FYI, the report of this Reducing Internet Latency workshop is now available:
http://www.internetsociety.org/blog/2013/12/speeding-internet-reducing-latency
Regards,
Mat
On 14 Jun 2013, at 09:42, Matthew Ford <ford(_at_)isoc(_dot_)org> wrote:
Possibly of interest. (Short) Position paper deadline is 23rd June.
Regards,
Mat
Workshop on Reducing Internet Latency
=====================================
25 - 26 September 2013
London, England
Latency tends to have been sacrificed in favour of headline bandwidth in the
way the Internet has been built. This two-day invitation-only workshop aims
to galvanise action to fix that. All layers of the stack are in scope.
Latency is an increasingly important topic for networking researchers and
Internet practitioners alike. Data from Google, Microsoft, Amazon and others
indicate that latency increases for interactive Web applications result in
less usage and less revenue from sales or advertising income. Whether trying
to provide platforms for Web applications, high-frequency stock trading,
multi-player online gaming or 'cloud' services of any kind, latency is a
critical factor in determining end-user satisfaction and the success of
products in the marketplace. Consequently, latency and variation in latency
are key performance metrics for services these days.
But latency reduction is not just about increasing revenues for big business.
Matt Mullenweg of WordPress motivates work on latency reduction well when he
says, "My theory here is when an interface is faster, you feel good. And
ultimately what that comes down to is you feel in control. The [application]
isn’t controlling me, I’m controlling it. Ultimately that feeling of control
translates to happiness in everyone. In order to increase the happiness in
the world, we all have to keep working on this."
Invitations to attend the workshop will depend on receipt of a position
paper. In a spirit of co- ordination across the industry, submissions are
encouraged from developers and network operators as well as the research and
standards communities.
A wide range of latency related topics are in scope including, but not
limited to:
- surveys of latency across all layers
- analyses of sources of latency and severity/variability
- the cost of latency problems to society and the economy, or the value of
fixing it
- principles for latency reduction across the stack
- solutions to reduce latency, including cross-layer
- deployment considerations for latency reducing technology
- benchmarking, accreditation, measurement and market comparison practices
Submissions
-----------
This is an invitation-only workshop. Prospective participants must submit
short (up to 2 pages) position papers outlining their views on a specific
aspect of the overall scope. The emphasis here is on relevance and brevity -
you do not need to write a lot of text, just demonstrate that you have
thought about the problem space and have something interesting to say on the
topic.
Please send position papers in PDF format to: latency(_at_)isoc(_dot_)org
Participant numbers will be limited to focus on discussion and identifying
actions rather than slideware.
Accepted position papers will be made public. A report on the workshop will
be published after participants have agreed the content. Therefore, it will
be possible to state views during the workshop without them being publicly
attributed.
Important Dates
---------------
Position paper submission deadline: 23 June 2013
Paper acceptance notification: 28 June 2013
Workshop dates: 9am, Wednesday 25th – 5pm, Thursday 26th September 2013
Program committee
-----------------
Mat Ford, Internet Society, co-chair
Bob Briscoe, BT, co-chair
Gorry Fairhurst, University of Aberdeen
Arvind Jain, Google
Jason Livingood, Comcast
Andrew McGregor, Google
Workshop venue and other details
--------------------------------
Venue: Hilton London Paddington Hotel, 146 Praed Street, LONDON W2 1EE, UK
Registration fee: There is no registration fee for the workshop.
Recommended accommodation: Hilton London Paddington, registration link will
be supplied to accepted participants.
The workshop is sponsored by the Internet Society, the RITE project, Simula
Research Labs and the TimeIn project.
The Internet Society will host a workshop dinner on the Wednesday evening.