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Subject: [Dbworld] WWW2005 CALL FOR PANELS - msg#00113
List: db.dbworld
WWW2005 CALL FOR PANELS
The Fourteenth International World Wide Web Conference
May 10-14, 2005, Chiba, Japan
http://www2005.org
Panel submission deadline: November 8, 2004
WWW2005 will be held in Chiba, Japan at Nippon Convention Center (or
better known as Makuhari Messe). The technical program will include
refereed paper presentations, special interest tracks, plenary sessions,
panels, and poster sessions. Tutorials and workshops will precede the
main program, and a Developers Day will follow, which will be devoted to
in-depth technical sessions designed specifically for web developers.
The main program includes a PANELS track that runs in parallel with the
paper presentations tracks and the W3C track.
IMPORTANT DATES FOR WWW2005 PANELS:
Panel proposals deadline: November 8, 2004
Acceptance notification: January 31, 2005
Conference: May 10-14, 2005
Call for Participation:
WWW2005 panels should focus on emerging technologies, controversial
issues, or unsolved problems in the World Wide Web community to
stimulate lively, thoughtful, and sometimes provocative discussions. We
expect the panelists to actively engage the audience and help them
broaden their understanding of the issues.
Particular areas of interest include, but are not limited to:
* E-commerce and E-payments
* E-Learning
* Emerging XML Standards
* Emerging P2P Technologies and Services
* Mobile Multimedia Services
* Mobile Blogs
* Multi-modal User Interfaces
* New Search Technologies and Web Mining
* Next Generation Internet (such as PlanetLab)
* Middleware
* Security and Privacy
* Semantic Web Technologies
* Web Engineering
* Web Services
Panel Proposal Submission Procedure:
Submissions should include:
* Panel title
* Panel objective, scope, and target audience
* Extended abstract
* Panel format
* The names and affiliations of the panelists
* Panel length (preferably 90 minutes)
Please append short bios for the moderator and each panelist, from whom
prior approval to participate should be obtained. The panel proposal
should also indicate whether other similar panels have been formed
recently in other conferences or workshops. If so, what is the
difference? Proposals should be 4-6 pages long and can be submitted in
either HTML or PDF. Please send proposals for WWW2005 Panels to
panels-1eeBaZ1dCANAfugRpC6u6w@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Panel Formats:
Panels should last 90 minutes and typically include three to five
panelists plus a moderator. Be creative about the panel format. A
typical format includes:
* moderator introduction
* brief position statements by domain experts (it's essential that
this part does not exceed a total of 30 minutes divided by all
panelists)
* discussions (at least 40 minutes divided by all participants)
* closing statements from panelists and moderator
You are also welcome to use various forms of multimedia presentations to
help engage the audience.
WWW2005 Panels Organizers:
Panels Chair: Robin Chen (AT&T Labs),
chen-7WuBAv+fczCkVZkbZjKZZw@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Deputy Chair: Ian Horrocks (University of Manchester),
horrocks-I9UBhjeNIXeFxr2TtlUqVg@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Deputy Chair: Irwin King (Chinese University of Hong Kong),
king-zYqom8TFGCeYwlIiWXL0Uw@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
_______________________________________________
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[Dbworld] Call for Papers- International Workshop on Ubiquitous Computing IWUC'2005
[Apologies if you have received multiple postings]
CALL FOR PAPERS
________________________________________________________________
International Workshop on Ubiquitous Computing (IWUC 2005)
May 24-25, 2005 - Miami, USA
In conjunction with the Seventh International Conference on Enterprise
Information Systems - ICEIS 2005 (http://www.iceis.org/)
________________________________________________________________
Workshop Background and Goals
The development and availability of new computing and communication devices,
and the increased connectivity between these devices, thanks to wired and
wireless networks, are enabling new opportunities for people to perform their
operations anywhere and anytime. Furthermore, due to the high acceptance rate
of such devices by the user community, it is expected that these devices will
become so pervasive that most users will take them for granted. Generally known
as Ubiquitous Computing (UC), the vision of UC is to push computational
services out of conventional desktop interfaces into environments characterized
by transparent forms of interactivity.
