Previous Seminars 

Please read Below for details on previous seminars hosted by or in conjunction with the Discipline of Information Technology.

Wednesday, 17th February 2016

Time and Venue 4pm in Room ENG-2002 (Engineering Building).

"Embedded Technologies for Smart Cities"

Speaker: Professor Pedro José Marrón

ABSTRACT:  In this talk, we will discuss the current status of Smart City technologies focusing on practical projects and implementations that require embedded devices. We will discuss several Smart City projects and the evolution of Location-Based-Services from their conception to their current form.

Speaker bio: Prof. Dr. Pedro Jose MARRON received his bachelor and master's degree in computer engineering from the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor in 1996 and 1998 and his Ph.D. from the University of Freiburg in 2001. After a professorship at the University of Bonn, he is currently full professor at the University of Duisburg-Essen, where he leads the "Networked Embedded Systems Group". Pedro Marron is also founder of Locoslab GmbH, an SME specialized in low cost solutions for localization in indoor environments and is also the president of UBICITEC, the European Center for Ubiquitous Technologies and Smart Cities, which counts with over 20 institutional partners from industry and academia.

 

Tuesday, November 10, 2015

Time and Venue 3pm in room IT125 (IT Building).

"Evolving Quantum Computers"

Speaker: Eric Ladizinsky (D-Wave Systems)

ABSTRACT: Quantum computation could revolutionize the information age and trigger as big an impact on society as the conventional computer. It promises to transform not just science and technology but our very understanding of reality.

At key points in human history, civilization took a leap forward because people discovered a new way of harnessing nature. Tool making, farming, the industrial revolution, and the information age were all triggered by the discovery of new ways of manipulating nature. By harnessing the Alice in Wonderland like e ects of quantum physics, Quantum computers could help realize true arti cial intelligence, o er insights into nanotechnology, teleportation and time travel, change the way chemists and biologists study the molecules of life and design drugs, and break supposedly unbreakable secret codes. . . . . . tasks well beyond the capabilities of any conceivable classical supercomputers.

D-Wave Systems has built a mini-Manhattan-Project like e ort bringing together a world class, interdisciplinary team, of scientists, engineers and applications experts all dedicated to making quantum computers a reality sooner rather than later ..and in just a few years D-Wave has created the rst, special purpose quantum processors in a scalable architecture. D-Wave's first generation quantum processors (now being explored by Google/NASA as well as Lockheed and USC) are showing signs of being at a "tipping point" .. matching state of the art solvers for some problems (and sometimes exceeding them) . . . portending
the exciting possibility that in just a few short years D-Wave processors could exceed the capabilities of any existing classical computers for certain classes of important problems in the areas of machine learning and optimization.

In this lecture, Eric Ladizinsky, Co-Founder and Chief Scientist at D-Wave will describe the basic ideas behind quantum computation , Dwave's unique approach, and the current status and future development of D-Wave's processors. Included will be answers to some frequently asked questions about the D-Wave processors, clarifying some common misconceptions about
quantum mechanics , quantum computing, and D-Wave quantum computers.

 

BIO: Eric Ladizinsky is a physicist, Co-founder, and Chief Scientist of D-Wave Systems. Prior to his involvement with D-Wave, Mr. Ladizinsky was a senior member of the technical sta at TRW's Superconducting Electronics Organization (SCEO) in which he contributed to building the world's most advanced Superconducting Integrated Circuit capability intended to enable superconducting supercomputers to extend Moore's Law beyond CMOS. In 2000, with the idea of creating a quantum computing mini-Manhattan-project like e ort, he conceived, proposed, won and ran a multi-million dollar, multi-institutional DARPA program to develop a prototype quantum computer using (macroscopic quantum) superconducting circuits. Frustrated with the pace of that e ort Mr. Ladizinsky, in 2004, teamed with D-Wave's original founder (Geordie Rose) to transform the
then primarily IP based company to a technology development company modeled on his mini-Manhattan-project vision. He is also responsible for designing the superconducting (SC) IC process that underlies the D-Wave quantum processors . . . and transferring that process to state of art semiconductor production facilities to create the most advanced SC IC process in the world.


http://www.dwavesys.com/

 

IT Research Seminar: GRC talks 2014/2015

‌‌‌IT Research Seminar

As always, everybody is welcome - please feel free to forward an invitation to anyone who might be interested in one or both of these talks.

