Cantitate/Preț
Produs

Distributed Computing: 21st International Symposium, DISC 2007, Lemesos, Cyprus, September 24-26, 2007, Proceedings: Lecture Notes in Computer Science, cartea 4731

Editat de Andrzej Pelc
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 7 sep 2007

Din seria Lecture Notes in Computer Science

Preț: 33703 lei

Preț vechi: 42128 lei
-20% Nou

Puncte Express: 506

Preț estimativ în valută:
6450 66100$ 5358£

Carte tipărită la comandă

Livrare economică 03-17 februarie 25

Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76

Specificații

ISBN-13: 9783540751410
ISBN-10: 3540751416
Pagini: 530
Ilustrații: XVI, 512 p. With online files/update.
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 x 32 mm
Greutate: 0.74 kg
Ediția:2007
Editura: Springer Berlin, Heidelberg
Colecția Springer
Seriile Lecture Notes in Computer Science, Theoretical Computer Science and General Issues

Locul publicării:Berlin, Heidelberg, Germany

Public țintă

Research

Cuprins

Invited Talks.- Routing and Scheduling with Incomplete Information.- Time-Efficient Broadcasting in Radio Networks.- A Subjective Visit to Selected Topics in Distributed Computing.- Regular Papers.- Bounded Wait-Free Implementation of Optimally Resilient Byzantine Storage Without (Unproven) Cryptographic Assumptions.- A Simple Population Protocol for Fast Robust Approximate Majority.- A Denial-of-Service Resistant DHT.- Mobility Versus the Cost of Geocasting in Mobile Ad-Hoc Networks.- Self-stabilizing Counting in Mobile Sensor Networks with a Base Station.- Scalable Load-Distance Balancing.- Time Optimal Asynchronous Self-stabilizing Spanning Tree.- Rendezvous of Mobile Agents in Unknown Graphs with Faulty Links.- Weakening Failure Detectors for k-Set Agreement Via the Partition Approach.- Amnesic Distributed Storage.- Distributed Approximations for Packing in Unit-Disk Graphs.- From Crash-Stop to Permanent Omission: Automatic Transformation and Weakest Failure Detectors.- Deterministic Distributed Construction of Linear Stretch Spanners in Polylogarithmic Time.- On Self-stabilizing Synchronous Actions Despite Byzantine Attacks.- Gossiping in a Multi-channel Radio Network.- The Space Complexity of Unbounded Timestamps.- Approximating Wardrop Equilibria with Finitely Many Agents.- Energy and Time Efficient Broadcasting in Known Topology Radio Networks.- A Distributed Algorithm for Finding All Best Swap Edges of a Minimum Diameter Spanning Tree.- On the Message Complexity of Indulgent Consensus.- Gathering Autonomous Mobile Robots with Dynamic Compasses: An Optimal Result.- Compact Separator Decompositions in Dynamic Trees and Applications to Labeling Schemes.- On the Communication Surplus Incurred by Faulty Processors.- Output Stability Versus Time Till Output.- A Distributed Maximal Scheduler for Strong Fairness.- Cost-Aware Caching Algorithms for Distributed Storage Servers.- Push-to-Pull Peer-to-Peer Live Streaming.- Probabilistic Opaque Quorum Systems.- Detecting Temporal Logic Predicates on Distributed Computations.- Optimal On-Line Colorings for Minimizing the Number of ADMs in Optical Networks.- Efficient Transformations of Obstruction-Free Algorithms into Non-blocking Algorithms.- Automatic Classification of Eventual Failure Detectors.- Brief Announcements.- When 3f?+?1 Is Not Enough: Tradeoffs for Decentralized Asynchronous Byzantine Consensus.- On the Complexity of Distributed Greedy Coloring.- Fault-Tolerant Implementations of the Atomic-State Communication Model in Weaker Networks.- Transaction Safe Nonblocking Data Structures.- Long Live Continuous Consensus.- Fully Distributed Algorithms for Convex Optimization Problems.- On the Power of Impersonation Attacks.- Perfectly Reliable and Secure Communication in Directed Networks Tolerating Mixed Adversary.- A Formal Analysis of the Deferred Update Technique.- DISC 20th Anniversary.- DISC at Its 20th Anniversary (Stockholm, 2006).- DISC 20th Anniversary: Invited Talk Time, Clocks, and the Ordering of My Ideas About Distributed Systems.- DISC 20th Anniversary: Invited Talk My Early Days in Distributed Computing Theory: 1979-1982.- DISC 20th Anniversary: Invited Talk Provably Unbreakable Hyper-Encryption Using Distributed Systems.