"The Internet: Towards a Global Information Infrastructure"
Sheraton Waikiki Hotel
Holululu, HI, USA
27-30 June 1995
ADVANCE PROGRAM AND REGISTRATION MATERIALS
Program and Conference Committee
Conference Chair: Eric Schmidt sch...@anchor.eng.sun.com
Program Committee Chairs: Kilnam Chon ch...@prosit.stanford.edu
Dan Lynch dly...@interop.com
Program Committee Secretary C. Kinman cki...@interop.com
Program Committee Track Leaders
1. Network Technology P. Mockapetris p...@isi.edu
S. Yamaguchi sug...@is.aist-nara.ac.jp
2. Network Engineering P. Ford pf...@rt66.com
3. Application Technology B. Leiner BLe...@arpa.mil
R. Kummerfeld b...@cs.su.oz.au
4. User S. Goto go...@ntt-20.ntt.jp
J. K. Reynolds jk...@isi.edu
5. Policy Issues H. Klein hkk...@mit.edu
6. Regional Issues John Hine john...@comp.vuw.ac.nz
S. Goldstein gold...@nsf.gov
7. Commercial Tommi Chen to...@solomon.technet.sg
8. Education Kathy Rutkowski k...@isoc.org
Michele Huston mic...@anu.edu.au
Tutorial Chair: H. Ishida ish...@u-tokyo.ac.jp
Developing Countries Workshop: George Sadowsky sado...@nyu.edu
Local Arrangements: David Lassner da...@hawaii.edu
Conference Management: Elizabeth Barnhart barn...@educom.edu
Internet Society VP Education: Larry Landweber l...@cs.wisc.edu
Internet Society Secretariat: Mary Burger mbu...@isoc.org
The easiest and best way to review the following informationa and to
register for INET 95 is via our INET95 Conference home page at
http://www.isoc.org/inet95.html.
INET'95, the 5th Annual Conference of the Internet Society, focusing
on worldwide issues of Internet networking, will be held on 27-30
June 1995 in Hawaii. The goal of this conference is to provide a
platform that will bring together those developing and implementing
Internet networks, technologies, applications, and policies
worldwide for infrastructure development. The theme of INET'95 is
"The Internet: Towards Global Information Infrastructure."
Since 1991, the INET conferences have become a common meeting ground
for participants interested in the design, implementation, operation
and use of the Internet. Global policy and economic issues, ethical
concerns, and many technical issues are raised in a variety of
contexts. The rapid influx of commercial and individual uses on the
Internet has influenced the nature of the system and broadened its
utility. The importance of the Internet and its technology to all
sectors of the global economy is growing as is the social impact of
access to the Internet. Internet Society encourages its members and
all other interested parties to plan active participation in this
conference.
INET'95 will be held at the Sheraton Waikiki Hotel on Waikiki Beach
with some events at the adjoining Royal Hawaiian Hotel.
====================================================================
INET'95 gratefully acknowledges the following corporations for their
generous support (others to be added in final program).
Conference Sponsors ($25,000 and above)
3Com, Cisco Systems, FTP Software, IBM, MCI, Netscape Communications,
Novell, Sun Microsystems, GTE Hawaiian Telephone
Conference Contributors ($10,000 to $24,999)
Bellcore, Digital Equipment Corporation, Soft Bank Expositions
Conference and Workshop Contributors (equipment and communications)
Apple, Cisco Systems, Digital Equipment Corporation, GTE Hawaiian
Telephone, IBM, Maui High Performance Computing Center, Oceanic Cable,
Strategic Information Systems, SUN Microsystems
Workshop for Developing Countries Contributors
Novell, O'Reilly and Associates, Performance Systems International
====================================================================
INET'95 PRELIMINARY PROGRAM (subject to change)
Wednesday, 28 June 1995
8:15-10:00 PLENARY SESSION (Eric Schmidt, Chair
sch...@eng.sun.com)
Conference welcome -- Eric Schmidt
Local welcome -- Benjamin J. Cayetano
Governor, Hawaii
ISOC welcome -- Vint Cerf & Larry Landweber
Review of program -- Kilnam Chon
Keynote Address -- Jean Jipguep--ITU
10:00-10:30 BREAK
10:30-12:00 PARALLEL BREAKOUT SESSIONS
A1--Information Space Environments
Chair: Bruce Schatz sch...@csl.ncsa.uiuc.edu
Maintaining Link Consistency in Distributed Hyperwebs
Frank Kappe fka...@iicm.tu-graz.ac.at
The C-ODA Project - Experiences and Tools
Peter Kirstein P.Kir...@cs.ucl.ac.uk
Interchange of Structured Multimedia Documents Containing External
Information
Jesus Acebron ace...@ac.upc.es
D1--New Partnerships
Chair: Kathy Rutkowski k...@isoc.org
Building a Commercial Internet Service for Teaching and Learning
Richard Perlman rdp...@pacbell.com
Common Ground: Community Networks as Catalysts
Ken Klingenstein k...@spot.colorado.edu
APICNET: A Japanese Initiative to Create a Global Classroom
on the Internet
Toshi Tsubo ts...@apic.or.jp
N1--Multicasting
Chair: Allison Mankin man...@isi.edu
Recent Activities in the MICE Conferencing Project
Peter Kirstein P.Kir...@cs.ucl.ac.uk
A Tool for Configuring Multicast Data Distribution over Global Networks
Bob Voigt vo...@ece.nps.navy.mil
Making the Mbone Real