-- Matthias

 

Friday, July 10, 2015

Venue IT203 (IT building)

Hamda Ajmal: "Using Data Analytics to Refine Structure of DBN Derived from Mathematical Models"

Abstract: Research has been done previously to develop probability-based framework which exploits existing domain knowledge in the form of mathematical models and uses real-time data streams to individualise model parameters. The focus of this current research is to design and develop new machine learning algorithms to inductively learn probabilistic models; specifically Dynamic Bayesian Networks (DBNs) by taking the DBN derived from a mathematical model a starting point. It is expected that the new learned structures will be able to perform better than the original ones.

 

Mahmoud Elbattah: "Multi-Perspective Modeling and Simulation Approach for Healthcare Planning Applied to Hip Fracture Care"

Abstract: The aging population of Ireland implies an inevitable need for patient-centred healthcare strategies that can keep pace with the consequent foreseen challenges. The research project aims at modeling the necessary components towards developing a nation-wide plan for the prevention and prediction of fall injuries and hip fractures, as an exemplar of elderly healthcare services. The project is being developed in collaboration with the AFFINITY (Activating Falls and Fracture Prevention in Ireland Together) program, overseen by the State Claims Agency and the HSE.

 

Both speakers are PhD students in the IT discipline, under the supervision of Dr Mike Madden (Hamda) and Dr Owen Molloy (Mahmoud).

IT Research Seminar: GRC talks 2014/2015

‌‌‌IT Research Seminar

"Optimizing the QoS of VoIP Applications over WiFi through the use of Synchronized Time".

Padraig O Flaithearta

Time: Thursday, 16th April 2015, 11am - 12pm

Venue: room IT125G (IT building, ground floor)

Abstract

The Internet has evolved to a stage where the number of Internet enabled devices exceeds the global population. With much of the required connectivity over wireless, contention for bandwidth is an important issue which has to be addressed. In this context, applications that have certain Quality of Service (QoS) requirements must be protected. WiFi-enabled mobile devices such as smartphones and tablets are commonly used by both personal and business users for Voice over IP (VoIP) communications, while also supporting conventional data applications such as email, file transfer and web access. Previous research has shown that time synchronized endpoints can provide better QoS by calculating accurate Mouth to Ear (M2E) delays, and using this information to better inform buffer playout strategies. The IEEE 802.11e protocol extends 802.11 by providing different traffic priorities based on traffic type. However, it cannot distinguish between traffic streams within the same category. This research has developed a real world proof-of-concept test-bed that utilizes an Access Point (AP)-centred mechanism for further distinguishing between streams within 802.11e categories. Results are presented that correlate well with previous NS-3 based simulations.

Everybody is welcome! Please feel free to forward this invitation to everyone who might be interested in the topic of this talk.

Optimizing the QoS of VoIP Applications over WiFi through the use of Synchronized Time

‌‌‌IT Research Seminar

"Optimizing the QoS of VoIP Applications over WiFi through the use of Synchronized Time".

Padraig O Flaithearta

Time: Thursday, 16th April 2015, 11am - 12pm

Venue: room IT125G (IT building, ground floor)

Abstract:

The Internet has evolved to a stage where the number of Internet enabled devices exceeds the global population. With much of the required connectivity over wireless, contention for bandwidth is an important issue which has to be addressed. In this context, applications that have certain Quality of Service (QoS) requirements must be protected. WiFi-enabled mobile devices such as smartphones and tablets are commonly used by both personal and business users for Voice over IP (VoIP) communications, while also supporting conventional data applications such as email, file transfer and web access. Previous research has shown that time synchronized endpoints can provide better QoS by calculating accurate Mouth to Ear (M2E) delays, and using this information to better inform buffer playout strategies. The IEEE 802.11e protocol extends 802.11 by providing different traffic priorities based on traffic type. However, it cannot distinguish between traffic streams within the same category. This research has developed a real world proof-of-concept test-bed that utilizes an Access Point (AP)-centred mechanism for further distinguishing between streams within 802.11e categories. Results are presented that correlate well with previous NS-3 based simulations.

Everybody is welcome! Please feel free to forward this invitation to everyone who might be interested in the topic of this talk.

Guerrilla Analytics

‌‌‌IT Research Seminar

Guerrilla Analytics

Dr Enda Ridge

Monday, 23rd February 2015, 3-4pm AC003 (D’Arcy Thompson Lecture Theatre) National University of Ireland, Galway

Doing data science is difficult. Projects are typically very dynamic with requirements that change as data understanding grows. The data itself arrives piecemeal, is added to, replaced, contains undiscovered flaws and comes from a variety of sources. Teams have mixed skill sets and tooling is often limited. Despite these disruptions, a data science team must get off the ground fast and begin demonstrating value with traceable, explainable, tested work products. This is when you need Guerrilla Analytics.

