Sunday 22 November Welcome recpetion 20.00-22.00 in Kista Science Tower, Färögatan 33. Close to the conference building the hotels. During the reception you will be able to pick up your name badge (and conference badge). Monday 23 November Electrum Building, Kistagången 16/Isafjordsgatan 26. Please note that the place for the welcome reception and the conference is not the same. The map below shows all the important locations for the conference. Map Kista Science City 7.30 – 8.30 Registration 8.30 – 10.30 Plenary opening session 10.30 – 11.15 Coffee break with Posters 11.15 – 12.45 Session I.1 Different architectures for different business models? Session I.2 eID management and provisioning in the Future Internet infrastructures including routing, services, and content Session I.3 What does it mean to conduct experimentally driven research? 12.45 – 14.15 Lunch break. Final 30 minutes Posters and Coffee 14.15 – 15.45 Session II.1 Orchestration across networks, things, services and content Session II.2 How to measure trust? Session II.3 What does Future Internet mean for smart cities? 15.45 – 16.30 Coffee break with posters 16.30 – 18.00 Session III.1 The question of Discovery and Search in the future internet Session III.2 What does Future Internet mean for enterprise? Session III.3 Deploying on Future Internet Research & Experimentation (FIRE) 18.30 Busses will leave to the Museum of Modern Art in Stockholm for tour and gala dinner Tuesday 24 November 9.00 – 11.00 Session IV.1 FI Socio-economics Session IV.2 Management & Service aware NA Session IV.3 Trust & Identity Session IV.4 Usage of facilities Session IV.5 FI Service Offer Session IV.6 Real-world Internet Session IV.7 Future Content Networks 11.00 – 11.30 Coffee break and posters 11.30 – 13.30 Plenary closing session 13.30 – 14.30 Lunch
Sunday 22 November Welcome recpetion 20.00-22.00 in Kista Science Tower, Färögatan 33. Close to the conference building the hotels. During the reception you will be able to pick up your name badge (and conference badge). Monday 23 November Electrum Building, Kistagången 16/Isafjordsgatan 26. Please note that the place for the welcome reception and the conference is not the same. The map below shows all the important locations for the conference. Map Kista Science City
7.30 – 8.30
Registration
8.30 – 10.30
Plenary opening session
10.30 – 11.15
Coffee break with Posters
11.15 – 12.45
Session I.1 Different architectures for different business models?
Session I.2 eID management and provisioning in the Future Internet infrastructures including routing, services, and content
Session I.3 What does it mean to conduct experimentally driven research?
12.45 – 14.15
Lunch break. Final 30 minutes Posters and Coffee
14.15 – 15.45
Session II.1 Orchestration across networks, things, services and content
Session II.2 How to measure trust?
Session II.3 What does Future Internet mean for smart cities?
15.45 – 16.30
Coffee break with posters
16.30 – 18.00
Session III.1 The question of Discovery and Search in the future internet
Session III.2 What does Future Internet mean for enterprise?
Session III.3 Deploying on Future Internet Research & Experimentation (FIRE)
18.30
Busses will leave to the Museum of Modern Art in Stockholm for tour and gala dinner
Tuesday 24 November
9.00 – 11.00
Session IV.1 FI Socio-economics
Session IV.2 Management & Service aware NA
Session IV.3 Trust & Identity
Session IV.4 Usage of facilities
Session IV.5 FI Service Offer
Session IV.6 Real-world Internet
Session IV.7 Future Content Networks
11.00 – 11.30
Coffee break and posters
11.30 – 13.30
Plenary closing session
13.30 – 14.30
Lunch
The 2nd Meeting of the Future Internet Forum of EU Member Countries will take place on Monday 23 November from 14:oo – 18:oo – collocated with the FIA'09 Workshop in Kista Science City. Attendance to this meeting is limited to nominated EU Member countries representatives.
