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The development of mobile ad hoc systems have considerably emphasized the need for a better understanding of the factors that influence the systemspsila performance, i.e., mobility patterns, radio propagation, traffic characteristics and their interrelations. Depending on the context where the system is being used-whether at work, at home, or in some means of transportation-there will be various applications...
Existing anycast routing protocols solely route packets to the closest group member. In this paper, we introduce density-based anycast routing, a new anycast routing paradigm particularly suitable for wireless ad hoc networks. Instead of routing packets merely on proximity information to the closest member, density-based anycast routing considers the number of available anycast group members for its...
Podcasting has become popular for dissemination of streaming contents over the Internet. It is based on software clients that query servers for updates of subscribed content feeds. Podcasting may be used for any media content, but it is most commonly associated with audio streams. It provides a simple, no-frills broadcasting system for delay tolerant contents. A main limitation with this system is...
In performance studies of vehicular ad hoc networks, the underlying mobility model plays a major role. In this paper, we investigate the influence of three mobility models on the performance of ad hoc network routing protocols (AODV and GPSR). As a benchmark, we use the popular random waypoint mobility model. Our second model is based on a vehicular traffic simulator that we proposed in earlier work...
End-to-end transport protocols such as TCP perform poorly in mobile environments, primarily due to their inability to cope with the dynamics incurred by node mobility. We re-consider the design decisions that lead to the end-to-end design of the transport layer. To this end, we present a framework for reliable hop-by-hop transport protocols. Based on this framework, we design and evaluate such a protocol...
This paper analyzes the characteristics of a multi-hop 802.11b mobile ad hoc network. We present data gathered from a mobile network of 20 devices carried by test users over 5 days in an indoor environment. The data is analyzed with regard to (i) the number of reachable devices, (ii) the node degree, (iii) the average path length, (iv) the link lifetime, (v) and the route lifetime. Despite the relatively...
In mobile ad hoc networks, we envision a network where mobile users obtain services from close-by instances. The architecture of today's Internet was designed for fixed users that obtain services from stationary servers and is not well suited for such scenarios. The reason is that (i) the architecture combines identity and location in an IP address and thus forces mobile elements to change their identity...
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