In this talk, you will learn about:

  • The Guerrilla Analytics Principles: simple rules of thumb for maintaining data provenance across the entire analytics life cycle from data extraction, through analysis to reporting.
  • Reproducible, traceable analytics: how to design and implement work products that are reproducible, testable and stand up to external scrutiny.
  • War stories: practice tips on actual project challenges encountered in consulting, pre-sales and research.
  • Preparing for battle: how to set up your team's analytics environment in terms of tooling, skill sets, workflows and conventions.

Presentation slides

http://www.slideshare.net/guerrillaanalytics/guerrilla-analytics-tactics-for-coping-with-data-science-reality

Speaker biography

Enda Ridge, PhD, is an accomplished data scientist whose experience spans consulting, pre-sales of analytics software and academic research. Enda has consulted to clients in the public and private sectors including financial services, insurance, audit and IT security. He is an expert in agile analytics for real world projects where data and requirements change often, and results must be traceable and auditable for high profile stakeholders including governments and regulators. 

Enda's PhD used Design of Experiments techniques to methodically evaluate algorithm performance with data analytics. He has authored or co-authored peer-reviewed research papers, is an invited contributor to edited books and has spoken at several analytics practitioner conferences in Europe and the United States. Enda holds a Bachelor’s degree in Mechanical Engineering and Master’s in Applied Computing from the NUI Galway and was awarded the National University of Ireland’s Travelling Studentship in Engineering. His PhD was awarded by the University of York, UK.

Time: Thursday, 6th February 2014, 11:00-12:00.
Location: Seminar Room THB-G010 (James Hardiman Library Extension)

Speaker: Catherine Cronin

Topic: Open education and digital identities

“I don’t think education is about centralized instruction anymore; rather, it is the process [of] establishing oneself as a node in a broad network of distributed creativity.”
- Joi Ito (2011)

This presentation will explore emerging open education practices and their effects not only on learning and teaching, but on our multiple and overlapping identities as networked scholars, educators, students, and citizens. We are in the early days of large-scale open education. The boundaries continue to blur between real and virtual spaces, formal and informal learning, educators and learners. Open, participatory and social media are enabling new ways of learning and new forms of education (MOOCs anyone?). While the traditional higher education model is focused on centralized expertise, the individual learner, and competition, higher education is currently engaged in the process, albeit unevenly, of moving towards more distributed expertise, facilitation of networked learners, and openness. This presentation will consider the concept of digital, networked identities in the context of open education, with a particular focus on us as educators and our interactions with students in both bounded and open online spaces.

Speaker bio: Catherine is academic coordinator of IT Online programmes and lecturer in Professional Skills in the BSc CS+IT programme. Catherine’s work focuses on online and open education, digital literacies, and social media in education. In addition to her teaching and research in HE, she works with schools and community groups exploring these areas. She is currently pursuing a Ph.D. in the area of open education and digital identity practices. She holds a B.Sc in Mechanical Engineering, M.Eng. in Systems Engineering, and M.A. in Women’s Studies where her dissertation topic was gender and technology.


http://about.me/catherinecronin

Time-Aware Systems and the Internet of Things (IoT)

‌‌‌IT Research Seminar

Time-Aware Systems and the Internet of Things (IoT)

Seminar Slides:Time-Aware Systems

Dr. Marc Weiss

Formerly NIST Colorado US

Friday 31st October 2014, 1pm-2pm, Room IT207 (IT Building)

Trillions of Euro in growth are forecast over the next decade as the Internet becomes Industrialized. Companies like GE, AT&T, Cisco, IBM Intel and others are investing in an "Industrial Internet." A Public Working Group with co-chairs from NIST, NUIG, and National Instruments is developing a Framework and Reference Architecture for Cyber-Physical Systems: networked systems that sense, compute and control. A new initiative has begun called Time-Aware Applications, Computers and Communications Systems (TAACCS). The U.S. National Science Foundation has funded research on Timing in the IoT called the Roseline Project. With computing and networking optimally developed to disconnect from the physical layer, optimal timing, which comes as a physical signal, is at odds with modern data systems. Yet, improved timing methods will be critical for this massive growth predicted. This seminar discusses the current state-of-the-art in timing systems, and a way forward to further develop Time-Awareness in crucial elements to make timing a first-class citizen in the IoT.