Despite the growing interest in UC, there is still some progress to be made
before UC shifts from the research mode to the commercial and intensive use
modes. The support technologies, however, are improving at an impressive pace.
Most of the research and development activities are currently aimed at
improving the devices themselves and the technologies these devices will use to
communicate. At present, the main use of mobile devices is still
voice-oriented, but several indicators show that this is changing. 3G networks
(e.g., GPRS, UMTS) and recent development of communication and presentation
protocols (e.g., XML, WAP) are being combined to give users a high-quality
experience of data-centric services.
Besides the central role that hardware infrastructure plays in the expansion
and penetration of UC, other issues still need to be tackled to better assist
developers of UC applications. Developers are put on the front line of
satisfying the promise of businesses and service providers for delivering
Internet content to mobile devices. Indeed, the fact that an application for
mobile users has different requirements, calls for new techniques to identify
and specify these requirements. With regard to users, it is expected that they
will be frequently engaged in complex operations such as searching the net for
better business opportunities. Therefore, their association with intelligent
components, to act as proxies, is deemed appropriate. UC environments of the
near future will be populated by a large number of computing devices, spread
across the network, and often invisible. These devices need to be coordinated
for better interactions. Devices, whether carried on by people or e!
mbedded into other systems (within the home or at other sites), will
constitute a global networking infrastructure -- and likely to provide a new
level of openness and dynamics. These interactions raise many new issues that
draw upon existing research areas, as well as introduce new research and
development challenges, in technical areas (such as device design, wireless
communication, location sensing, etc), psychology (privacy concerns, attention
focus, multi-person interaction, etc), and design (direct interaction, work
patterns, etc).
Existing global efforts in Grid Computing also shares some similarities with
the aims of this workshop, although Grid computing at present is restricted to
high-end computational resources. Making the Grid more open, and accessible to
a wider range of users will also require the need to address similar
challenges.
Topics of interest
In this workshop, we aim to identify ecent and significant developments in the
general area of ubiquitous computing. Topics of interests include, but are not
limited to:
- Mobile computing vs. Pervasive computing vs. Ubiquitous computing.
- Design methodologies and evaluation techniques.
- New interfaces and modes of interactions between people and ubiquitous
computing devices, applications or environments.
- Grid Computing technologies for Wireless networks
- Context awareness.
- Agent-based ubiquitous applications.
- Services for ubiquitous applications.
- Middleware for service discovery.
- Integration of wired and wireless networks.
- Enabling technologies such as Bluetooth, 802.11, etc.
- Security and privacy issues.
- Visionary future scenarios.
- Mobile services
- Performance tuning of mobile applications
Format of the Workshop
The workshop will consist of oral presentations. The proceedings of the
workshop will be published in the form of a book by ICEIS.
Submission of Papers
There will be two types of papers: long (approx. 5000 words) and short (approx.
2000 words). Furthermore, a keynote speaker and a discussion panel are planned.
Postscript/RTF versions of the manuscript should be submitted thru ICEIS
web-based paper submission procedure.