Ajit Thyagarajan aj...@louie.udel.edu
P1--GII and its Relationship to the Internet - Panel
Chair: Frank Kuo k...@ai.sri.com
Panelists: <TBD>
R1--Developing Countries
Chair: Mike Lawrie mla...@frd.ac.za
Confronting the Emerging International Tower of Babel in Science and
Academic Telecomm
Irving Lerch ler...@acfcluster.nyu.edu
Raul Zambrano zamb...@undp.org
The International Science Foundation Telecommunications Program
Ilya Mafter i-ma...@nwu.edu
T1--Security
Chair: Christian Huitema hui...@sofia.inria.fr
A Simple Active Attack Against TCP
Laurent Joncheray l...@merit.edu
Secure TCP -- Providing Security Functions in TCP Layer
Toshiyuki Tutumi tosi...@is.aist-nara.ac.jp
Measured Interference of Network Security Mechanisms with Network
Performance
K Claffy k...@upeksa.sdsc.edu
U1--User Needs and Problems
Chair: Jill Foster jill....@newcastle.ac.jk
User-oriented Listserv Operation: A Case Study of Phnlink
Sara Kim sar...@u.washington.edu
Virtual Museums: Enjoy the Monumental Cemetery of Milano through the
Internet
Marco Padula pad...@nerve.itim.mi.cnr.it
Collaboratory
Margit Watts wa...@uhunix.uhcc.hawaii.edu
12:00-13:30--Lunch
13:30-15:00 PARALLEL BREAKOUT SESSIONS
A2--Low Bandwidth and Wireless Applications
Chair: Mario Gerla ge...@cs.ucla.edu
Multimedia Message Distribution in a Constrained Environment
W S Wijesoma sar...@cse.mrt.ac.lk
Extending the Reach of the Internet through Paging
Dileeka Dias dil...@infolabs.is.lk
A Remote Research Facility for Mobile Robotics
Andrew Kahng abkm...@cs.ucla.edu
D2--Internetworking and Educational Reform
Chair: Tracy LaQuey- Parker tr...@cisco.com
Internetworking and Educational Reform
Beverly Hunter bhu...@bbn.com
Mark Conway conwa...@a1.akocoa.nemts.mts.dec.com
N2--Routing and Addressing
Chair: Steve Deering dee...@parc.xerox.com
The Routing Arbiter in the Post-NSFnet Service World
Bill Manning bman...@isi.edu
Problems and Solutions of Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol(DHCP)
Akihiro Tominaga to...@sfc.wide.ad.jp
Exchange-Based Aggregation of Routing Information
Yakov Rekhter ya...@watson.ibm.com
P2--Democracy
Chair: Martin Vystavil comc...@savba.sk
Internet: Support Democratic Changes in the Post-communist Slovak
Republic
Martin Vystavil comc...@savba.sk
Democracy and Network Interconnectivity
Christopher Kedzie ked...@rand.org
Grassroots Democracy and the Internet: The Telecomm Policy Roundtable
Northeast
Hans Klein hkk...@mit.edu
R2--Funding Models
Chair: Attila Ozgit oz...@knidos.cc.metu.edu.tr
Networking the Caribbean Region via the Virgin Islands
Paradise FreeNet
Peter Deblanc pdeb...@usvi.net
Turkish Internet Project: Policies for Organizational Framework
and Funding
Kursat Cagiltay kur...@metu.edu.tr
REUNA: How an Academic Network can be Self-funded
Florencio Utreras futr...@reuna.cl
T2--Internet Protocol: Next Generation
Chair: Bob Hinden hin...@ipsilon.com
IPng History and Process
Scott Bradner s...@harvard.edu
IPng Technical Overview
Steve Deering dee...@parc.xerox.com
IPng Real Time Services
Lixia Zhang li...@parc.xerox.com
U2--Museum
Chair: Art St. George stge...@nsf.gov
Artists on the Internet
Ann Bishop abi...@uiuc.edu
Designing, Implementing and Using Local Museum Infrastructure
Paul Helfrich helf...@fi.edu
Bringing Museums Online in France.
Bruno Mannoni man...@culture.fr
A3--Distributed Systems
Chair: Gary Minden gmi...@arpa.mil
A Scalable, Deployable, Directory Service Framework for the Internet
Tim Howes t...@umich.edu
NetAgent: A Global Search System Over Internet Resources by
Distributed Agents
Taeha Park ta...@nuri.net
15:00-15:30 BREAK
15:30-17:00/17:30 PARALLEL BREAKOUT SESSIONS
A4--Security
Chair: TBD
A Distributed Authorization Model for WWW
Jose Kahan ka...@ccett.fr
Using Public Key Technology -Issues of Binding and Protection
James Galvin gal...@tis.com
Simple Key-manaagement for Internet Protocol(SKIP)
Carolyn Turbyfill carolyn....@eng.sun.com
D3--Education - Asia/Pacific
Chair: George Brett george...@cnidr.org
Internet for Schools - The Singapore Experience
Eng Pheng Tan ep...@moe.ac.sg
Constructing Japanese K-12 Network Community: Case Study
Takashi Shintani shin...@izanagi.glocom.ac.jp
Constructing Computerized Campus to Lay the NII Foundation
Ching Hai Yin y...@moers2.edu.tw
Summary of K-12 Activities in Japan
Masaya Nakayama naka...@nc.u-tokyo.ac.jp
The ACTEIN Program: Bringing the Internet to Australian Schools
Michele Huston michele...@anu.edu.au
N3--Network Management
Chair: Erik Huizer erik....@surfnet.nl
Producing Quality Factors for the LAN Interconnection Services
Harri Valimaa harri....@noc.datanet.tele.fi
Preventing Rather than Repairing - A New Approach in ATM Network
Management
Anja Schuhknecht schuh...@lrz-muenchen.de
Improved Network Management Using Network Management Work System
Hiroyuki Ohno ho...@is.titech.ac.jp
Object Evaluator Management Function
Taesang Choi tsc...@cctr.umkc.edu
P3--Law and Fair Use
Chair: Richard Civille rciv...@civicnet.org
Laws of Electronic Communities and Their Roads: High Noon?
