Advanced Content Delivery and Streaming in the Cloud

Call for Chapters

Introduction Objectives Topics of Interest Important Dates Target Audience Submission Instructions Editors Contact Details

LATEST: A tentative Table of Contents can be found here.

Introduction

Content Delivery Networks (CDNs) evolved as a solution for Internet service degradations such as congestions and bottlenecks due to the large end-user demands posed on Web access services. Applications of CDNs can be found in many communities, such as social networking websites, audio and video streaming, academic institutions, advertising media and Internet advertisement companies, data centers, Internet Service Providers (ISPs), online music retailers, mobile operators, consumer electronics manufacturers, and other carrier companies. Along with the proliferation, formation, and consolidation of the CDN landscape and the introduction of Cloud computing, new forms of Internet content, services, and technologies are coming into picture; while distribution and management of content is introducing new challenges in this domain. This raises new issues in the architecture, core technology, development, and applications of CDNs. The proposed book aims to capture the technological trends in the content delivery domain to provide an exclusive research and development roadmap to the CDN community.

Objectives

The aim of this book is to provide a comprehensive guide on latest ideas and results in the content delivery domain. By reading this book, audience will have the following benefits:

Topics of Interest

Topics for potential chapters include, but are not limited to:

Important Dates

Chapter Proposal Due: October 15, 2012 (You are invited to submit a 1-2 pages proposal describing the topic of your chapter. The proposal should include the chapter organization, anticipated number of pages of the final manuscript and brief biography of authors. Early submission is highly appreciated)

Notification of Proposal Acceptance/Rejection: November 15, 2012

Full Chapter Due: March 15, 2013

Notification of Chapter Acceptance/Rejection: June 15, 2013

Final Chapter Due: July 15, 2013

Manuscript Delivery to Publisher: July 30, 2013

Target Audience

The proposed book is aimed at a large audience including systems architects, practitioners, product developers, and researchers. It can be used as a reference/text-book for graduate students and roadmap for academicians, who are starting to research in the field of content delivery. We expect the readers to have at least the basic knowledge of Web technologies and the Internet. In particular, readers should be knowledgeable about Web caching, replication, Internet-based services and applications, and basic networking. This book will attract readers, who have ever been intrigued by the word “content networking” and are interested in finding out more. Upon reading this book, they will be the promoter and spokesperson of content networking technologies. The readers will be able to point to this book while initiating discussion, design, development, and be a feedback mechanism for the future improvements of the book. The content of this book will be 25% introductory, 25% advanced and 50% specialist.

Submission Instructions

Proposal Submission: Proposal should not exceed three A4 pages and must include title, authors, chapter organization and proposed content in each section. Proposals should be submitted using the EasyChair Submission System or by email to the corresponding editor.

Final manuscript submission: Each accepted chapter must not exceed 25 pages in final camera-ready format. Please use attached MS Word template and Author's Guide or please download the Word style files from http://www.wiley.com/authors/guidelines/stmguides.html for preparing your chapter for submission to the publisher. We expect to receive significant, high quality, and innovative contributions that are not yet fully published or that are not currently under review elsewhere. To make the book accessible to larger audience, contributions from the authors can also be based on the concepts learned from previously published works. The book is intended to be used as graduate level courseware. Therefore, each chapter should be written as tutorial type, rather than as a conference paper. Each chapter should include the following mandatory sections (with exact heading) among others of choice of the authors: keywords (at least 5, not more than 10), introduction, background/related work, visionary thoughts for practitioners, future research directions, conclusion, and references. Submission of a chapter for review would imply the readiness of the author(s) to publish the chapter in the book. Early submission is highly appreciated as the editors would like to have progressive dialogue and work with prospective authors to bring out a book of wide appeal. Authors of accepted chapters would be required to sign an agreement of copyright transfer and an originality statement to the publisher.

Editors Contact Details

Dr. Mukaddim Pathan (Corresponding Editor)

Technology Specialist - Content Delivery Networks

Telstra Corporation Limited

21/35 Collins St, Melbourne, Victoria 3000, Australia

Email: mukaddim.pathan@team.telstra.com; al.mukaddim@gmail.com

 

Prof. Ramesh K. Sitaraman

Akamai Fellow

Department of Computer Science

University of Massachusetts

Amherst, MA 01003-4610, USA

Email: ramesh@cs.umass.edu

 

Dom Robinson

Director Innovation

id3as-company /  D2Consulting Ltd

20 Rowan Way, Rottingdean, Brighton, Sussex, UK

Email: d2@d2consulting.co.uk