Dr. Marc Weiss has worked at NIST (the U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology--formerly NBS, the National Bureau of Standards) since 1979, specializing in time transfer techniques. Specific work has included: developing GPS since 1980, Relativity problems applied to clocks, optimal statistics for clocks, creating and leading a workshop on synchronization in telecom, and more recently focusing on sync and control systems in other networks. He received his Ph.D. in Mathematical-Physics from the University of Colorado in 1981.

See Figure 1 From http://www.ge.com/docs/chapters/Industrial_Internet.pdf

Seminars From 2013 and Earlier.....

 

Time: Thursday, 12th December 2013, 2pm

Speaker: Dr. Andrew Hines.

Title: "Warning: Quality of speech is not guaranteed"

Dr. Hines is a research fellow in the School of Engineering, Trinity College Dublin. He completed his PhD in 2011 in the Sigmedia research group having returned to academia in 2008. Prior to this, he worked in software engineering and was director of product development for a travel software solutions company and engineering manager in a financial software company.

Abstract: Computers are very good at monitoring CPU usage or flagging network conditions like packet loss, but struggle with holistic quality judgements. In contrast, people have an inherent ability to judge speech quality -- effortlessly synthesising factors from audibly annoying distortions to problems of intelligibility and listening effort. Objective measures of speech quality are being developed to predict these human expectations through estimating a quality of experience rather than quality of service. This has become more important as transmission channels for human speech communication have evolved moving from fixed line telephone to a greater reliance on mobile and VoIP for communications. This talk will explore methods of measuring speech intelligibility and speech quality and matching the model to the application.

Speaker: Menglin Li

Topic: "Effect of the clustering coefficient on the emergence of cooperation in spatial evolutionary games"

Abstract: The research explores the robustness of cooperation in a spatially organised population of agents participating in the N-player prisoner's dilemma. The agents are placed on graphs exhibiting different properties and the relationship between these properties and the robustness of cooperation is explained. In particular, we analyses the effect the clustering coefficient and the average node degree has on cooperation. In addition to theoretical analysis, rigorous experiments, involving the creation of graphs exhibiting certain desirable properties, are undertaken to explore the effect of the graph properties on the ability of cooperation to resist invasion.

Speaker: Sam Redfern

Topic: "Games AI in an Online Car Combat/Racing Game"

Abstract: This presentation will discuss key aspects of the Artificial Intelligence (A.I.) techniques underlying the author's online game "Darkwind: War on Wheels". Topics will include: the use of Genetic Algorithms for racing-line optimisation; the development of a novel, crowd-sourced approach to pathfinding; and, a first look at 2.6 million weaponsfire datapoints which have been gathered over the past 18 months, and some ideas about how these might be use to improve tactical decision-making.

Padraig O'Flaithearta

Title: Optimising QoS of VoIP over Wireless LANs via Synchronized Time

Abstract: As well as supporting conventional data applications such as email, file transfer and web access, mobile handheld devices that are WiFi-enabled are being used increasingly for Voice over IP (VoIP). Wireless LANs (WLANs) are thus increasingly required to support Quality of Service (QoS)-centric applications, which are delay sensitive and require a certain level of throughput. Whilst 802.11e goes some way towards meeting this need, severe congestion leading to unacceptable delays and packet loss can still occur. In the existing 802.11e standard, all VoIP sessions contend within the same prioritization Access Category (AC), despite having potentially varying M2E (Mouth to ear) delays. In this paper we show how synchronized time can help optimize 802.11e EDCA parameters in order to prioritize VoIP sessions with relatively large M2E delays and thus distinguish between VoIP sessions. Using the NS-3 Network Simulator, we quantify the benefits achievable through synchronization of an 802.11e network handling multiple VoIP calls in the presence of other TCP traffic. We also present our EDCA tuning algorithm which uses the E-Model R-Factor QoS rating mechanism as the basis of control.

Arjumand Younus

Title: CIRG at RepLab2012 Filtering Task: A Two-Pass Approach for Company Name Disambiguation in Tweets

Abstract: Using Twitter as an effective marketing tool has become a gold mine for companies interested in their online reputation. A quite significant research challenge related to the above issue is to disambiguate tweets with respect to company names. In fact, finding if a particular tweet is relevant or irrelevant to a company is an important task not satisfactorily solved yet; to address this issue in this paper we propose a Wikipedia-based two-pass algorithm. The experimental evaluations demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed approach.

Muhammad Atif Qureshi

Title: Concept Term Expansion Approach for Monitoring Reputation of Companies on Twitter

Abstract: The aim of our work is to easily monitor the reputation of a company in the Twittersphere. We propose a strategy that organizes a stream of tweets into different clusters based on the tweets topics. Furthermore, the obtained clusters are prioritized into different priority levels. A cluster with high priority represents a topic which may affect the reputation of a company, and that consequently deserves immediate attention. The evaluation results show that our method is competitive even though the method does not make use of any external knowledge resource.

Dr. Tamara Polajnar

JuSe: A Picture Dictionary Query System for Children

Dr. John Fitzpatrick

Performance Engineering Lab UCD

An Introduction to Femtocells

Dr. Frank Hopfgartner

CLARITY: Centre for Sensor Web Technologies DCU

Dr. Ronan Cummins

Measuring the Ability of Score Distributions to Model Relevance by Ronan Cummins

Abstract: Modelling the score distribution of documents returned from any information retrieval (IR) system is of both theoretical and practical importance. The goal of which is to be able to infer relevant and non-relevant documents based on their score to some degree of confidence.

In this paper, we show how the performance of mixtures of score distributions can be compared using inference of query performance as a measure of utility. We (1) outline methods which can directly calculate average precision from the parameters of a mixture distribution. We (2) empirically evaluate a number of mixtures for the task of inferring query performance, and show that the log-normal mixture can model more relevance information compared to other possible mixtures. Finally, (3) we perform an empirical analysis of the mixtures using the recall-fallout convexity hypothesis.

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Muhammad Atif Qureshi

Improving the Quality of Web Spam Filtering by Using Seed Refinement by Muhammad Atif Qureshi
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Arjumand Younus

Linking Social Web Data to News by Arjumand Younus
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Speaker: Dr. Donn Morrison (Digital Enterprise Research Institute)

Title: TagCaptcha: Annotating images with CAPTCHAs

Abstract: In this talk I will present a review of existing CAPTCHA technologies

(Completely Automated Public Turing test to tell Computers and Humans Apart) as well as a novel image-based CAPTCHA that is used to annotate images for use in a retrieval setting. The annotation system, called TagCaptcha, presents the user with a number of images that must be correctly labelled in order to pass the test. Given a partially annotated database used as a control set, the unannotated images will be incrementally labelled over time. I will examine robustness against automated attacks, report on usability results from a small user study and present sample annotations from the online demonstration system.

Dr. Ronan Cummins, postdoctoral researcher with the Information Retrieval Group, Glasgow University.

Dr. Cummins will present a talk on Information retrieval, and modern web search, which have been vibrant research areas for several decades now. In this talk, he examines the limits of the information retrieval process from three different perspectives, and shows that there is much room for improvement in the area of query construction. He will outline preliminary research that develops a number of query performance predictors that may aid in automatically navigating the query space.

Presented by Lourdes Beloqui Yuste and Dr. Hugh Melvin of the Performance Engineering Laboratory group, NUIG

'The transmission of multimedia traffic over IP Networks is increasing year on year. This is particularly the case for IPTV systems in Europe. IPTV differs from other TV delivery platforms by facilitating greater user interactivity and customisation. IPTV provides an excellent delivery system for different multimedia streams from multiple sources which can be integrated at the receiver end, making it possible to display content in a synchronised mode.
In particular, synchronisation of multiple multimedia acquires importance in sporting events where time is crucial. To accomplish this objective it is necessary to study how time and timing in multiple streams are conveyed over IPnetworks, from sender to receiver. This research seminar outlines some application scenarios and focuses on how time and timing are embedded within video MPEG standards as one of the most relevant multimedia types streamed over IP Networks"

Speaker: Dr. Marc Weiss, USA National Institute of Standards and Technology

Title: GNSS (Global Navigation Satellite System) Past, Present and Future

Abstract: We give an overview of the development, the current status and the future plans for GNSS including GPS, GLONASS, Galileo, Beidou/Compass, and QZSS. One of the greatest assets as well as the biggest problems for GPS is that it is extremely reliable. We list known failure modes. A brief discussion will be included of upcoming issues for GNSS such as location-based services, intelligent transportation systems, methods of assuring signal integrity, and methods for backing up GPS/GNSS. References will be made available.

Biography:

Dr. Weiss has worked at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST, formerly the National Bureau of Standards, NBS) in Boulder Colorado since 1978. He wrote the firmware for the NBS/GPS Time Transfer System for which he received the Applied Research Award of the NBS in 1983, along with the other principals. Dr. Weiss has been active in studying and developing time transfer systems especially using the Global Positioning System, for applications such as the generation of International Atomic Time. He also has led the NIST contract with the GPS program office for support of their clocks and timing systems.

In addition Dr. Weiss has specialized in new time scale algorithms and in synchronization in telecommunications systems. He has worked on problems with Relativity as they relate to GPS and to primary frequency standards. He has spear‑headed an annual Workshop on Synchronization in Telecommunications Systems (WSTS), which is now co‑sponsored each year by NIST, ATIS-OPTXS, the telecommunications synchronization standards committee, and by Telcordia. A sister conference, ITSF, was spawned from this, and held most recently in Dublin, November 2-4, 2010.

Marc Weiss received his B.S. degree from Valparaiso University, Valparaiso, Indiana in 1973. He received his M.S. degree in Mathematics in 1975, and his Ph.D. in Mathematical‑Physics in 1981, both from the University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado.

Speaker: Prof. Padhraic Smyth, Dept. Computer Science, University Of California, Irvine.

Title: Modeling Social Network Data Over Time Using Hidden Variable Models

Abstract:

This talk will discuss the problem of modeling and prediction of social network data over time, such as time-stamped emails or other communication events among a set of individuals. The talk will begin by motivating the problem of modeling such data, discussing for example the difference between discrete-time aggregated network representations and continuous-time event-based representations. We will review some of the basic strategies in building probabilistic models for such data, starting with models for static (non-temporal) data and moving to temporal models. In particular we will focus on hidden variable models which are emerging as a broadly applicable and flexible framework for network modeling. Relevant prior work in this area will be discussed as well as new ongoing work. We will also emphasize the importance of predictive evaluation in network modeling and discuss a number of issues that arise in this context. Experimental results will be presented comparing different modeling approaches using a variety of real-world event-based network data sets such as email networks.

Joint work with Arthur Asuncion, Chris DuBois, and Jimmy Foulds.

Biography:

Padhraic Smyth is a Professor in the Department of Computer Science and also serves as Director of the Center for Machine Learning and Intelligent Systems, both at the University of California, Irvine. He also has joint appointments in the Statistics and Biomedical Engineering Departments at UC Irvine. His research interests include machine learning, data mining, pattern recognition, and applied statistics. He was a recipient of best paper awards at the 2002 and 1997 ACM SIGKDD Conferences, received the NSF CAREER award in 1999, the ACM SIGKDD Innovation Award in 2009, and is a AAAI Fellow. He is co-author of Modeling the Internet and the Web: Probabilistic Methods and Algorithms (with Pierre Baldi and Paolo Frasconi in 2003), and was also co-author of Principles of Data Mining, MIT Press, August 2001, with David Hand and Heikki Mannila.

He received a first class honors degree in Electronic Engineering from University College Galway (National University of Ireland) in 1984, and the MSEE and PhD degrees from the Electrical Engineering Department at the California Institute of Technology in 1985 and 1988 respectively. From 1988 to 1996 he was a Technical Group Leader at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, and has been on the faculty at UC Irvine since 1996. In addition to his academic research he is also active in industry consulting, working with companies such as Netflix (on the Netflix Prize), eBay, Oracle, Yahoo!, Nokia, and AT&T.

Jonathan Shannon

"Computer Synchronisation over Wireless Networks"

Many real world applications require a sense of global time in order to carry out time sensitive processes but providing these applications with an accurate measure of global time is no easy task. A computer system’s clock is far from perfect and tends to drift from real time giving rise to significant clock errors. If computer clocks are to conform to some time standard they must be disciplined using some synchronisation technique. This is a challenging task when the computer systems are located across a dynamic and variable latency network but becomes even more challenging when the network contains wireless links.

Lourdes Beloqui

IPTV involves basically delivering TV services over an Internet Protocol (IP) connection. Although IPTV has not yet gained much ground in Ireland or UK where satellite/cable TV have a strong market share, it is well established in mainland Europe and elsewhere. User interactivity and customisation are key distinguishing features of IPTV that must be preserved to help distinguish it from current satellite/cable alternatives. With Satellite TV, a satellite broadcasts the same content down to the user’s Set-Top Box (STB), the user simply selects from this broadcasted content. The degree of real interaction is thus very limited as there is no communication in the uplink direction to the satellite. IPTV allows a user to interact with the IPTV provider in much the same way we browse the Internet.