Peter Harter p...@nptn.org
Community Networks and Small IP Service Businesses
Richard Civille rciv...@civicnet.org
The Law and the Internet
Dan Appelman d...@hewm.com
R3--Networks as Empowering Technology
Chair: Saul Hahn sh...@umd5.umd.edu
"Japan Window": A US-Japan WWW Collaboration for Japanese Information
Burt Lee bl...@kiku.stanford.edu
"Friends and Partners": Building Global Community on the Internet
Greg Cole gc...@solar.rtd.utk.edu
Information-transfer Stations for Developing Countries in Asia
Jeff Smith asi...@well.sf.ca.us
Building a French Virtual Community on Internet: The Example of Frognet
Bruno Oudet b...@access.digex.net
T3--Alternative Access Technologies
Chair: Shinji Shimojo shi...@center.osaka-u.ac.jp
Mobility Support in IPv6 Based on the VIP Mechanism
Fumio Teraoka te...@csl.sony.co.jp
The Internet in Developing Countries: Issues and Alternatives
MV Pitke pi...@tifrvax.tifr.res.in
A Data and Telecommunications Gateway Between the Internet and ISDN
Graham Knight kni...@cs.ucl.ac.uk
Fast Packet Technologies in the Internet Environment
Pushpendra Mohta pu...@cerf.net
U3--Public Health and Medicine
Chair: S. Akazawa aka...@who.ch
Global Health Network(GHNet) Initiative
Ronald Laporte rlap...@vms.cis.pitt.edu
NIH/NLM World Wide Web Database Project
RPC Rodgers rod...@nlm.nih.gov
D4--Education - Europe/Latin America
Chair: Jane Smith jane....@cnidr.org
Slovak Academic Network(SANET) and European Schools Project(ESP) in
Slovakia
Tibor Weis ti...@tuzvo.sk
Setting up a Computer Mediated Communication Network for Secondary
Schools
Kursat Cagiltay kur...@metu.edu.tr
The Educational Demands of Networking
Jim Strom j.s...@doc.mmu.ac.uk
Development of WWW Services in Mexico: Toward a National Information
Infrastructure
Jeffry Fernandez je...@redudg.udg.mx
Educational Projects Using Networks in Chilean Elementary Schools
Ernesto Laval ela...@enlaces.ufro.cl
19:00-21:30--LUAU
Thursday, 29 June 1995
8:30-10:00 PLENARY SESSION (David Lassner, Chair da...@hawaii.edu)
Keynote Address -- Tim Berners-Lee -- WWW
Industry Panel -- Eric Schmidt, Chair
Tsutomu Shimomura, SDSC
John Patrick, IBM
Rose Ann Giordano, DEC
Reggie Best, 3Com
others to be announced
10:00-10:30 Break
10:30-12:00 PARALLEL BREAKOUT SESSIONS
A5--Navigating the Web
Chair: Tony Barry to...@info.anu.edu.au
The User Interface of URLs
Paul Hoffman phof...@proper.com
Searching Internet Resources Using IP Multicast
Hiroaki Kashima kas...@csce.kyushu-u.ac.jp
C1--The Internet for Business
Chair: Tom Agoston ago...@vnet.ibm.com
Publishing Models for Internet Commerce
Tim O'Reilly t...@ora.com
Launching Internet Services in Asia: The Hong Kong Experience
Pindar Wong pin...@lamtin.hk.super.net
Daiichi Advanced Home Shopping Structure
Toshifumi Matsumoto mats...@spin.ad.jp
D4--New Concepts of School
Chair: Laurie Maak lm...@netcom.com
YouthCaN: Environmental Conservation Education
Millard Clements clem...@acfcluster.nyu.edu
Building Global Learning Communities: Connectivity Alone will
not Save Education
Kim Rose ro...@applelink.apple.com
Can You Lend me a Hand? -- Automated Services in Support of
Telecollaboration
Alan Feldman alan_f...@terc.edu
N4--Scaling Up the Internet - Panel
Chair: <TBD>
Panelists: <TBD>
P4--Economics and Pricing
Chair: Miguel Perez mpe...@lascar.puc.cl
Public Policies to Encourage High-Speed Residential Internet Access
Sharon Gillett sha...@far.mit.edu
Internet Economics: What Happens when Constituencies Collide
Joseph Bailey bai...@farnsworth.mit.edu
Pricing the Internet: A Model and a Practical Implementation
Miguel Perez mpe...@lascar.puc.cl
R4--Pacific
Chair: David Lassner da...@hawaii.edu
Computer Telecommunication for a Hawaiian Speaking Generation
Keola Donaghy ke...@maui.com
Self-Determination in the Information Age
Scott Crawford ex...@hawaii-nation.org
Current and Future Internet Services via PEACESAT
Lori Mukaida lmuk...@elele.peacenet.hawaii.edu
U4--Enterprise Networking
Chair: Chris Weider c...@bunyip.com
Internet Affects the Corporation: Experiences from Eight
Year Connectivity
Suzanne Johnson joh...@intel.com
Internet Usage Guidelines in a Commercial Setting
Nicholas Trio n...@watson.ibm.com
Developing an Information Infrastructure
Robert Zakon rza...@mitre.org
T4--High Performance Networking
Chair: Dae Young Kim dy...@comsun.chungnam.ac.kr
Solutions of IPng Support for Wireless-ATM Integration
Wei Lu ddke...@utmkl.bitnet
Internetworking with ATM-based Switched Virtual Networks
Kamran Ghane kam...@neda.com
The Failure of Conservative Congestion Control in Large Bandwidth-Delay
Hyogon Kim hk...@gradient.cis.upenn.edu
12:00-13:30 Lunch
13:30-15:00 PARALLEL BREAKOUT SESSIONS
A6--Engineering the Web
Chair: Hakon Lie how...@dxcern.cern.ch
Supporting a URI infrastructure by Message Broadcast
Vasco Freitas v...@uminho.pt
Schizophrenic HTTP Server
Alan Barrett bar...@ee.und.ac.za
Intelligent Caching for WWW objects
Duane Wessels wes...@colorado.edu
D5--New Concepts of Learning
Chair: Richard Perlman rdp...@pacbell.com
Analyzing Linkage Structure in a Course-Integrated Virtual Learning
Community on WWW
Leon James le...@uhunix.uhcc.hawaii.edu
Science Education as a Driver of Cyberspace Technology Development
Roy Pea p...@aristotle.ils.nwu.edu
Creating Global Learning Communities: I*EARN's Action-Based Projects
Kristin Brown krb...@igc2.igc.apc.org
