Title: Adventures in TomorrowLand
1Adventures in TomorrowLand
- Randy H. Katz
- United Microelectronics Corporation Distinguished
Professor and Chair, Electrical Engineering and
Computer Science Department - University of California, Berkeley
- Berkeley, CA 94720-1776
2Berkeley Tradition of Experimental Computing
Systems Research
3Large-Scale Experiment
- Deploy/use pervasive computing infrastructure in
Soda Hall - Evaluate impact on 200 person CS Division
community - Information Broadcast Channels
- Seminar announcements
- Lecture content
- News/sports/weather/stock ticker
- Shared Information
- Calendars
- Room reservations
- Collaborative note-taking brainstorming
- Smart spaces and device control
- Controlling your environment as a new app
4Large-Scale Experiment
- Extensive trace collection to drive future
designs - User mobility
- Logging of PDA usage
- Comprehensive user studies
- (PDA-based) questionnaires
- Research interests of key faculty members
- User interface and other systems courses
- Strong tradition of project-oriented courses
- Student projects yielding innovative applications
and services, extending the infrastructure - Large user community motivates students
5New Application Service Discovery
- Adapt device functionality to services in new
environment - Beacon augmentation
- Adaptive user interfaces
- Composed behaviors
- Deployment within Soda classrooms and MASH CoLab
- Light, video, slide projector, VCR, audio
receiver, camera, monitor, A/V switcher control - Local DNS/NTP/SMTP servers, HTTP proxies,
RTP/multicast gateways - Audited printer access
- Interactive floor maps, protocols for advertising
object locations - Coarse-grained user tracking
Universal Interaction?
6Experimental Testbed
Fax
IBM WorkPad
Image/OCR
Text
Speech
MC-16
Ericsson
CF788
Motorola Pagewriter 2000
WLAN
Pager
306 Soda
405 Soda
326 Soda Colab
GSM BTS
Millennium Cluster
Smart Spaces Personal Information Management
Millennium Cluster
7TomorrowLand
- Cooperative buildings flexible/dynamic
environment providing cooperative workspaces
supporting/augmenting human communications and
collaboration - 5000 sq. ft. in prototype pod space next door
to Soda Hall - To house Internet systems researchers faculty,
students, support staff, industrial visitors - Flexible floor plan to enhance collaboration
- Reconfigurable architectural spaces/roll around
furniture - Wireless connectivity for computers and phones
- Minimal physical building infrastructure enables
experimentation with new building-scale services - Smart spaces and computer-integrated
environmental controls - Prototype for new on-campus buildings
8Project Synergies
TranSend TACC Model Wireless Access
NINJA Scalable, Secure Services Computation in
the Network Smart Spaces as an
app Event-Response Programmable Access
BARWAN Wireless Overlay Networks Scalable Proxies
RTPGateway Service Discovery
vic, vat, wb
MASH Collaboration Applications Active Services
NOW/Millennium Computing Platform
MASH Toolkit Active Services Model
9Mission Statement Internet-Scale Systems
Research Group
- Lead the evolution of the Internet through
fundamental protocol and network-centric systems
research - Ground research in real-world prototypes that are
deployed across diverse user communities - Unify on-going and future research projects
- Facilitate technology transfer and
standardization - Work closely with industrial partners in an open
laboratory environment
10Strategy
- Leverage interdisciplinary systems expertise in
network-based applications, scalable services,
network-connected computing platforms - Work collaboratively across applications, OS,
networks, architecture - Interact closely with industry, to obtain early
access to leading edge technologies and
facilitate tech transfer - Cultivate ties with Bay Area network and systems
research community
11Internet-Scale Systems
- Extremely large, complex, distributed,
heterogeneous, with continuous and rapid
introduction of new technologies - Feasible architectures
- Decentralized, scalable algorithms
- Dynamically deployed agents where they are needed
- Incremental processing/communications growth
- Cross-layer protocol design and optimization
- Prototyping, deployment, evaluation,
experimentation
12Benefits of Sponsorship
- Involvement with outstanding Berkeley graduate
students - Participation in a portfolio of large-scale,
inter-disciplinary, pre-competitive research
efforts with only modest investment, leveraging
investment of other industrial partners - Access to all ISRG-developed software,
prototypes, simulation tools, and testbeds - Early access to groups research results through
on-campus participation and retreats - Support the expansion of cadre of researchers
with expertise in Internet-scale systems
13Intellectual Property Issues
- All ISRG results are placed in the public domain
- Widely disseminated and distributed for
educational and research purposes - Research reports, Web site
- Sponsors can receive non-exclusive, no-fee
licenses for commercialization - Only sponsors participate in twice yearly
retreats - To encourage an open research environment, ISRG
researchers would prefer not to sign
non-disclosure agreements
14Other Possible Participants
- ATT
- Bay Networks
- Cisco
- Ericsson
- HP
- IBM
- Intel
- Lucent
- Microsoft
- Motorola
- Philips
- Sprint
- Sun Microsystems
- Xerox