Standard
Would self-organized or self-managed networks lead to improved QoS? /
Hutchison, David; Hjálmtýsson, Gísli; Sterbenz, James P. G. et al.
Quality of Service – IWQoS 2005 13th International Workshop, IWQoS 2005, Passau, Germany, June 21-23, 2005. Proceedings. ed. / Hermann de Meer ; Nina Bhatti. Berlin: Springer Verlag, 2005. p. 17-18 (Lecture notes in Computer Science; Vol. 3552).
Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSN › Conference contribution/Paper › peer-review
Harvard
Hutchison, D, Hjálmtýsson, G, Sterbenz, JPG, Ventre, G & Vicente, J 2005,
Would self-organized or self-managed networks lead to improved QoS? in H de Meer & N Bhatti (eds),
Quality of Service – IWQoS 2005 13th International Workshop, IWQoS 2005, Passau, Germany, June 21-23, 2005. Proceedings. Lecture notes in Computer Science, vol. 3552, Springer Verlag, Berlin, pp. 17-18.
https://doi.org/10.1007/11499169_3
APA
Hutchison, D., Hjálmtýsson, G., Sterbenz, J. P. G., Ventre, G., & Vicente, J. (2005).
Would self-organized or self-managed networks lead to improved QoS? In H. de Meer , & N. Bhatti (Eds.),
Quality of Service – IWQoS 2005 13th International Workshop, IWQoS 2005, Passau, Germany, June 21-23, 2005. Proceedings (pp. 17-18). (Lecture notes in Computer Science; Vol. 3552). Springer Verlag.
https://doi.org/10.1007/11499169_3
Vancouver
Hutchison D, Hjálmtýsson G, Sterbenz JPG, Ventre G, Vicente J.
Would self-organized or self-managed networks lead to improved QoS? In de Meer H, Bhatti N, editors, Quality of Service – IWQoS 2005 13th International Workshop, IWQoS 2005, Passau, Germany, June 21-23, 2005. Proceedings. Berlin: Springer Verlag. 2005. p. 17-18. (Lecture notes in Computer Science). doi: 10.1007/11499169_3
Author
Bibtex
@inproceedings{ffe3d3c008354bf489d12ef962b30e9b,
title = "Would self-organized or self-managed networks lead to improved QoS?",
abstract = "Quality of Service (QoS) is an often misunderstood term. The International Standardisation (ISO) efforts of the early 1990s on a QoS Framework showed that there are several QoS aspects, the most significant being performance, availability and security. Ultimately, the most important consideration is that the service provided (by whatever system is providing it) is for the benefit of the user. Most of the research effort in the subsequent decade has been on the performance aspect (including, rightly, perceptual QoS), but unfortunately the other aspects have largely been ignored or overlooked. Both availability and security have a central role to play in ensuring the overall QoS of a networked system. Should either of these be compromised, there will be a fairly direct and negative impact on the system performance: this is a particularly topical issue.",
author = "David Hutchison and G{\'i}sli Hj{\'a}lmt{\'y}sson and Sterbenz, {James P. G.} and Giorgio Ventre and John Vicente",
year = "2005",
doi = "10.1007/11499169_3",
language = "English",
isbn = "978-3-540-26294-7",
series = "Lecture notes in Computer Science",
publisher = "Springer Verlag",
pages = "17--18",
editor = "{de Meer }, {Hermann } and Nina Bhatti",
booktitle = "Quality of Service – IWQoS 2005 13th International Workshop, IWQoS 2005, Passau, Germany, June 21-23, 2005. Proceedings",
}
RIS
TY - GEN
T1 - Would self-organized or self-managed networks lead to improved QoS?
AU - Hutchison, David
AU - Hjálmtýsson, Gísli
AU - Sterbenz, James P. G.
AU - Ventre, Giorgio
AU - Vicente, John
PY - 2005
Y1 - 2005
N2 - Quality of Service (QoS) is an often misunderstood term. The International Standardisation (ISO) efforts of the early 1990s on a QoS Framework showed that there are several QoS aspects, the most significant being performance, availability and security. Ultimately, the most important consideration is that the service provided (by whatever system is providing it) is for the benefit of the user. Most of the research effort in the subsequent decade has been on the performance aspect (including, rightly, perceptual QoS), but unfortunately the other aspects have largely been ignored or overlooked. Both availability and security have a central role to play in ensuring the overall QoS of a networked system. Should either of these be compromised, there will be a fairly direct and negative impact on the system performance: this is a particularly topical issue.
AB - Quality of Service (QoS) is an often misunderstood term. The International Standardisation (ISO) efforts of the early 1990s on a QoS Framework showed that there are several QoS aspects, the most significant being performance, availability and security. Ultimately, the most important consideration is that the service provided (by whatever system is providing it) is for the benefit of the user. Most of the research effort in the subsequent decade has been on the performance aspect (including, rightly, perceptual QoS), but unfortunately the other aspects have largely been ignored or overlooked. Both availability and security have a central role to play in ensuring the overall QoS of a networked system. Should either of these be compromised, there will be a fairly direct and negative impact on the system performance: this is a particularly topical issue.
U2 - 10.1007/11499169_3
DO - 10.1007/11499169_3
M3 - Conference contribution/Paper
SN - 978-3-540-26294-7
T3 - Lecture notes in Computer Science
SP - 17
EP - 18
BT - Quality of Service – IWQoS 2005 13th International Workshop, IWQoS 2005, Passau, Germany, June 21-23, 2005. Proceedings
A2 - de Meer , Hermann
A2 - Bhatti, Nina
PB - Springer Verlag
CY - Berlin
ER -