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http://rina.tssg.org/lectures.xml |
Lecture Series Podcast Library | |
Name | Description |
Short Biography of John Day |
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Shortening the Dark Ages of Networking |
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A journey from Science to Craft ... and Back? |
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How to Clean a Slate |
![]() Also view the other "How to Clean a Slate" lecture as there are differences in the two lectures with alternate content in both. |
How to Clean a Slate |
![]() Also view the other "How to Clean a Slate" lecture as there are differences in the two lectures with alternate content in both. |
Interview, WIT |
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IM2011 - Stalking the Wiley Homunculus and other Adventures in Network Management |
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We Got Trouble! Right Here in River City, With a capital T and that Rhymes with P, and That Stands for IP! |
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From the Archive:Things they never taught you about Naming and Addressing |
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Press Releases - European Tour |
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Subscribe to the Pouzin Society Documents Podcast and automatically receive updates into iTunes. | |
Copy the Podcast URL below, then in iTunes, Select Advanced, Subscribe to Podcast, Paste the link and click OK | |
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http://rina.tssg.org/documents.xml |
Documents & Publications Library | |
Name | Description |
How in the Heck do you lose a layer!? | ![]() Author: John Day |
Welcome to the RINAissance! - An Introduction to the RINA Architecture Part I | ![]() Author: John Day |
Welcome to the RINAissance! - An Introduction to the RINA Architecture Part II | ![]() Author: John Day |
We Got Trouble! | ![]() Author: John Day |
DAFs and Management in RINA | ![]() Author: John Day |
Introduction to current RINA R&D activities | ![]() Author: John Day, Lou Chitkushev (Boston University) Steve Bunch, Peter de Wolf (TRIA Network Systems) Miguel Ponce de Leon (WIT-TSSG), Eduard Grasa (Fundació i2CAT) |
IRATI - Project overview, use cases, specifications, software development and experimental activities | ![]() Author: IRATI Project |
Overview of IRINA project - Investigating RINA as the next generation GEANT and NREN network Architecture | ![]() Author: Dimitri Staessens, Eduard Grasa, Miguel Ponce De Leon, Francesco Salvestrini, Didier Colle |
Overview of PRISTINE project - Programmability In RINA for European supremacy of virtualised networks | ![]() Author: Miguel Ponce De Leon |
Assessing the Security of a Clean-Slate Internet Architecture Layer | ![]() Author: G. Boddapati, I. Matta. J. Day, L. Chitkushev |
Layer Discovery in RINA Networks | ![]() Author: E. Trouva, E. Grasa, J. Day. S. Bunch |
Layer Discovery in RINA Networks | ![]() Author: E. Trouva, E. Grasa, J. Day. S. Bunch |
RINA: Update on Research and Prototyping Activities | ![]() Author: Eduard Grasa |
Developing a RINA prototype over IP using the TINOS framework | ![]() Author: Eduard Grasa |
Experiences with Implementing RINA - Recursive Inter Network Architecture | ![]() Author: Miguel Ponce de Leon, John Day, Eduard Grasa |
Patterns In Network Security: An Analysis Of Architectural Complexity In Securing Recursive Inter-Network Architecture Networks | ![]() Author: Jeremiah Small |
RINA Java Prototype demo and development plans | ![]() Author: Miguel Ponce de Leon, John Day, Eduard Grasa |
How in the Heck do you lose a layer!? | ![]() Author: John Day |
Threat Analysis of Recursive Inter-Network Architecture Distributed Inter-process Communication Facilities | ![]() Author: Jeremiah Small |
How in the Heck do you lose a layer!? | ![]() Author: John Day |
Bounding the router table size in an ISP network using RINA | ![]() Author: Eleni Trouva et al. |
The Last Waltz and Moving Beyond TCP/IP | ![]() Author: John Nolan |
Transport over Heterogeneous Networks Using the RINA Architecture | ![]() Author: Eleni Trouva et al. |
Is the Internet an Unfinished Demo? | ![]() Author: Eleni Trouva et al. |
Poster for the Terena Conference | ![]() Author: Eleni Trouva, Eduard Grasa |
2010 Futurenet Tutorial on RINA - Part 1 | ![]() Author: John Day |
2010 Futurenet Tutorial on RINA - Part 2 | ![]() Author: John Day |
2010 Futurenet Tutorial on RINA - Part 3 | ![]() Author: John Day |
Moving Beyond TCP/IP | ![]() Author: Fred Goldstein and John Day |
Networking is IPC and only IPC or How to Clean a Slate | ![]() Author: John Day |
Things They Never Tought You About Naming and Addressing | ![]() Author: John Day |
On the Performance and Robustness of Managing Reliable Transport Connections | ![]() Authors: Gursun, Matta, Mattar |
On the Cost of Supporting Multihoming and Mobility | ![]() Authors: Ishakian, Akinwumi, Matta |
And You Thought the Wall Street Meltdown was Fun! | ![]() Author: John Day |
Internet: The Coming of Age | ![]() |
The Pouzin Society | ![]() Author: Jean-Michel Cornu |
Why Loc/Id Split Isn't the Answer | ![]() Author: John Day, Draft |
Architectural Implications of Locator/ID Separation | ![]() Authors: D. Meyer, D. Lewis 2009 |
A Challenge for Researchers | ![]() |
A Challenge for Business | ![]() |
Networking is IPC: A Guiding Principle to a Better Internet | ![]() Authors: Day, Matta, Mattar |
Creating a Viable Economic Model for a Viable Internet | ![]() Author: John Day, 2008 |
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Patterns in Network Architecture: A Return to Fundamentals by John Day Published by Prentice Hall ISBN 0132252422 In Patterns in Network Architecture, pioneer John Day takes a unique approach to solving the problem of network architecture. Piercing the fog of history, he bridges the gap between our experience from the original ARPANET and today's Internet to a new perspective on networking. Along the way, he shows how socioeconomic forces derailed progress and led to the current crisis. Beginning with the seven fundamental, and still unanswered, questions identified during the ARPANET's development, Patterns in Network Architecture returns to bedrock and traces our experience both good and bad. Along the way, he uncovers overlooked patterns in protocols that simplify design and implementation and resolves the classic conflict between connection and connectionless while retaining the best of both. He finds deep new insights into the core challenges of naming and addressing, along with results from upper-layer architecture. All of this in Day's deft hands comes together in a tour de force of elegance and simplicity with the annoying turn of events that the answer has been staring us in the face: Operating systems tell us even more about networking than we thought. The result is, in essence, the first "unified theory of networking," and leads to a simpler, more powerful-and above all-more scalable network infrastructure. The book then lays the groundwork for how to exploit the result in the design, development, and management as we move beyond the limitations of the Internet. |