Important Dates
Full paper submission: January 25, 2005
Author notification: March 4, 2005
Camera-ready paper submission: March 18, 2005
Co-Chairs:
Soraya Kouadri Mostéfaoui (primary contact)
Dep. of Computer Science
University of Fribourg
Chemin Du Musée 03 CH-1700
Phone: (41) 26 300 84 72
Fax: (41) 26 300 97 31
Zakaria Maamar
College of ISs
Zayed University
P.O. Box 19282, Dubai U.A.E
Phone: (971) 4 2082 461
Fax: (971) 4 2640 854
Workshop Program Committee:
A. Elgorashi, George Washington University, USA
J. Shepherdson, British Telecommunications plc, UK
M. Brian Blake, George Washington University, USA
B. König-Ries, TU München, Germany
W. Binder, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Switzerland
S. Kouadri Mostéfaoui, University of Fribourg, Switzerland
G. Kouadri Mostéfaoui, University of Fribourg, Switzerland
P. Mihailescu, British Telecommunications plc, UK
A. Gómez Skarmeta, Universidad de Murcia, Spain
S. Dustdar, Vienna University of Technology, Austria
P. Bellavista, Università degli Studi di Bologna, Italy
K. Drira, LAAS, Toulouse, France
J. Al-Muhtadi, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA
L. Esmahi, Athabasca University, Canada
L. Ruf, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich, Switzerland
H. Ammar, West Virginia University, USA
Q. Z. Sheng, the University of New South Wales, Australia
N.C. Narendra, IBM Software Labs, India
C. van Aart, Acklin agent based support, The Netherlands
A. Karageorgos, University of Thessaly, Greece
E. Aimeur, University of Montreal, Canada
M. Berger, Siemens Corporate Technology, Germany
M. Ouzzani, Purdue University, USA
A. Messer, Samsung, USA
R. A. Haraty, Lebanese American University, Lebanon
M. Khedr, University of Ottawa, Canada
T.Nadour, ENST, France
T. Ahmed, LABRI, Bordeaux, France
A. Zeid, American University of Cairo, Egypt
A. Lahlou, IUT Velizy, France
D. Meddour, France Telecom R&D, France
F. Belghoul, Eurecom Mobile Communication, France
O. Fouial, ENST, France
S. Kurkovsky, Columbus State University, USA
Venue
The workshop will be held at Deauville Beach Resort in Miami, USA.
Registration Information
To attend the workshop you need to register at http://www.iceis.org
Secretariat
ICEIS 2005 Secretariat - International Workshop on Ubiquitous Computing (IWUC
2005)
E-mail: workshops-7evW/5PWwybYtjvyW6yDsg@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Web site: http://www.iceis.org
_______________________________________________
Please do not post msgs that are not relevant to the database community at
large. Go to www.cs.wisc.edu/dbworld for guidelines and posting forms.
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[Dbworld] Last CFP for a Special Issue on Distributed Data Management in JDIM
Last Call for Papers for a Special Issue in
Journal of Digital Information Management
http://www.dirf.org/jdim/aim.htm
Special Issue on Distributed Data
Management
Guest Editor:
Richard CHBEIR,
LE2I-CNRS, Bourgogne
University, France
************************************************
Submission deadline: October 30, 2004
************************************************
Objectives
Since the last decade, the
evolution and successful development of a wide range of devices connected via
various networks have improved and increased the use of distributed
heterogeneous data in many application areas such as medicine, surveillance,
cartography, meteorology, security, visual data communications, e-learning, etc.
This infrastructure aggregation presents a number of challenges where new
appropriate techniques are required to store, extract, organize, interpret,
secure, optimize and utilize useful information from these large shared
distributed and heterogeneous data. Several research topics are emerging. In
this special issue, we are looking for original papers that cover current issues and shape future directions of distributed
heterogeneous data management
research.
Topics
Areas of interests include, but
not limited to:
Distributed, Virtual and P2P Databases
Distributed Information Retrieval
Multimedia Data Management
Semi
and Unstructured Datasets Distribution and
Clustering
Concurrency Control and Data Recoverability
Issues
Replication Management
Distributed and Network Shared Memory
Mobile and Wireless Database Management
Process
Migration and Load Balancing
Distributed Query Processing and Optimization
Security and Trust in Peer-To-Peer
Systems
QoS in P2P Systems and Services
Important
Dates
Submission deadline:
October 30, 2004
Notification of paper acceptance:
January 30, 2005
Final version due:
March 15, 2005
Tentative publication date:
May, 2005
Submission
Categories and Guidelines
Authors are invited to submit
research contributions representing original previously unpublished work. All
submissions will undergo a blind peer review by at least three external expert
reviewers to ensure a high standard of quality.
