Innovationszentrum
H
uman-Centric Communication

Veranstaltungen   |   Ausschreibungen   |   Auftakt   |   Keynote  



Auftaktveranstaltung IZ H-C3 - Keynote

Closing the Cyber-Physical Gap - The Internet of Every Thing
David E. Culler
University of California, Berkeley

=> Folien

Abstract
Today's communications networks allow us to connect almost everybody, but soon we will have the ability to connect almost every thing of value. This next tier of the internet will connect directly to the physical world, allowing a real-world web of physical information to stream up into out information processing enterprise where it can serve as a basis for decision making and action. Over the past decade, broad R&D efforts of many companies and universities have created the technolgical building blocks of this next tier. These include the integration of sensing, computing, and wireless communication into compact, low-power devices, the development of robust, communication-centric embedded operating systems, and the formulation of reliable, energy-efficient routing protocols. And, in the last two years these devices have become truely the front-tier of the Internet with 6LoWPAN carrying IPv6 in compact form. We now begin the next major stage of the journey - making sense out of a vast pool of sensory data. This will include extracting features, indexing, cataloging, cross referencing, and the many other kinds of processing that are today understood only for human generated information and highly staged physical settings.

CV
David Culler is a Professor of Computer Science at the University of California, Berkeley, CTO of Arch Rock Corporation, and Associate CIO for the College of Engineering. Professor Culler received his B.A. from U.C. Berkeley in 1980, and M.S. and Ph.D. from MIT in 1985 and 1989. He has been on the faculty at Berkeley since 1989, where he holds the Howard Friesen Chair. He is a member of the National Academy of Engineering, an ACM Fellow, an IEEE Fellow and was selected for ACMs Sigmod Outstanding Achievement Award, Scientific American's 'Top 50 Researchers', and Technology Review's '10 Technologies that Will Change the World'. He received the NSF Presidential Young Investigators award in 1990 and the NSF Presidential Faculty Fellowship in 1992. He was the Principal Investigator of the DARPA Network Embedded Systems Technology project that created the open platform for wireless sensor networks based on TinyOS, and was the founding Director of Intel Research, Berkeley. He has done seminal work on networks of small, embedded wireless devices, planetary-scale internet services, parallel computer architecture, parallel programming languages, and high performance communication, and including TinyOS, PlanetLab, Networks of Workstations (NOW), and Active Messages. He has served on Technical Advisory Boards for several companies, including Inktomi, ExpertCity (now CITRIX on-line), and DoCoMo USA.

Top


© H-C3 - - Impressum