N5--High Speed Networking
Chair: Yakov Rekhter ya...@watson.ibm.com
TCP/IP on Gigabit Networks
Anne Wilson a...@chernikeeff.co.uk
Multimedia experiments at the University of Pisa
Stefano Giordano gior...@iet.unipi.it
Traffic Measurements in Multimedia Documents Real Time Transfer
Maurizio Lancia lan...@iasi.rm.cnr.it
P5--Public Interest Regulation - Panel
Chair: Sean McClaughlin
Panelists: <TBD>
R5--Asia
Chair: Devendra Narayan nar...@sut.ac.jp
Connecting China Education Community to the Global Internet
Xing Li xi...@cernet.edu.cn
Asia Now Online
Malia Zoughlin ma...@uhunix.uhcc.hawaii.edu
PAN Asia Networking
Andrew Garton aga...@peg.apc.org
C2--Electronic Cash
Chair: Bob Coggeshall co...@hongkong.cogwheel.com
Using the Internet to Decrease Software Piracy
Ralf Hauser hau...@acm.org
Digital Cash and Monetary Freedom
Jon Matonis 74774...@compuserve.com
CyberCash: Payments Systems for the Internet
Stephen Crocker cro...@cybercash.com
U5--Networked Information Discovery and Retrieval - Panel
Chair: Cliff Lynch cliffor...@ucop.edu
Panelists: Avra Michelson, Cecilia Preston, Craig Summerhill
(t...@cu.nih.gov, cpre...@info.berkeley.edu, cr...@cni.org)
P6--Government Services
Chair: Gregory Searle sea...@tdg.uoguelph.ca
Building Community Computer Networks for all Canadians
Gregory Searle sea...@tdg.uoguelph.ca
The WWW and its Implications in a Democratic Society
Jill Cramer cra...@tdc.redstone.army.mil
Future Prospects for NSF's International Connections Program Activities
Steven Goldstein gold...@nsf.gov
15:00-15:30 BREAK
15:30-17:00 PARALLEL BREAKOUT SESSIONS
A7--Infrastructure for Networked Applications - Panel
Chair: Barry Leiner ble...@arpa.mil
Panelists: <TBD>
D6--New Curriculum
Chair: Michele Huston mic...@aarnet.edu.au
Educational Application of the Internet: International Joint Teleclass
Kumiko Aoki ka...@uhunix.uhcc.hawaii.edu
MegaMath: Expanding and Connecting the Mathematics Community
Nancy Casey case...@cs.uidaho.edu
Net-frog: Using the WWW to Learn about Frog Dissection and Anatomy
Mable Kinzie mk...@curry.edschool.virginia.edu
Networked Math "Learning Bursts" for Mathphobics
David Marques mar...@akocoa.enet.dec.com
The Internet and K-12 Mathematics and Science Reform
David Thomas umsf...@mathfs.math.montana.edu
N6--High Speed Wide Area Networks
Chair: Ann Wilson a...@chernikeeff.ac.uk
Real Use of the SuperJanet High Speed Multiservice Network
John Dyer j.d...@ukerna.ac.uk
The Implementation of a High Speed Network for the DFN Community
Peter Kaufmann kauf...@dfn.d400.de
Towards a European High-Speed Backbone
Michael Behringer mic...@omega.dante.org.uk
Post-NSFNET Statistics Collection
K Claffy k...@upeksa.sdsc.edu
P7--Transborder Information Flows
Chair: H A Peng mcma...@leonis.nus.sg
Internet Policy Issues in New Zealand
Colin Jackson colin....@comms.moc.govt.nz
Censorship and Internet: A Singapore Perspective
Hwa Ang Peng mcma...@leonis.nus.sg
Issues in the Transborder Flow of Scientific and Technical Data
Paul Uhlir puh...@nas.edu
R6--Europe
Chair: Peter Bakonyi h25...@ella.hu
Slovak Academic Network(SANET): Further Evolution
Peter Gajdos gaj...@uakom.sk
UNIBEL: Academic and Research Network of Belarus
Sergei Kritsky kri...@ok.minsk.by
Kiev Pilot IP Network Backbone for Academic and Reserch Community in
Ukraine
VV Shkarupin sl...@prs.isf.kiev.ua
RUNNet - Federal University Network of Russia
Andrei Robachevsky and...@ifmo.ru
Romanian National Computer Network for Research and Higher Education
Eugenie Staicut esta...@roearn.ici.ro
Bringing Internet to North-West of Russia -- RUSNet N/W Project
Vladimir Zaborovskij vl...@stu.spb.su
C3--Business of the Internet
Chair: Toru Takahashi to...@interop.co.jp
Tourism Promotion Using the World Wide Web
Martin Lennon mle...@chcsn1.ait.ac.nz
The Internet for Small Businesses: An Enabling Infrastructure for
Competitiveness
Simpson Poon sp...@swin.edu.au
Commercial Use of the Internet
Lee Levitt lle...@idcresearch.com
U6-- Community Networking
Chair: Ann Bishop bis...@alexia.lis.uiuc.edu
Networked Ocean Science Research and Education-Monterey Bay
Don Brutzman brut...@nps.navy.mil
Enhancing Communication and Cooperation in Human Service
Delivery through Internet
Zoran Milosevic zo...@cs.uq.oz.au
Potential Users and Virtual Communities in the Academic World
Jose Silvio j.si...@unesco.org
Energy Utilities: User or Provider of Internet Services
Robert Aiken ai...@es.net
P8--Internet Privacy Guideline - Panel
Chair: Marc Rotenberg marc_ro...@epic.org
Panelists: D. Hurley, E. Kirsch, S. Perrin, F. Tuerkheimer
18:00-19:00 Cocktail Party
Friday, 30 June 1995
8:30-10:00 PARALLEL BREAKOUT SESSIONS
A8--Multimedia Interface to Cyberspace
Chair: Bob Kummerfeld b...@cs.su.oz.au
MMMGate - Enabling Overall Multimedia Messaging
Manfred Bogen manfre...@gmd.de
Reliable Audio for use Over the Internet
Vicky Hardman v.ha...@cs.ucl.ac.uk
Use of the Internet Based Audio and Video Applications
Richard Muirden ric...@rmit.edu.au
D7--Professional Development and Training
Chair: Michele Huston mic...@aarnet.edu.au
Teachers and Internet: Charting a Course for Success
Phil Buchanan p.buc...@mailbox.uq.oz.au
Training is for Dogs: Teachers Teach; Teachers Learn
Janet Murray jmu...@psg.com
Cyberspace ... The Endless Frontier
Linda Joseph ljo...@magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu
N7--Network Information Centers