Plenary Opening Session (23 Nov. 8.30 – 10.30)
Welcome messages, Prof. Gunnar Landgren, Vice Rector of KTH and Leif Zetterberg, State Secretary to the Minister for Communications (15’)
European Perspectives on the Future Internet, Mario Campolargo, Director, EC (30’)
Industry preparations for a FI PPP, David Kennedy on behalf of the "European Future Internet Initiative" (15’)
Socio-economic views on the Future Internet, Chair Burkhard Stiller (Un. Zurich) ”Serving the Incentives of Users and Providers”, George Stamoulis, aueb (14')
”Contrasting the Technology-centric Perspective by Alternative Perspectives from End- users' Views” ,Peter Ljungstrand, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden (14')
Questions (30’)
I.1. Different architectures for different business models? (23 Nov. 11.15 – 12.45) The requirement of a single, scalable and configurable architecture will be one of the driving forces for the Future Internet. The variety and heterogeneity of the emerging business models, as well as the dynamic service composition and provision may lead to a situation of many Internets, with different architectural structure, requirements and functionality. Such a scenario will result in a nightmare of maintenance efforts, increased costs, incompatibilities and the like. It is thus important to try to build a single core architecture that maintains properties like configurability, extendibility, scalability and openness. Keeping the core architecture as generic as possible will offer the possibility to easily extend and adapt it to the requirements of the edge. Such a design will follow the rising trend of moving intelligence to the edge of the network. On the other hand, there are more specialized applications segments e.g. home networking and surveillance, smart cities, e-health services being established- that are really vertical segments. How will these emerging (?) segments and their business models impact architecture? Session agenda: Introduction: Henrik Abramowics (MANA) 10 min presentations providing the viewpoint of other groups on this topic:
Future Content Networks - Paul Moore, Atos Origin, nextMedia Management and Service Aware Networking Architectures, Alex Galis, UCL, AutoI Future Internet Socio-economics - Simon Delaere, IBBT/VUB Future Internet Service Offer - Stefano de Panfilis, Engineering, Nexof-RA Trust Identity, Volkmar Lotz, SAP, ThinkTrust Discussion summary Additional information I.2. eID management including routing and addressing in the Future Internet (23 Nov. 11.15 – 12.45) The scope of this session encompasses the identities across the various levels (stacks) – networks, services, applications, device and terminals (set of devices) and content, as well as the minimum requirements for identifying user(s) when accessing a resource. Agenda:
11:15 – 11:20, Introduction to session, Jim Clarke, Waterford IT 11:20 – 11:30, Panel session starting with a short description of reference scenario description for eID systems in the Future Internet. Moderator – Marcus Brunner, NEC Labs
11:30 – 11:40, Panelist 1. Networking approaches - Motivation Ricardo Azevedo Pereira, Portugal Telecom, PORTUGAL
11:40 – 11:50, Panelist 2. Networking approaches – Research challenges Amardeo Sarma, NEC Labs Europe, GERMANY
11:50 – 12:00, Panelist 3. Service/Application approaches - Motivation, Simone Fischer Hübner, Karlstad University, Sweden 12:00 – 12:10, Panelist 4. Service/Application approaches - Research challanges 1, Kai Rannenberg, Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany and Jan Camenisch, IBM Zurich, Switzerland 12:10 – 12:40, Discussion with all speakers 12:40 – 12:45, Moving forward to FIA Valencia Wrap Up. Chair – Jim Clarke, Waterford IT
Additional information I.3. What does it mean to conduct experimentally driven research? (23 Nov. 11.15 – 12.45)
Intro on Experimetation methodology and speakers
Nancy Alonistioti
10 min
Necessity for experimentation from the PPP point of view
Didier Bourse
15 min
Presentation on the methodology issues and how to experiment
Martin May
How the methodology could facilitate the shorter time to product development
Vania Conan
Experimentation as a methodology to achieve concrete results: where, how, when
Dimitri Papadimitriou
Panel discussion
- a structure of FI research which may be too strict and inhibit research (forced division in many areas). Need for a frequent interaction between the areas and harmonization and cross-validation of activities/ideas.