Referees will consider originality, significance,
technical soundness, and clarity of exposition.
Submissions
in all categories must follow the following guidelines:
Papers should be no more than 5000 words in
length. The format should be
for A4 paper with a Times Roman font set at 12
pt with 1.5 line spacing. Electronic submissions of
Microsoft Word or PDF documents are encouraged as email attachments to
richard.chbeir-YsxpE2y/cofpyegr6ZeaHg@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx.
The submission should also include every author(s) name, address, phone & fax numbers, e-mail,
and full affiliation. All correspondence and acknowledgment will be sent to
the first author unless otherwise specified.
The number of
submissions by an author (including joint authorship) is strictly limited to a
maximum of two submissions.
IMPORTANT NOTE: If you do not receive an e-mail
acknowledgment within two weeks after your electronic submissions, please
contact the guest editor immediately.
Guest Editor
Dr. Richard CHBEIRLE2I - Bourgogne
UniversityDepartment of
Computer ScienceAile de l`ingenieur21000 Dijon FRANCE
Email: richard.chbeir-YsxpE2y/cofpyegr6ZeaHg@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxWeb:
http://lubi.u-bourgogne.fr:9090
About the
Journal
The JOURNAL OF DIGITAL
INFORMATION MANAGEMENT is a quarterly journal in digital information science and
technology. It concentrates on all aspects of digital information management and
broadly covers digital information processing, digital content management,
digital world structuring, digital libraries, metadata, information management
and other related fields. It is an international peer reviewed journal contains
original research papers, ongoing research, technology, reviews, reports of progress, short notes and forthcoming events. It
would act as a portal to the digital information world.
Further details of this journal can be found at: http://www.dirf.org/jdim/
_______________________________________________
Please do not post msgs that are not relevant to the database community at
large. Go to www.cs.wisc.edu/dbworld for guidelines and posting forms.
To unsubscribe, go to http://lists.cs.wisc.edu/mailman/listinfo/dbworld
Previous Message by Thread:
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[Dbworld] Call for Papers- International Workshop on Ubiquitous Computing IWUC'2005
[Apologies if you have received multiple postings]
CALL FOR PAPERS
________________________________________________________________
International Workshop on Ubiquitous Computing (IWUC 2005)
May 24-25, 2005 - Miami, USA
In conjunction with the Seventh International Conference on Enterprise
Information Systems - ICEIS 2005 (http://www.iceis.org/)
________________________________________________________________
Workshop Background and Goals
The development and availability of new computing and communication devices,
and the increased connectivity between these devices, thanks to wired and
wireless networks, are enabling new opportunities for people to perform their
operations anywhere and anytime. Furthermore, due to the high acceptance rate
of such devices by the user community, it is expected that these devices will
become so pervasive that most users will take them for granted. Generally known
as Ubiquitous Computing (UC), the vision of UC is to push computational
services out of conventional desktop interfaces into environments characterized
by transparent forms of interactivity.
Despite the growing interest in UC, there is still some progress to be made
before UC shifts from the research mode to the commercial and intensive use
modes. The support technologies, however, are improving at an impressive pace.
Most of the research and development activities are currently aimed at
improving the devices themselves and the technologies these devices will use to
communicate. At present, the main use of mobile devices is still
voice-oriented, but several indicators show that this is changing. 3G networks
(e.g., GPRS, UMTS) and recent development of communication and presentation
protocols (e.g., XML, WAP) are being combined to give users a high-quality
experience of data-centric services.
