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Otto Spaniol

    April 11, 1942 – December 10, 2023
    Trends in distributed systems
    Aachen Workshop Trends in Distributed Systems '96
    Promotion tut not: Innovationsmotor "Graduiertenkolleg"
    Proceedings of the First International Workshop Mobile Services and Personalized Environments
    High speed networking, III
    High speed local area networks
    • 1996

      Trends in distributed systems

      • 289 pages
      • 11 hours of reading

      This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the International Workshop on Trends in Distributed Systems, TreDS '96, held in Aachen, Germany, in October 1996. The 21 revised full papers presented were carefully selected from a total of 51 submissions; also included is an invited paper by Sape Mullender and Paul Sijben on quality of service in distributed multimedia systems. Beyond the topic of the CORBA architecture and implementations, the book addresses interoperability issues, formal methods, multimedia communication services, distributed object systems, coordination protocols, reuse, workflow management, etc.

      Trends in distributed systems
    • 1991
    • 1987

      High speed local area networks

      • 286 pages
      • 11 hours of reading

      The workshop from which these papers originate intended to present the state of the art within the High Speed Local Area Networks (HSLAN) area as well as to give directions for the solution of unsolved problems. Some of the most important questions - Which applications for HSLAN? - When will products appear on the market at a more reasonable price? - Which performance is required for connecting stations i.e. will the limited terminal capacity result in serious bottlenecks (as in some established lower speed LAN)? - Are HSLAN the adequate solution for LAN subnetwork interconnection? - Will interconnected HSLAN extend to metropolitan area networks (MAN)? - Will wideband ISDN and its associated PBX make HSLAN concepts obsolete? Results showed that there is enormous progress in concept development and in understanding of specific problems arising in the HSLAN environment. Performance aspects have become much clearer, too.

      High speed local area networks