- Experimentation is a mandatory step in the validation of new ideas. FIRE facilities offer the bridge between tests in a lab and in a very large scale
- Migration strategies and coexistence testing are as much important as models validation. FIRE facilities offer also such capabilities.
- International collaboration and concertation, also at the technical level is of utmost importance. In particular standardization.
Background and Rationale
The Internet has been the ICT success story for many decades, having great impact in everyday life as well. Economical as well as societal aspects have been greatly affected by the emergence and proliferation of the Internet technologies. The support of Internet communication and the great number of novel services over heterogeneous systems has boosted new forms of communication schemes, collaboration possibilities, services, education, knowledge and information propagation as well as innovation. The fast grow of the Internet, points to the need for broader experimentation capabilities for future technologies.
Theoretical models in the context of future internet, emerging communications and services, are usually validated through dedicated prototyping activities. The test beds used in these activities are usually focused in terms of testing capabilities and fragmented in terms of validation capabilities. Therefore, the need to evolve the test beds into coherent experimentation facilities, enabling broader scope experimentation and validation of theoretical approaches, becomes apparent. This will engage the federation of multi scope platforms under a common framework.
Scope
The experimentally driven research, based on large scale federated experimental infrastructures is quite a challenge. The mere benefits appear to be the engagement in a validation and assessment loop early in the R&D process. In this way in complex systems, experimentation could be the key for discovery and validation throughout the research process. There is a lot of value in putting end users participating as active testers at an early stage of the R&D cycle. They could become key indicators of several metrics related to the realization of theoretical approaches in tangible real life scenarios. Indicative metrics that could be assessed would be the scalability of solutions, performance, usability, robustness and security of the tested functionality. Reduced time to market of tested products could be the imminent outcome of the whole process.
Relevant topics to be addressed:
Experimentation as a methodology to achieve concrete results: where, how, when?
The experimentation facilities as a service offered to R&D
What are the metrics relevant to experimentations?
The impact to standardization
Large scale experimentation: requirements and limitations
Participation
The targeted audience would be organizations involved in R&D projects with prototyping and proof of concept work items, the FIRE projects, the PPP representatives, engineers and application providers, as well as the EC members. Additional information II.1. Orchestration Across Networks, Services, Things and Content (23 Nov. 15.15 – 16.30) What are the orchestration capabilities needed to integrate and govern the complete behaviour and operations of the system-of-systems (i.e. communication-centric systems, information-centric systems, context-centric systems, resource-centric systems, content–centric systems, service/computation-centric systems, device-centric systems, object-centric systems, things-centric systems and management-centric systems)? Draft Agenda: Overview: Alex Galis (UCL) Networks and Network management view points - Martin Vigoureux (Alcatel-Lucent) Content Networks viewpoints - Jean-Dominique Meunier (Thomson) System of Systems Viewpoint - Stefan Schuster Service Level Agreements - Joe Butler (Intel) Service Composition - Dimka Karastoyanova (Univ of Stuttgart) Discussion & Summing up Additional Information II.2. How to measure trust? (23 Nov. 14.15 – 15.45) Without trust, the Future Internet will not materialise in new business platforms and models strengthening the European economy or novel applications increasing quality of life. The reason lies in the value of interactions over the FI for the stakeholders involved and its distributed ownership / federation, demanding entities to behave as expected in order to not put the values at risk. A trusted FI, however, does not mean that nothing can go wrong: vulnerabilities of technical solutions are a fact of life (and there is no evidence that they will vanish with the advent of the FI), and they are likely to be exploited by malicious entities. The key to a trusted FI, thus, lies in the ability to assess the risk associated with these vulnerabilities and the likelihood of malicious behaviour as well as having means at hand to mitigate those risks by adequate controls. This allows a user, for instance, when consuming a service, to make informed decisions about the risk upon engaging in a transaction and to mitigate the risk if necessary (or withdraw from the interaction, if either the risk or the mitigation costs are too high). Agenda:
