| C. Perkins, "Mobile networking in the Internet," ACM/Baltzer MONET, 3(4), 1998, pp. 319-334. |
....needs to be less aggressive, or our environment needs to reduce cell overlap, to reduce the roaming, reduce the resulting load on the network, and give better service to the user. Furthermore, since it is expensive to deploy a single campus wide subnet for the wireless network [6, 7] Mobile IP [11] or similar services are required to support seamless roaming. When we ignore any roams that occur within thirty seconds of a preceding roam, the maximum number of roams per session dropped Figure 10: syslog] Number of active cards per hour. The number of active cards for each hour of the day, ....
....stationary, leading to failures of IP traffic. Network designers should note the high variance in the activity of buildings, access points, and cards, over both time and space. We need new solutions to prevent cards from roaming too frequently, without sacrificing coverage. We need network layer [11] and application layer solutions to support multi subnet roaming. Finally, note that the traffic is not definitively dominated by outbound or inbound traffic. The ratio varied significantly from day to day, building to building, and protocol to protocol. This conclusion argues against any design ....
C. E. Perkins. Mobile networking in the Internet. Mobile Networks & Applications, 3(4):319--334, 1999.
....corporate network requirements in term of management. In Section 4, the principles of Policy Based Management are presented. Section 5 presents our proposal to manage corporate Ad Hoc Network. And finally a conclusion and intended future works. 2. Ad Hoc networks Mobile Ad hoc NETworks (MANET) [1][2] is a set of mobile terminal that communicate together using wireless communications and can set up dynamically arbitrary networks. If a terminal is connected to two spontaneous networks is can relay packets between these two networks to allow multi hop communications. Thus, each mobile ....
C.E. Perkins, "Mobile networking in the Internet," Mobile Networks and Applications, ACM/Baltzer, Vol. 3, 1998, p319-334.
....sessions on the internet, Ohta and Crowcroft [17] propose alternate static strategies, as the use of DNS as a means to disseminate core information. Basically, by adding the CORE resource record to DNS, one could set up all cores needed for any given multicast group. As pointed by Perkins [18], the intrinsic lack of hierarchy in ad hoc networks may make DNS as it is today a hard fit for such networks. But still some name or session directory service is likely to be available. CAMP makes use of the idea of making multicast group information available through such services, and has two ....
C.E. Perkins, "Mobile networking in the Internet," Mobile Networks and Applications, ACM/Baltzer, Vol. 3, 1998, p319-334..
No context found.
C. Perkins, "Mobile networking in the Internet," ACM/Baltzer MONET, 3(4), 1998, pp. 319-334.
No context found.
C.E. Perkins, "Mobile networking in the internet ", Mobile Networks and Applications, vol. 3, no. 4, January 1999, pp. 319-334.
No context found.
C. Perkins, "Mobile networking in the Internet," ACM/Baltzer MONET, 3(4), 1998, pp. 319-334.
No context found.
C.E. Perkins, "Mobile networking in the Internet," ACM Mobile Networks and Applications Vol. 3, 1998
No context found.
C. Perkins, "Mobile networking in the Internet," ACM/Baltzer MONET, 3(4), 1998, pp. 319-334.
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