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Welcome to Networking Research Lab (NRL)

Networking Research Lab (NRL) is led by Injong Rhee along with a number of graduate students and research scientists. We study network protocols that enhance the well-being of computer networks, particularly, what we call today the Internet. In the evolution of the Internet, we have observed the birth and demise of many different types of computer networks, including ATM, Ethernet, optical networks, wireless networks, sensor networks and delay (or disruption) tolerant networks. With the evolution of new network technologies, network protocols must also adapt to and evolve with the new technologies. The mission of NRL is to enable this evolution of network protocols. We build protocols that are fast, scalable, adaptable, realizable and deployable. In the midst of these efforts, we discover fundamental properties of computer networks involving humans as the major enablers, which makes the research work all the more interesting. Our approaches are fundamental, but at the same time highly practical; we pursue lasting work that can help network users of today as well as of future.

Lab News

Date Description
2009/05/10 Photos of Puneet's diploma ceremony are posted. Click here
2008/12/17 Photos of Ajit's diploma ceremony are posted. Click here
2008/11/15 Lab photos are updated. Click here to see the pictures.
2008/10/14 Congratulation! Our MS graduates, Puneet Arora and Sanidhya Khilnani are going to join Microsoft.
More ...

Resources


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Latest News
New Human Movement Model Can Aid In Studying Epidemic Outbreaks, Public Planning
(April 28, 2009)

Dr. Injong Rhee, associate professor of computer science, is developing a new statistical model that simulates human mobility patterns, having a host of potential uses ranging from land use planning to public health studies of disease outbreak.  [full story] [mobility model home]

PFLDNet Tokyo, Japan
(May 2009)
Yaogong will present a paper on Netset at PFLDNeT, Tokyo, Japan in May 2009.
INFOCOM, Rio, Brazil
(April 22, 2009)
Sankararaman Janakiraman presented a full paper titled "DiffQ: Practical Differential Backlog Congestion Control for Wireless Networks," at INFOCOM, Rio, Brazil on April 22, 2009.
INFOCOM, Rio, Brazil
(April 22, 2009)
Kyunghan Lee presented a full paper titled "SLAW: A Mobility Model for Human Walks," at INFOCOM, Rio, Brazil on April 22, 2009.
Research data
Research Highligts on DiffQ and demo videos are available .

NS2 and Matlab source codes of two mobility models, SLAW and TLW, are available (link).

 
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