Introduction: Volkmar Lotz, SAP
Game-theoretical Experiments to Measure trust and trustworthiness, Prof. Claudia Keser, Goettingen University Discussion session
Security Weather Forecast: Security as a Science for the Future Internet, Dr. Stephan Neuhaus, University of Trento, Italy Discussion session Towards FIA Valencia: Additional topics and issues to be addressed and Wrap-up, Volkmar Lotz - SAP
Additional information II.3. What does Future Internet mean for smart cities? (23 Nov. 14.15 – 15.45) The objective of this session is to foster an understanding on what Smart Cities can expect from the Future Internet and how they can benefit from it, but also how Future Internet research can benefit/strive from Smart City environments. The report of the DG INFSO Task Force on the Future Internet Content identified “Federated, Open, Trusted Platforms (F-O-T Platforms)” as a key concept to enable smart applications and services in a Future Internet. The session aims to bring together researchers, experts and practitioners from a variety of different disciplines, covering but not limited to areas such as Internet technologies, built environment, sociologist, anthropologist, ethnographers, etc. to explore the relationship between Smart Cities and the Future Internet, and to identify and characterise the Federated, Open, and Trusted Platforms that will enable the applications and services that will make our cities “smart”. Agenda: Introduction to session by Alex Gluhak Duncan Wilson (Arup Foresight Innovation + Incubation) – “Designing Smarter Cities - Experience from a technology perspective” Fiona Williams (Ericsson Research) - “Smart Cities in the PPP agenda” Dave Carter (Manchester Digital Development Agency) - “Smart Cities - urban living labs supporting regeneration through creativity and innovation” Panel discussion (30 mins) Additional information III.1. The question of Discovery and Search in the Future Internet (23 Nov. 16.30 – 18.00) Within the Future Internet content/context-based search is a topic which covers several different communities each with their own language, notations, tools and methodologies. Specifically, Future Internet search can be considered from the viewpoint of media, physical objects or services. One of our main concerns of the FIA Stockholm event will be to bring these communities together and to have an effective dialogue. Agenda: 16:30 – 16:40, Session goals, Petros Daras, CERTH/ITI 16:40 – 17:00, Perspective of the FCN group, Ralph Traphoener, EMPOLIS, ~05 min talk, ~15 min Q&A 17:00 – 17:20, Perspective of the FISO group, Dieter Fensel, Un. of Innsbruck, ~05 min talk, ~15 min Q&A 17:20-17:40, Perspective of the RWI group, Neeli Prasad, Un. of Aalborg, ~05 min talk, ~15 min Q&A 17:40 - 18:00, Round Table Discussion, Chair: John Domingue, OU Agenda.ppt Additional information III.2 What does Future Internet mean for enterprise? (23 Nov. 16.30 – 18.00) The session aims to debate the problem statement: What will the Future Internet deliver for Enterprises? The intention is to elicit opinions from a broad spectrum of stakeholders of FIA, with a view to creating a common baseline for identifying and prioritising issues in research. Building on that, the intention is also to determine, where possible, what needs to be done to ensure that European enterprises including SMEs would benefit from Future Internet research and its outcomes. In this respect, the session has an emphasis on the application of Future Internet technologies in support of business innovation and enterprise transformation.
To help prepare for the session, a dedicated wiki has been created to elaborate on the Problem Statement and identify specific discussion issues. The session caretakers invite all session participants and interested parties to visit the wiki at http://services.future-internet.eu/index.php/Enterprises and actively contribute to the debate in the run up to the FIA Stockholm.