Chair: David Conrad dav...@keio.jp.apnic.net
Financing Common Infrastructure
Andreas Schachtner andreas.s...@germany.eu.net
JPNIC: A Country NIC for Administrating Common Network Resources
Masaki Hirabaru h...@nic.ad.jp
Network Skills in a Networked Information World: The Latest
Tips and Tools
Susan Calcari sus...@is.internic.net
P9--Industrial Policy
Chair: Hans Klein hkk...@mit.edu
Measuring and Comparing the Return on Investment on Network-Mediated
Empowerment
Stephen Ruth ru...@gmu.edu
Surf's Up! Hawaii Attempts to Develop an Information Industry and
Statewide Internetwork but Doesn't Always Catch the Right Wave
Stephen Harkness ste...@ptc.org
Formulating a Telecommunications and Information Industry Policy for
an Economy to Interconnect with its Trading Partners for Maximum
Strategic Advantage
DJ Horgan d.ho...@ieee.org
R7--Americas
Chair: Richardo Reich rre...@halcon.dpi.udec.cl
Empowering Information Professionals and End Users with New Cultural
Values
Soledad Ferreiro sfer...@abello.seci.uchile.cl
Networking in Latin America and the Caribbean and the OAS/RedHUCyT
Project
Saul Hahn sh...@umd5.umd.edu
STARNET/IP
Eduardo Torres tor...@infomail.infonet.com
C4--Future of Commerce on the Net
Chair: Peter Dawe pe...@unipalm.co.uk
The Emerging Internet Market
Gordon Howell gor...@ibs.co.uk
Internet: Improving the Actual Benefit and Reducing the (Hidden) Cost
Joop Veenis j...@tg.nl
Electronic Commerce on Internet: What is Still Missing?
Zoran Milosevic zo...@cs.uq.oz.au
R8--Middle East/North Africa
Chair: Hisham El Sherif hsh...@ritsec.com.eg
The Communication and Networking Infra- and Info-structure in the Arab
Region as a Base for a Regional Information Highway
Tarek Kamel tka...@ritsec.com.eg
Internet's Role in Middle-East Development: Palestinian Perspective
Saleem Zougbi zou...@attmail.com
Jordan's National Information System
Yousef Nosseir j_...@ritsec.com.eg
Networking Efforts in the Maghreb Region of the Northern Africa
Khaled Sellami khaled...@irsit.tn
10:00-10:30--BREAK
10:30-12:30--PLENARY SESSION (Dan Lynch, Chair dly...@interop.com)
Keynote Address - Jonathan Sallet - US Dept of Commerce
Keynote Address - K. Nishi -- ASCII
INET'96 Bernard Turcotte, CRIM Montreal
GII World's Fair - Carl Malamud
Closing remarks - Eric Schmidt
The Program Committee can be contacted at
<inet-p...@interop.com> or by fax: +1-415-723-0758
(Attn.: Prof. Kilnam Chon)
====================================================================
INET'95 TUTORIAL PROGRAM
Tuesday, June 27, 1995, 09:00-17:00
Place: Sheraton Waikiki Hotel, Honolulu, Hawaii, USA
Courses: 5 full-day courses in parallel
Registration Fee: $150(early registration)/$170(late registration)
1. Publishing with the World Wide Web
Peter Deutsch, Bunyip, Canada (pet...@bunyip.com)
This course covers the selection and installation of the most
popular World Wide Web servers and clients, discusses security
issues involved with the Web, and provides detailed information
about preparing data for publication in the Web.
Who should attend? Anyone who wishes to publish data in the World
Wide Web.
What you will learn: Detailed instructions on selection and
installation of WorldWideWeb clients and servers,techniques for
analyzing resource requirements security considerations, and the
preparation of text and multimedia information resources for
publication in the Web.
Tutorial Instructor: Peter Deutsch is one of the architects of the
archie information system and an active developer of Internet tools
and services. He is President of Bunyip Information Systems Inc of
Montreal, a company specializing in new Internet services and has
been on the Internet since 1987, when he helped bring the first link
into Eastern Canada. Mr. Deutsch holds an M.Sc. in Computer Science
and a B.Sc. in Mathematics and Computer Science from McGill
University and thinks that with the Internet he's finally found what
he wants to do when he grows up...
2. IPng: The Next Generation Internet Protocol
Steve Deering, Xerox Palo Alto Research Center, USA
(dee...@parc.xerox.com)
A new version of the Internet's core protocol, IP, has been
developed by the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) and is now
entering the IETF Standards track. The new IP, known as IPng or IP
version 6, is designed to meet the scaling requirements imposed by
the explosive growth of the Internet, and to meet the demand for
greater functionality at the internet layer, including strong
security, automated configuration, and support for multimedia
traffic. In this tutorial, the lead designer of IPng will present a
detailed walkthrough of the protocol, explaining what it is, why it
is, and what role it is expected to play in the evolution of the
Internet.
Prerequisite: familiarity with the current version of IP.
Tutorial Instructor: Stephen Deering is a member of the research
staff at Xerox PARC, engaged in research on advanced internetwork
technologies, including multicasting routing, mobile
internetworking, scalable addressing, and support for multimedia
applications over the Internet. He is present or past chair of
numerous Working Groups of the Internet Engineering Task Force
(IETF) and a member of the IETF's IPng Directorate. He received his
B.Sc. (1973) and M.Sc. (1982) from the University of British
Columbia, and his PhD (1991) from Stanford University.
