wireless grids
- Virtual markets
- Pricing, charging, and accounting
- Spectrum management and public policy issues
- Intellectual property
- Jurisdiction and geography
- Designs and implementations
- Power management
- Software radio
- Routing in ad hoc wireless grids
- Protocols for resource sharing
- Policy-based service, bandwidth management, and QoS control
- Trust and security mechanisms
- Mobility management
- Impact of hot-spot meshes on wireless grids
- Virtual markets
- Pricing, charging, and accounting
- Spectrum management and public policy issues
- Intellectual property
- Jurisdiction and geography
Measuring the Internet's Performance (September/October 2004)
Guest Editors Nevil Brownlee CAIDA and The University of Aucklan kc claffy CAIDA
Submission Deadline: 2 February 2004
Over the past ten years Internet service providers built out their networks in order to cope with what they perceived as steadily increasing user demands. Because of that rapid development, network measurement tended to have lower priority than immediate network operations, deployment, and upgrade concerns. Network measurement activities serve at least three communities. First, collected traffic engineering and performance data can provide practical support for network operators or third-party monitoring agents to ensure the quality of service users actually receive. Second, researchers continually seek data to facilitate insight into Internet routing and topology behavior, as well as to build better models of how various protocols and services behave on a local and global scale. Finally, better data can help users and local enterprise make better decisions regarding how to best evaluate their current network service and when/where to switch.
This special issue seeks submissions in all areas of network measurement, with an emphasis on how measurement has improved our understanding of Internet workload, toplogy, routing, performance, or scaling behavior.
We invite researchers and practitioners to submit original work on Internet measurement, especially studies that involve an open source or freely available tool and data from wide area or WAN access networks. Suitable topics include:
- Internet topology
- Routing system behavior
- Workload characterization in support of better traffic models
- Understanding protocol behavior
- Traffic flow behavior, selective flow monitoring
- Traffic characterization, visualization
- Monitoring/management of large-scale backbones
- Quality of Service monitoring
- Network data collection systems and tools which use them
Editorial Board
Editor in Chief Robert Filman—Research Institute for Advanced Computer Science/NASA Ames
Research Institute for Advanced Computer Science
NASA Ames Research Center, MS 269-2
Moffett Field, CA 94035
(650) 604-1250
FAX: (650) 604-3594
mailto:rfilman@arc.nasa.gov
Associate Editor in Chief Li Gong—Sun Microsystems
Editorial Board
· Jean Bacon—University of Cambridge
· Miro Benda—Amazon.com
· Elisa Bertino—University of Milano, Italy
· Scott Bradner—Harvard University
· Siobhán Clarke—Trinity College, Dublin
· Fred Douglis—IBM
· Stuart Feldman—IBM
· Ian Foster—University of Chicago / Argonne Labs
· Michael Huhns—University of South Carolina
· Len Kleinrock—UCLA
· G.S. Kuo—National Chengchi University, Taiwan IEEE Communications Society Liaison
· Doug Lea—State University of New York, Oswego
· Frank Maurer—University of Calgary
· Daniel A. Menascé—George Mason University
· Chris Metz—Cisco Systems
· Peter Norvig—Google
· Charles Petrie—Stanford University EIC Emeritus
· Krithi Ramamritham—ITT Bombay
· Ravi Sandhu—George Mason University
· Munindar Singh—North Carolina State University EIC Emeritus
· Craig Thompson—University of Arkansas
· Steve Vinoski—IONA Technologies
Publications Staff
· Steve Woods — Lead Editor
· Gene Smarte — Group Managing Editor
· Scott L. Andresen — Staff Editor
· Kathy Clark-Fisher — Staff Editor
· Jenny Ferrero — Staff Editor
· Monette Velasco — Production Assistant
· Hazel Kosky — Magazine Assistant
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