Chair: Man-Sze Li (IC Focus) 16.30 – 17.15 Welcome and Introduction Position Statements from a cross-section of Stakeholders (5 minutes each)
Sergios Soursos (INTRACOM) Jean-Dominique Meunier (Thomson) Paul Moore (ATOS) Michele Missikoff (FInES Research Roadmap Rapporteur, CNR-IASI) Sergio Gusmeroli (COIN Technical Coordinator, TXT) 17.15 – 17.45 Open discussion organised into 3 knowledge cafes
Knowledge Café 1 (Moderator/Rapporteur: Jean-Dominique Meunier, Man-Sze Li)
Knowledge Café 2 (Moderator/Rapporteur: Sergios Soursos, Stefano De Panfilis)
Knowledge Café 3 (Moderator/Rapporteur: Sergio Gusmeroli, Michele Missikoff)
17.45 – 18.00 Feedback and Summary Additional information III.3. Deploying on "Future Internet Research & Experimentation" (FIRE) (23 Nov. 16.30 – 18.00) The FIRE experimental facilities let us explore whether Future Internet systems operating at scale exhibit the properties and behaviours that we intended when we designed them and tested in the lab, whether systems constructed independently can be integrated together and whether they function as we expect when they are integrated. If we are able to make facilities available for others to use we can also look for emergent properties and emergent usage of systems (e.g. creative use of facilities by users who discover different ways. 1st Specific focus on Trust and Identity Provide e-Identity facilities Provide quarantine areas of the testbed: Observing and monitoring attacks on systems in the public internet (e.g. Honeynets) Provision of ‘trust services’ e.g. eID on which more trustworthy services can be constructed Experimental identification of technical vulnerabilities in systems Experimental work with ‘real’ end users (e.g. living labs) 2nd Specific focus on Software and Services Explore the application of the Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) cloud paradigm on the FIRE testbeds Case: Deploy Open Nebula/Reservoir solutions for managing clouds On reproducibility – Support for basic SLAs, mimic current commercial clouds Agenda:
Introduction
Anastasius Gavras, Eurescom GmbH
3 min
Deploying Service Experiments on FIRE: A OpenNebula / RESERVOIR Perspective
Philippe Massonet, CETIC
18 min
Using Panlab Federation Mechanisms and Infrastructure for Cloud Experiments
Sebastian Wahle, Fraunhofer FOKUS
Provide quarantine areas of the testbed
Nick Wainwright, HP Labs
Deploying isolated testbeds
Mauro Campanella, GARR
Plenary:
What actions are necessary for creating specifications to satisfy such requirements
All
Rapporteur: Anastasius Gavras
09:00 - 09.15, Short presentations of the results from the Architecture, eID and Orchestration sessions of day 1 - 23rd Nov 2009
09.15 - 09.20, Introduction Overview – 1ST MANA position paper
09.20-10.20, 3 Parallel Brainstorming Subgroups
Brainstorming Objectives:
Preparation for 2nd MANA position paper “Future Internet Research Road Map”
Key FI research milestones for the next 5 years
Technical approaches to design Future Internet (FI)
-What are the ideas/means/ priorities related to the analysed capabilities that will drive the new architecture? How will these ideas be synthesized into an overarching architecture?
-What are the building blocks and interactions related to the analysed capabilities
-Review research priorities identified in the 1st MANA position paper
Input: MANA position paper; other position papers: http://www.future-internet.eu/home/future-internet-assembly/prague-may-2009/management-and-service-aware-networking-architectures.html
Group1 – Prioritise FI objectives, requirements and candidate approaches/architectures for designing FI systems
Group 2 – Prioritise Research Challenges for Control, Elasticity, Accountability, Identity capabilities
Group 3 – Prioritise Research Challenges for Virtualisation, Self-management, Orchestration, Service-awareness capabilities
10.20 - 10.50, Presentation of brainstorming results & discussion
10.50 - 11.00, Topics for FIA Valencia & preparation for 2nd MANA position paper – “FI Research Road Map” & Summing up
IV.3. