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Challenges in Ubiquitous Data Management
Michael Franklin
UC Berkeley
2:00pm, December 8, 2000, LH5
AetherSystems Distinguished Lecture Series in Mobile and Wireless Systems
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Lecture Abstract |
Advances in ubiquitous computing infrastructure are arriving on a daily basis
and by all accounts this level of activity will continue for the foreseeable
future. Such infrastructure includes mobile devices, sensors, and wireless
networks all backed by an increasingly sophisticated federation of fixed
networks and data centers. Ubiquitous computing promises unprecedented access,
convenience, and efficiency but in order to realize this potential, data
management technology must be adapted to deal with the limitations as well as
the tremendous opportunities of large-scale ubiquitous data access. Challenges
exist in core database areas such as systems architecture, query processing,
and transaction management, as well as in emerging areas such as information
dissemination and user-centered, context-aware data delivery. In this talk I
will outline several of these challenges, and describe on-going work in two
related projects that address these issues: 1) Telegraph, an adaptive,
data-flow query processing engine, and 2) the Data Centers project on
profile-driven data management.
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Author's Biography |
Michael Franklin is an Associate Professor of Computer Science
at the University of California, Berkeley where his research
focuses on the architecture and performance of distributed
databases and information systems. Previously, Dr. Franklin was at
the University of Maryland, College Park, where he led the
development of the DIMSUM flexible query processing architecture
and was a co-developer of the Broadcast Disks data dissemination paradigm.
He is Editor-In-Chief of the ACM SIGMOD Record, is an editor of ACM
Computing Surveys, and is Program Co-Chair for the 2nd International
Conference on Mobile Data Management to be held in Hong Kong this January.
He currently serves on the Technology Advisory Boards of several Bay Area
start ups, including: AppStream, CommonObject, Propel, and RightOrder.
He is a 1995 recipient of the NSF CAREER award and a 2000 recipient of
an Okawa Foundation research grant.
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Recorded Lecture Links |
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here for Directions to UMBC Campus
AetherSystems Distinguished Lecture Series in Mobile and Wireless Systems
For more information contact Dr. Anupam Joshi via e-mail at joshi@csee.umbc.edu or by phone at (410) 455 2590.
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This page was last updated on Thursday, 04-Jan-2001 15:27:51 EST.
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