A database for publications published by researchers and students at SimulaMet.
Research area
Publication type
- All (564)
- Journal articles (133)
- Books (5)
- Edited books (2)
- Proceedings, refereed (149)
- Book chapters (4)
- Talks, keynote (11)
- PhD theses (5)
- Proceedings, non-refereed (15)
- Posters (6)
- Technical reports (13)
- Talks, invited (146)
- Talks, contributed (15)
- Public outreach (48)
- Miscellaneous (12) Remove Miscellaneous <span class="counter">(12)</span> filter
Miscellaneous
Increasing Availability of Subsea Telecom Infrastructure Through Monitoring Vibrations in Optical Fibre Subsea Cables
Submarine Telecoms Forum, 2023.Status: Published
Increasing Availability of Subsea Telecom Infrastructure Through Monitoring Vibrations in Optical Fibre Subsea Cables
Society’s reliance on telecommunication infrastructure continues to grow as both energy and telecommunications solutions share mutual dependencies. This dependency calls for increased monitoring of fibre networks and fibre optic subsea cables, which serve as the backbone of connectivity for all digital communications.
Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) and State of Polari- sation (SoP) monitoring provide real-time measurements of vibrations and potential mechanical interference which could impact the cable. Implementation of these sensing technologies mitigate risk to the infrastructure, preventing equipment failure and downtime. In particular, any unexpected movements caused by subsea activities such as passing trawlers, hooking of equipment on the seabed, and any geophysical phenomena can be traced so that appropriate action could be taken.
This article will explain the capability and benefits of the monitoring system and how Tampnet utilises this system for monitoring its vast subsea and terrestrial cable systems.
Afilliation | Communication Systems |
Project(s) | The Center for Resilient Networks and Applications, GAIA |
Publication Type | Miscellaneous |
Year of Publication | 2023 |
Publisher | Submarine Telecoms Forum |
URL | https://subtelforum.com/subtel-forum-magazine-131-regional-systems/ |
Miscellaneous
Africa and the Internet
Oslo: CRNA blog, 2022.Status: Published
Africa and the Internet
PhD student Jan Marius Evang discuss the current controversies happening with the African Regional Internet Registry (AFRINIC) and how this might affect the stability and resilience of the Internet.
Afilliation | Communication Systems |
Project(s) | The Center for Resilient Networks and Applications |
Publication Type | Miscellaneous |
Year of Publication | 2022 |
Publisher | CRNA blog |
Place Published | Oslo |
Keywords | Africa, Afrinic, Governance |
URL | https://crna.substack.com/p/africa-and-the-internet |
What is happening to the Internet in Ukraine and Russia?
Oslo: CRNA blog, 2022.Status: Published
What is happening to the Internet in Ukraine and Russia?
The current events happening in Ukraine have caused interruptions to the internet connectivity. In this blog post we take a look at some things we can learn about the events from looking at internet monitoring, and what the consequences of political actions may be.
Afilliation | Communication Systems |
Project(s) | The Center for Resilient Networks and Applications |
Publication Type | Miscellaneous |
Year of Publication | 2022 |
Publisher | CRNA blog |
Place Published | Oslo |
Keywords | Governance, Ukraine |
URL | https://crna.substack.com/p/what-is-happening-to-the-internet |
Miscellaneous
Digital Value Chains - Debate
Cyber Foresight Workshop: German Council on Foreign Relations, 2021.Status: Published
Digital Value Chains - Debate
Afilliation | Communication Systems |
Project(s) | The Center for Resilient Networks and Applications |
Publication Type | Miscellaneous |
Year of Publication | 2021 |
Publisher | German Council on Foreign Relations |
Place Published | Cyber Foresight Workshop |
Miscellaneous
A Survey on Universal Design for Fitness Wearable Devices
In arXiv. arXiv, 2020.Status: Published
A Survey on Universal Design for Fitness Wearable Devices
Afilliation | Communication Systems |
Project(s) | Department of Mobile Systems and Analytics, Simula Metropolitan Center for Digital Engineering |
Publication Type | Miscellaneous |
Year of Publication | 2020 |
Publisher | arXiv |
Accession Number | 2006.00823 |
How accurate are IP geolocation services?
APNIC blog, 2020.Status: Published
How accurate are IP geolocation services?