Besides the central role that hardware infrastructure plays in the expansion
and penetration of UC, other issues still need to be tackled to better assist
developers of UC applications. Developers are put on the front line of
satisfying the promise of businesses and service providers for delivering
Internet content to mobile devices. Indeed, the fact that an application for
mobile users has different requirements, calls for new techniques to identify
and specify these requirements. With regard to users, it is expected that they
will be frequently engaged in complex operations such as searching the net for
better business opportunities. Therefore, their association with intelligent
components, to act as proxies, is deemed appropriate. UC environments of the
near future will be populated by a large number of computing devices, spread
across the network, and often invisible. These devices need to be coordinated
for better interactions. Devices, whether carried on by people or e!
mbedded into other systems (within the home or at other sites), will
constitute a global networking infrastructure -- and likely to provide a new
level of openness and dynamics. These interactions raise many new issues that
draw upon existing research areas, as well as introduce new research and
development challenges, in technical areas (such as device design, wireless
communication, location sensing, etc), psychology (privacy concerns, attention
focus, multi-person interaction, etc), and design (direct interaction, work
patterns, etc).
Existing global efforts in Grid Computing also shares some similarities with
the aims of this workshop, although Grid computing at present is restricted to
high-end computational resources. Making the Grid more open, and accessible to
a wider range of users will also require the need to address similar
challenges.
Topics of interest
In this workshop, we aim to identify ecent and significant developments in the
general area of ubiquitous computing. Topics of interests include, but are not
limited to:
- Mobile computing vs. Pervasive computing vs. Ubiquitous computing.
- Design methodologies and evaluation techniques.
- New interfaces and modes of interactions between people and ubiquitous
computing devices, applications or environments.
- Grid Computing technologies for Wireless networks
- Context awareness.
- Agent-based ubiquitous applications.
- Services for ubiquitous applications.
- Middleware for service discovery.
- Integration of wired and wireless networks.
- Enabling technologies such as Bluetooth, 802.11, etc.
- Security and privacy issues.
- Visionary future scenarios.
- Mobile services
- Performance tuning of mobile applications
Format of the Workshop
The workshop will consist of oral presentations. The proceedings of the
workshop will be published in the form of a book by ICEIS.
Submission of Papers
There will be two types of papers: long (approx. 5000 words) and short (approx.
2000 words). Furthermore, a keynote speaker and a discussion panel are planned.
Postscript/RTF versions of the manuscript should be submitted thru ICEIS
web-based paper submission procedure.
Important Dates
Full paper submission: January 25, 2005
Author notification: March 4, 2005
Camera-ready paper submission: March 18, 2005
Co-Chairs:
Soraya Kouadri Mostéfaoui (primary contact)
Dep. of Computer Science
University of Fribourg
Chemin Du Musée 03 CH-1700
Phone: (41) 26 300 84 72
Fax: (41) 26 300 97 31
Zakaria Maamar
College of ISs
Zayed University
P.O. Box 19282, Dubai U.A.E
Phone: (971) 4 2082 461
Fax: (971) 4 2640 854
Workshop Program Committee:
A. Elgorashi, George Washington University, USA
J. Shepherdson, British Telecommunications plc, UK
M. Brian Blake, George Washington University, USA
B. König-Ries, TU München, Germany
W. Binder, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Switzerland
S. Kouadri Mostéfaoui, University of Fribourg, Switzerland
G. Kouadri Mostéfaoui, University of Fribourg, Switzerland
P. Mihailescu, British Telecommunications plc, UK
A. Gómez Skarmeta, Universidad de Murcia, Spain
S. Dustdar, Vienna University of Technology, Austria
P. Bellavista, Università degli Studi di Bologna, Italy
K. Drira, LAAS, Toulouse, France
J. Al-Muhtadi, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA
L. Esmahi, Athabasca University, Canada
L. Ruf, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich, Switzerland
H. Ammar, West Virginia University, USA
Q. Z. Sheng, the University of New South Wales, Australia
N.C. Narendra, IBM Software Labs, India
C. van Aart, Acklin agent based support, The Netherlands
A. Karageorgos, University of Thessaly, Greece
E. Aimeur, University of Montreal, Canada
M. Berger, Siemens Corporate Technology, Germany
M. Ouzzani, Purdue University, USA
A. Messer, Samsung, USA
R. A. Haraty, Lebanese American University, Lebanon
M. Khedr, University of Ottawa, Canada
T.Nadour, ENST, France
T. Ahmed, LABRI, Bordeaux, France
A. Zeid, American University of Cairo, Egypt
A. Lahlou, IUT Velizy, France
D. Meddour, France Telecom R&D, France
F. Belghoul, Eurecom Mobile Communication, France
O. Fouial, ENST, France
S. Kurkovsky, Columbus State University, USA
Venue
The workshop will be held at Deauville Beach Resort in Miami, USA.
Registration Information
To attend the workshop you need to register at http://www.iceis.org
Secretariat
ICEIS 2005 Secretariat - International Workshop on Ubiquitous Computing (IWUC
2005)
E-mail: workshops-7evW/5PWwybYtjvyW6yDsg@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Web site: http://www.iceis.org
_______________________________________________
Please do not post msgs that are not relevant to the database community at
large. Go to www.cs.wisc.edu/dbworld for guidelines and posting forms.
To unsubscribe, go to http://lists.cs.wisc.edu/mailman/listinfo/dbworld
Next Message by Thread:
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[Dbworld] CFP - 2nd International Workshop on Ubiquitous Computing
Workshop Background and Goals
The development and availability of new computing and communication devices,
and the increased connectivity between these devices, thanks to wired and
wireless networks, are enabling new opportunities for people to perform their
operations anywhere and anytime. Furthermore, due to the high acceptance rate
of such devices by the user community, it is expected that these devices will
become so pervasive that most users will take them for granted. Generally known
as Ubiquitous Computing (UC), the vision of UC is to push computational
services out of conventional desktop interfaces into environments characterized
by transparent forms of interactivity.
Despite the growing interest in UC, there is still some progress to be made
before UC shifts from the research mode to the commercial and intensive use
modes. The support technologies, however, are improving at an impressive pace.
Most of the research and development activities are currently aimed at
improving the devices themselves and the technologies these devices will use to
communicate. At present, the main use of mobile devices is still
voice-oriented, but several indicators show that this is changing. 3G networks
(e.g., GPRS, UMTS) and recent development of communication and presentation
protocols (e.g., XML, WAP) are being combined to give users a high-quality
experience of data-centric services.
Besides the central role that hardware infrastructure plays in the expansion
and penetration of UC, other issues still need to be tackled to better assist
developers of UC applications. Developers are put on the front line of
satisfying the promise of businesses and service providers for delivering
Internet content to mobile devices. Indeed, the fact that an application for
mobile users has different requirements, calls for new techniques to identify
and specify these requirements. With regard to users, it is expected that they
will be frequently engaged in complex operations such as searching the net for
better business opportunities. Therefore, their association with intelligent
components, to act as proxies, is deemed appropriate. UC environments of the
near future will be populated by a large number of computing devices, spread
across the network, and often invisible. These devices need to be coordinated
for better interactions. Devices, whether carried on by people or e!
mbedded into other systems (within the home or at other sites), will
constitute a global networking infrastructure -- and likely to provide a new
level of openness and dynamics. These interactions raise many new issues that
draw upon existing research areas, as well as introduce new research and
development challenges, in technical areas (such as device design, wireless
communication, location sensing, etc), psychology (privacy concerns, attention
focus, multi-person interaction, etc), and design (direct interaction, work
patterns, etc).
Existing global efforts in Grid Computing also shares some similarities with
the aims of this workshop, although Grid computing at present is restricted to
high-end computational resources. Making the Grid more open, and accessible to
a wider range of users will also require the need to address similar
challenges.
Topics of interest
In this workshop, we aim to identify ecent and significant developments in the
general area of ubiquitous computing. Topics of interests include, but are not
limited to:
- Mobile computing vs. Pervasive computing vs. Ubiquitous computing.