3. Internet: Making the Business Case
Gordon Howell, Internet Business Services, Scotland
(gor...@ibs.co.uk)
In their year-end reports, both Newsweek and the US News and World
Report rated the Internet as one of the top 10 developments in 1994.
The UK Economist suggested that the Internet will be an
"indispensible tool" for businesses in the late 90s.
The Internet "gold rush" is on, but where are you likely to strike
"pay dirt"? Is it really possible for conventional, non-technical
businesses to take advantage of the new electronic media to enhance
their business? What are the emerging business "conventions" in use
on the Internet?
This tutorial looks at how conventional business processes can be
enhanced by the Internet, and considers how to develop new lines of
business specifically to exploit the medium. Examples in areas such
as customer services, electronic publishing and direct marketing
(shopping for users) will be presented.
Tutorial Instructor: Gordon Howell is a founding director of
Internet Business Services Ltd, a business consultancy and training
organisation based in Scotland. He has co-developed a series of
seminars "Internet for Business" currently being run througout the
UK and other locations in Europe.
He is a consultant to various private and public sector bodies,
including the economic development agency in Scotland responsible
for developing the "Information Superhighway". Is the founder of
the Scottish Internet Business Club, and the Forum for Open Systems,
and is a regular contributer to public press and other publications.
He has been on the 'net since 1982.
4. Internetworking with ATM (Asynchronous Transfer Mode)
Eric Hoffman and Allison Mankin, ISI, USA (hof...@isi.edu;
man...@isi.edu)
As more and more people start using the Internet, the traffic
increases and need arises for bandwidth. Generation of audio/video
data is becoming easier as PCs become ever more powerful, and
multimedia traffic will become ever more frequent. ATM technology
at 155/612/2,400 Mbps (2.4Gbps) will be used for adding bandwidth to
meet these needs. Starting from what ATM is, we will give you
insight into how you can use ATM effectively in the Internet.
We will emphasize IP over ATM and end-to-end ATM transmission,
although other stacks are discussed. Signalling, the classical IP
approach, the Next Hop Resolution Protocol (NHRP), and addressing
and routing prospects are among the topics.
A portion of the tutorial will be devoted to practical information
on implementation and problem-solving for ATM segments in
internetworks today.
Tutorial Instructors: Eric Hoffman is the principal developer of
Vince, a publicly available implementation of ATM and IP over ATM,
which he created in 1992. He worked on parallel algorithms,
rendering software and scientific visualization before turning to
network research.
Allison Mankin serves on the Internet Engineering Steering Group, as
Area Director for Transport and was a Co-Director for IP Next
Generation, producing the recommendation that has lead to IPv6. She
has been a designer of Vince. Her published research includes
router performance, congestion control, and network measurement.
5. Internet security
Steve Crocker, CyberCash, USA (cro...@cybercash.com)
When companies join the internet, security is a major concern. To
address the problem, there are emerging security technologies such
as firewalls, proxy servers, PEM (Privacy Enhanced Mails) and a
number of encryption schemes such as secure Mosaic/HTTP and secure
payment protocols. These new technologies will be described in
detail for business applications.
This tutorial is intended for everyone who needs to understand the
security issues associated with a connection to the Internet and
what technology is available to protect their resources.
Tutorial Instructor: Steve Crocker is a founder of CyberCash, Inc.
and serves as senior vice president, Development, responsible for
security architecture and the design and implementation of the
CyberCash server systems.
He was previously a vice president at Trusted Information Systems,
where he led the development effort for the reference version of
Privacy Enahnced Mail and managed a variety of network security
projects. In prior positions, he was a program manager in the
Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA) and a senior researcher at
USC Information Information Services Institute. Dr. Crocker served
as the area director for security in the Internet Engineering Task
Force for four years and is now a member of the Internet
Architecture Board. He has published numerous RFCs and papers in
networking and computer security. Dr. Crocker holds a Ph.D in
Computer Science from UCLA.
====================================================================
THE INET95 DEMONSTRATION SHOWCASE
The INET'95 Demonstration Showcase will provide an opportunity for
INET'95 attendees to demonstrate their new projects, applications
and ideas in an informal individualized setting. Participants will
be allocated space in the Showcase room based on proposals to
participate. Showcase participants will be assigned specific times
during the conference when they will be available to demonstrate
their project. Showcase participants will be expected to provide
their own hardware and software; Showcase facilities themselves will
consist of furniture, power and an Internet connection only.
Participation in the INET'95 Demonstration Showcase is an
opportunity extended only to conference attendees from government,
academia and non-profit organizations. No financial support is
provided. Interested INET'95 registrants should submit a Proposal
to Participate in the Demonstration Showcase by May 1, 1995.
Notification of acceptance will be made by May 15.
Proposals to Participate in the Demonstration Showcase must include:
Name
Institution
Project Title
Brief Description of Project (1/2 page maximum)
Why will this project be of interest to other INET'95 participants?
Technical Requirements
Proposals must be submitted to ISOC Headquarters or sent by email to:
inet95-...@isoc.org by April 15, 1995.
====================================================================
ISOC SCHOOL NETWORKING COLLOQUIUM
Networking for schools is one of the crucial aspects of the emerging
Global Information Infrastructure. This year INET will include a
unique 1-day pre-conference School Networking Colloquium for to
address this issue from an international perspective and consider
ideas for future ISOC activities to support and accelerate school
networking around the world.
The ISOC School Networking Colloquium will be a highly-interactive
program It will be based on brief presentations to stimulate
thinking, followed by discussion and question/answer sessions with
expert panelists and all colloquium participants. Plenary and
breakout sessions will address the role of networking in schools,
Internet technology for schools, educational applications of the
Internet, and supporting educators' use of the Internet. The
colloquium agenda will allow ample opportunity for conversation and
discussion inside and outside the sessions.
ISOC School Networking Colloquium
Monday, June 26, 1995
Sheraton Waikiki
Cost: $95
====================================================================
NETWORK TRAINING WORKSHOP FOR DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
The Network Training Workshop for Developing Countries will be a
week-long program in 18-24 June of intensive instruction, with a
hands-on emphasis on Internet set-up, operations, maintenance, and
management. The Workshop covers the four program tracks:
Dial-up Networking Technology
TCP/IP Networking Technology
Network Navigation and Services
National Network Management
For information and general questions about the workshop, please
send email to
====================================================================
CONFERENCE EVENTS
All participants and registered accompanying person are invited to
attend the following programs. We hope these events will provide an
opportunity to renew old friendships and to create new ones with
colleagues from all over the world.
OPENING RECEPTION
Sheraton Waikiki Hotel
Tuesday, 27 June 1995
18:00-20:00
Enjoy light refreshments while catching up with friends and
colleagues on the beautiful Diamond Head Lawn at the conference
venue.
LUAU
Sheraton Waikiki Hotel
Diamond Head Lawn
Wednesday, 28 June 1995
19:30-22:00
While the waves of the Pacific are lapping at Waikiki Beach toss on
your "lei" and join the fun at a traditional Hawaiian Luau--complete
with hula dancers, Hawaiian entertainment and poi!
COCKTAIL PARTY
Sheraton Waikiki Hotel
Diamond Head Lawn
Thursday, 29 June 1995
18:30-19:30
Enjoy a light libation while coordinating with colleagues on where
to sample the local cuisine at the multitude of restaurants in
exciting Waikiki Beach.
====================================================================
CONFIRMATION OF REGISTRATION
A written confirmation for conference registration will be sent from
the Internet Society upon receipt of the completed registration form
and accompanying payment. The Sheraton Waikiki will send separate
hotel accommodation confirmation upon receipt of the completed form
and one night's deposit.
REGISTRATION FEES COVER
The registration fees cover attendance at all conference sessions.
Also included are the Opening Reception, Luau, Cocktail Party,
luncheons, coffee breaks, and conference materials including the
program and other conference publications.
The fee for an accompanying person includes the Opening Reception,
Luau, and Cocktail Party. Attendance at the conference sessions,
luncheons, and conference materials are not included in this fee.
PAYMENT OF FEES
All payments must be in US Dollars. Cash, bank draft, bank transfer
and international credit cards (MasterCard, Visa and American
Express) are acceptable. Personal checks will not be accepted
unless drawn on U.S. banks.
For wire transfer, please address correspondence to:
Riggs Bank of Virginia
8315 Lee Highway
Fairfax VA 22031 USA
Bank ABA number: 056001260,
Account number: Internet Society 148 187 10
Please indicate your name on the wire transfer.
PAYMENT AND CANCELLATION CONDITIONS
In the case of conference cancellation, written (postal, fax or
electronic) notification must be sent to the Internet Society and
received on or before the dates indicated. Refunds will be made
after deducting expenses and cancellation charges according to the
schedule below. We strongly encourage substitutions from the same
organization if you are unable to attend.
Registration Fee Refund after deducting
On or before 31 May $50 (administrative fee)
From 1 June to 22 June 50% of registration fee
On 23 June No refund
====================================================================
GENERAL INFORMATION
INTERNET FACILITIES AT INET'95
Internet access will be available at the Sheraton Waikiki. Notebook
docking stations will also be available. The terminal room will
open at 10am on Tuesday, 27 June. During the conference, the hours
will be 0700-2300 Wednesday and Thursday and 0700-1700 on Friday.
ACCOMMODATIONS FOR ATTENDEES WITH DISABILITIES AND SPECIAL NEEDS
We are committed to making conference activities accessible to all
attendees. Persons with disabilities or special needs should inform
us so that we can make the appropriate arrangements. Contact the
Internet Society at ine...@isoc.org or +1-703-648-9888. If you
require special meals, please note that on the appropriate area on
the conference registration form.
PASSPORT AND VISA REQUIREMENTS
All foreign visitors entering the United States must possess a valid
passport. Participants requiring a visa should apply immediately to
United States consular offices or diplomatic missions in their
countries in order to avoid delay in travel to the conference.
Additional information is available from local travel agents.
CLIMATE AND CLOTHING
The ocean breezes keep the island of Oahu quite pleasant year
along with a sweater/ light jacket for the outdoor evening events.
ACCESS TO THE CONFERENCE SITE
The Sheraton Waikiki is located approximately ~20 kilometers west of
the airport (Honolulu International Airport on the island of Oahu).
Taxis (~$20) are available to take you to your hotel. If you plan
to rent a car, please do so prior to arriving in Honolulu. The
Sheraton Waikiki charges $8.00 for overnight parking and $12.00 for
valet overnight parking.
====================================================================
CONFERENCE REGISTRATION PROCEEDURES
The easiest and best way to register for the conference is via our
WWW INET95 Conference home page form at
http://www.isoc.org/inet95.html
We appreciate your use of the WWW form.
If you do not have access to the WWW or do not wish to use it,
please return the following template:
1) by email to <inet-reg...@isoc.org> or
2) by FAX to: +1-703-648-9887 or
3) by postal mail to
Internet Society
12020 Sunrise Valley Drive, Suite 270
Reston VA 22091 USA
INTERNET SOCIETY MEMBER NUMBER: _______________ (Membership
necessary for discount)
Mr ____ Ms ____ Mrs ____ Dr ___ Prof ___ Dip Ing ___
FIRST NAME: ___________________________________________________
INITIAL/MIDDLE NAME: __________________________________________
FAMILY (LAST) NAME: ___________________________________________
SUFFIX : ______________________________________________________
TITLE: ________________________________________________________
AFFILIATION: __________________________________________________
ADDRESS: ______________________________________________________
CITY: _______________ STATE/PROV: _______ POSTAL CODE: _______
COUNTRY: ______________________________________________________
WORK TELEPHONE: _____________________ (optional)
HOME TELEPHONE: _____________________ (optional)
FAX: ________________________________ (optional)
EMAIL: ________________________________________________________
BADGENAME: ____________________________________________________
REGISTERED ACCOMPANYING PERSON(S)
NAME: _________________________________________________
NAME: _________________________________________________
SPECIAL NEEDS/MEALS:___________________________________________
TUTORIAL ______________________________________________________
The INET'95 Proceedings are available electronically. Would
you still like a hard copy?