Afilliation | Communication Systems |
Project(s) | The Center for Resilient Networks and Applications, GAIA |
Publication Type | Miscellaneous |
Year of Publication | 2020 |
Publisher | APNIC blog |
URL | https://blog.apnic.net/2020/09/15/how-accurate-are-ip-geolocation-services/ |
Miscellaneous
NorNet at the University of Sydney: From Simulations to Real-World Internet Measurements for Multi-Path Transport Research
Sydney, New South Wales/Australia: University of Sydney, 2019.Status: Published
NorNet at the University of Sydney: From Simulations to Real-World Internet Measurements for Multi-Path Transport Research
A large fraction of the communication in the Internet is handled by the Transmission Control Protocol (TCP). Since the first deployments of this protocol more than 30 years ago, the spectrum of applications as well as the structure of the network have developed at a fast pace. For example, today's network devices, like smartphones and laptops – i.e.\ particularly many devices in the area of mobile computing – frequently have an interesting property: the existence of multiple IP addresses (IPv4 and/or IPv6). The addresses may even change due to mobility. This property, denoted as multi-homing, can be utilised for multi-path transport, i.e. the simultaneous usage of multiple paths in the network to improve performance. Multi-path transport is a hot topic in the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), which is the standardisation organisation for the Internet.
This talk provides an overview of the work in the areas of multi-homing and multi-path transport, with focus on the area of the protocols TCP and Stream Control Transmission Protocol (SCTP) with their experimental extensions Multi-Path TCP (MPTCP) and Concurrent Multi-Path Transfer for SCTP (CMT-SCTP). It particularly shows the sequence of research and selected results, beginning from a simple simulation model, via lab setups and small Internet scenarios, up to the large-scale, international testbed project NorNet. NorNet, and particularly its landline network part NorNet Core, is furthermore described in some detail. Based on NorNet, it is finally possible to validate simulation results in real-world, multi-homed networks, in order to provide valuable input to the ongoing IETF standardisation processes of MPTCP and CMT-SCTP. Particularly, it will also show how the NorNet testbed can be utilised for research at the University of Sydney.
Afilliation | Communication Systems |
Project(s) | The Center for Resilient Networks and Applications, NorNet |
Publication Type | Miscellaneous |
Year of Publication | 2019 |
Publisher | University of Sydney |
Place Published | Sydney, New South Wales/Australia |
Keywords | Introduction, Multi-Homing, NorNet, NorNet Core, NorNet Edge, Status, Testbed |
Miscellaneous
An Experiment Tutorial for the NorNet Core Testbed at NICTA
Sydney, New South Wales/Australia, 2016.Status: Published
An Experiment Tutorial for the NorNet Core Testbed at NICTA
This tutorial – presented fat National Information Communications Technology Australia (NICTA) – provides an introduction on how to get access to the NorNet Core testbed as well as how to run experiments in the testbed.
Afilliation | , Communication Systems, Communication Systems |
Project(s) | NorNet, The Center for Resilient Networks and Applications |
Publication Type | Miscellaneous |
Year of Publication | 2016 |
Place Published | Sydney, New South Wales/Australia |
Keywords | Multi-Homing, Multi-Path Transport, NorNet, NorNet Core, Testbed, Tutorial |
Improving PIE's performance over high-delay paths
2016.Status: Published
Improving PIE's performance over high-delay paths
Bufferbloat is excessive latency due to over- provisioned network buffers. PIE and CoDel are two recently proposed Active Queue Management (AQM) algorithms, designed to tackle bufferbloat by lowering the queuing delay without degrading the bottleneck utilization. PIE uses a proportional integral controller to maintain the average queuing delay at a desired level; however, large Round Trip Times (RTT) result in large spikes in queuing delays, which induce high dropping probability and low utilization. To deal with this problem, we propose Maximum and Average queuing Delay with PIE (MADPIE). Loosely based on the drop policy used by CoDel to keep queuing delay bounded, MADPIE is a simple extension to PIE that adds deterministic packet drops at controlled intervals. By means of simulations, we observe that our proposed change does not affect PIE's performance when RTT < 100 ms. The deterministic drops are more dominant when the RTT increases, which results in lower maximum queuing delays and better performance for VoIP traffic and small file downloads, with no major impact on bulk transfers.
Afilliation | Communication Systems, Communication Systems, Communication Systems |
Project(s) | The Center for Resilient Networks and Applications |
Publication Type | Miscellaneous |
Year of Publication | 2016 |
Keywords | Active Queue Management, Internet latency, PIE |
URL | http://arxiv.org/abs/1602.00569 |
An Experiment Tutorial for the NorNet Core Testbed at HAW Hamburg
Hamburg/Germany, 2016.Status: Published
An Experiment Tutorial for the NorNet Core Testbed at HAW Hamburg
This tutorial -- presented at the Hochschule für Angewandte Wissenschaften Hamburg (HAW Hamburg) -- provides an introduction on how to get access to the NorNet Core testbed as well as how to run experiments in the testbed.
Afilliation | Communication Systems |
Project(s) | The Center for Resilient Networks and Applications |
Publication Type | Miscellaneous |
Year of Publication | 2016 |
Place Published | Hamburg/Germany |
Keywords | Multi-Homing, Multi-Path Transport, NorNet, NorNet Core, Testbed, Tutorial |