- Design methodologies and evaluation techniques.
- New interfaces and modes of interactions between people and ubiquitous
computing devices, applications or environments.
- Grid Computing technologies for Wireless networks
- Context awareness.
- Agent-based ubiquitous applications.
- Services for ubiquitous applications.
- Middleware for service discovery.
- Integration of wired and wireless networks.
- Enabling technologies such as Bluetooth, 802.11, etc.
- Security and privacy issues.
- Visionary future scenarios.
- Mobile services
- Performance tuning of mobile applications
Format of the Workshop
The workshop will consist of oral presentations. The proceedings of the
workshop will be published in the form of a book by ICEIS.
Submission of Papers
There will be two types of papers: long (approx. 5000 words) and short (approx.
2000 words). Furthermore, a keynote speaker and a discussion panel are planned.
Postscript/RTF versions of the manuscript should be submitted thru ICEIS
web-based paper submission procedure.
Important Dates
Full paper submission: January 25, 2005
Author notification: March 4, 2005
Camera-ready paper submission: March 18, 2005
Co-Chairs:
Soraya Kouadri Mostéfaoui (primary contact)
Dep. of Computer Science
University of Fribourg
Chemin Du Musée 03 CH-1700
Phone: (41) 26 300 84 72
Fax: (41) 26 300 97 31
Zakaria Maamar
College of Information Systems
Zayed University
P.O. Box 19282, Dubai U.A.E
Phone: (971) 4 2082 461
Fax: (971) 4 2640 854
Workshop Program Committee:
A. Elgorashi, George Washington University, USA
J. Shepherdson, British Telecommunications plc, UK
M. Brian Blake, George Washington University, USA
B. König-Ries, TU München, Germany
W. Binder, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, Switzerland
S. Kouadri Mostéfaoui, University of Fribourg, Switzerland
G. Kouadri Mostéfaoui, University of Fribourg, Switzerland
P. Mihailescu, British Telecommunications plc, UK
A. Gómez Skarmeta, Universidad de Murcia, Spain
S. Dustdar, Vienna University of Technology, Austria
P. Bellavista, Università degli Studi di Bologna, Italy
K. Drira, LAAS, Toulouse, France
J. Al-Muhtadi, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA
L. Esmahi, Athabasca University, Canada
L. Ruf, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich, Switzerland
H. Ammar, West Virginia University, USA
Q. Z. Sheng, the University of New South Wales, Australia
N.C. Narendra, IBM Software Labs, India
C. van Aart, Acklin agent based support, The Netherlands
A. Karageorgos, University of Thessaly, Greece
E. Aimeur, University of Montreal, Canada
M. Berger, Siemens Corporate Technology, Germany
M. Ouzzani, Purdue University, USA
A. Messer, Samsung, USA
R. A. Haraty, Lebanese American University, Lebanon
M. Khedr, University of Ottawa, Canada
T.Nadour, ENST, France
T. Ahmed, LABRI, Bordeaux, France
A. Zeid, American University of Cairo, Egypt
A. Lahlou, IUT Velizy, France
D. Meddour, France Telecom R&D, France
F. Belghoul, Eurecom Mobile Communication, France
O. Fouial, ENST, France
S. Kurkovsky, Columbus State University, USA
Venue
The workshop will be held at Deauville Beach Resort in Miami, USA.
Registration Information
To attend the workshop you need to register at http://www.iceis.org
Secretariat
ICEIS 2005 Secretariat - International Workshop on Ubiquitous Computing (IWUC
2005)
E-mail: workshops-7evW/5PWwybYtjvyW6yDsg@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Web site: http://www.iceis.org
_______________________________________________
Please do not post msgs that are not relevant to the database community at
large. Go to www.cs.wisc.edu/dbworld for guidelines and posting forms.
To unsubscribe, go to http://lists.cs.wisc.edu/mailman/listinfo/dbworld
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