Dependable Computing and Communications Symposium (DCCS)
- We invite original papers and other contributions reporting research and practical results covering all aspects of computer-system dependability, but very specially: resilient and dependable dynamic information networks and infrastructures, self-managing systems, survivable critical infrastructures, autonomic computing, intrusion detection and tolerance, the reliability aspects of human-computer interactions, dependable HW and SW architecture; distributed systems architectures and protocols.
- Topic areas include, but are not limited to:
- Adaptability
- Critical Infrastructures Protection
- Dependability in VLSI
- Distributed Systems
- E-commerce Dependability
- Fault Tolerance
- High-Speed Networks and Protocols
- Industrial Applications and Automotives
- Information Assurance and Survivability
- Intrusion Tolerance
- Internet Dependability
- Mobile Systems
- Multimedia Systems
- Quality of Service
- Real-Time Systems
- Safety-Critical Systems
- Security Policy, Protection and Access Control
- Software and System Reliability
- Software Testing, Validation, and Verification
- Storage Systems
- Supercomputing and High-end Computing Systems
- System Dependability Modeling and Prediction
- System Management and Self-managed Systems
- Telecommunication Systems
- Transaction Processing
- Andrea Bondavalli
<[email protected]>
- Dipartimento di Sistemi e Informatica,
Universita' di Firenze
/ISTI-CNR-Pisa
Via Lombroso, 6/17, 50134 Firenze, Italy
Tel: (+39) 055-4796776 / Fax: (+39) 055-4796730
- Manuscripts in the following categories will be refereed and considered for publication in the Proceedings of the 2005 International Conference on Dependable Systems and Networks. Excessively long submissions, unoriginal work, or work that is submitted to multiple venues will be disregarded. Please submit in any of the following categories by November 19,2004:
- Regular Papers describing recent research results.
- Practical Experience Reports describing an experience or a case study.
- Software and System Demonstrations describing the software or
the system, its context and objective, and the planned
demonstration. Optionally, authors may additionally send
video recordings of their proposed demonstration.
- Panels, including the proposed topic(s), a description of the
panel objectives, and the names and addresses of probable
panelists.
- The title page should include the title of the paper, author name(s), affiliations, mailing address, phone number, fax number, and e-mail address, a maximum 150-word abstract, five keywords (to help with referee assignment), the submission category (see above), an approximate word count, and a declaration that the material has been cleared through author affiliations. For multi-authored submissions, the contact author should be indicated.
- The format of submissions for review should be single-column, Times 11-point size, double-spaced:
- 20 pages for Regular Papers (equivalent to 10 IEEE conference
pages),
- 12 pages for Practical Experience Reports and Software and
System demonstrations (equivalent to 6 IEEE conference
pages),
- 4 pages (equivalent to 2 IEEE conference pages), plus
biographical sketch for Panel Proposals.
- The format for final, camera-ready submissions that have been
accepted for publication should be in accordance with
IEEE standard conference paper format.
- Submit all materials through
DCCS submission page
as Portable Document Format (.pdf) files. Please preview the manuscript in a viewer such as Acrobat to ensure its integrity before submitting it. Make sure you visually check uncommon fonts, symbols, equations, etc. A defective print can undermine your chances of success. For those who are unable to submit materials electronically or cannot generate .pdf files, please contact the program chair for special instructions.
- Submission: November 19, 2004
- Notification: February 28, 2005
The William C. Carter Award is presented annually since 1997 to
recognize an individual who has made a significant contribution to the
field of dependable computing through his or her graduate dissertation
research. The award honors the late William C. Carter, a key figure in
the formation and development of the field of dependable computing. The
award is sponsored by IEEE Technical Committee on Fault-Tolerant
Computing (TC-FTC) and IFIP Working Group on Dependable Computing and
Fault Tolerance (WG 10.4). To qualify, a paper based on the student's
dissertation must have been submitted to the DCC Symposium within DSN as
a regular paper with the student as the first author. Both current and
former graduate students, no more than two years past completion of
their dissertations, are eligible. A dissertation advisor wishing to
nominate a student should submit the nomination form which can be found
at DSN2005 Carter Award Nomination. All Carter Award
submissions accepted as regular papers to the DCC Symposium are
evaluated by the Steering Committee of the Conference.