_______YES ________NO
====================================================================
CONFERENCE PAYMENT
REGISTRATION FEES: Before 26 May 1995 After 26 May 1995
Internet Society Member $425 $460
Non-Internet Society Member $475 $510
(includes Internet Society
Membership Fees)
Accompanying Person $200 $200
Tutorial $150 $170
ISOC K-12 Workshop $ 95 $105
TOTAL AMOUNT: US$ _____________
How do you wish to pay?
___ Credit Card
___ VISA
___ MasterCard
___ AmEx
Card Number ___________________________________________________
Expiration Date _____________
Name on Card ___________________________________________________
Signature (for faxes or postal mail) ___________________________
___ Wire Transfer:
Riggs Bank of Virginia Bank ABA number: 056001260
8315 Lee Highway
Account number: Internet Society 148 187 10
Fairfax VA 22031 USA
>>Please Indicate your name on the wire transfer
___ Personal Cheque, Bank Draft, or money order (for
postal submissions)
====================================================================
HOTEL RESERVATION
Important:
o Reservations must be sent TO THE HOTEL (NOT ISOC),
although if you use the WWW form, the information
will automatically be sent to the hotel.
o A ONE-NIGHT deposit (see below) must be provided to the hotel.
o Reservations must be received by the hotel no later than THIRTY
(30) days prior to the arrival date.
o Requests received after 30 days prior to arrival will be
treated on a space-available basis only.
o Deposits will be refunded if reservation is cancelled and
notice received at the hotel seven (7) days prior to the arrival
date.
Check-in Time is after 15hr.00
Check-out Time is before 12hr.00 (mid-day)
If your dates change after submitting this form, please notify
the hotel immediately.
PLEASE COMPLETE THE FOLLOWING FORM AND:
1) EMAIL it to <inet-...@isoc.org> or
2) FAX it to +1-808-923-8785 (toll-call) or
3) CALL +1 808-922-4422 (toll-call) and ask for "Group Reservations"
CALL 800-782-9488 (free call, in US and Canada only)
Check your local directory for the ITT Sheraton Reservation number
in your country, and call that number, or
4) send by POSTAL MAIL to:
Reservations
Sheraton Waikiki Hotel
PO Box 8559
Honolulu, HI 96815 USA
5) PLEASE IDENTIFY the Conference as ID: #CINTER.
YOU WILL RECEIVE THE SPECIAL INET95 ROOM RATE!
====================================================================
HOTEL RESERVATION TEMPLATE
Name: ________________________________________________________
Address: _____________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
City: ____________ Prov/State: ________ Postal Code: _______
Country: _____________________________________________________
Tel: _______________________________ Fax: _____________________
ARRIVAL DATE: ____________ TIME: ___________ FLIGHT NO: _____
DEPARTURE DATE: ____________ TIME: ___________ FLIGHT NO: ___
SPECIAL ROOM REQUEST (non-smoking):_____________________________
PAYMENT OF ONE NIGHT DEPOSIT (U.S. dollars only):
For payment by check through normal mail, please make checks payable
to the Sheraton Waikiki Hotel and include a copy of this form with
your payment.
For payment by credit card, please provide the following information.
Credit Card:
______ AmEx
______ Visa
______ MasterCard
______ Diners' Club
______ Carte Blanche
Account No: _______________________
Exp. Date: ________________________
Name on Card: _____________________
Date: _____________________________
Signature for FAX/postal mail: ________________________________
SHERATON WAIKIKI is offering the following rooms with very special
rates! Please make your reservations early as rooms are very much
in demand! Please check your preference.
_____ SINGLE _______ DOUBLE/DOUBLE ______ TRIPLE ________ QUAD
Sheraton Waikiki Hotel:
______ Run-of-Ocean $165.00 Single/Double
(Rooms consist of ocean-front and partial-ocean-view rooms
(located on the mountain side of the hotel). The exact mix is
not known until the day of arrival and is dependent upon
availability in each category on the day of arrival.)
______ Run-of-Mountain $137.00 Single/Double
(Rooms consist of mountain view and city view rooms, all located
on the mountain side of the hotel. The exact mix is not known
until the day of arrival.)
______ Manor $95.00 Single/Double
(Rooms are located in a separate annex of the main building and
cannot triple or quad in room accommodations.)
______ Medium Suite $500.00 Single/Double
______ Large Suite $600.00 Single/Double
(SHOULD THE RATE BE SOLD OUT, THE NEXT AVAILABLE CATEGORY WILL BE
CONFIRMED.)
Room rates are subject to the current 10.17% Hawaii State and room
tax. Triple rate is $25.00 additional daily. Quad rate is $50.00
additional daily. Family Plan: No additional charge for children
17 years and younger sharing the same room with parents. Please
advise ages.
SHERATON PRINCESS KAIULANI HOTEL (located within 3 blocks of the
______ Run of House $100.00 Single/Double/Triple
Rooms are a mixture of Ocean view, Tower City view, Princess Pool
view and Kaiulani Wing rooms. These rooms are located throughout
the 3 wings of the Princess Kaiulani Hotel. The exact mix is not
known until the day of arrival and is based on availability in
each category on arrival day.)
Room rates are subject to the current 10.17% Hawaii State and room
tax.
====================================================================
ADDITIONAL CONFERENCE INFORMATION CAN BE OBTAINED VIA THE FOLLOWING
URLs: http://www.isoc.org/inet95.html
gopher: //gopher.isoc.org/11/isoc/inet95
ftp: //ftp.isoc.org/isoc/inet95
Email: ine...@isoc.org (for information)
inet-reg...@isoc.org (for registration)
Tel: +1-703-648-9888
800-468-9507 (in USA and Canada only)
Fax: +1-703-648-9887
Post: Internet Society Secretariat
12020 Sunrise Valley Drive, Suite 270
Reston VA 22091
USA
====================================================================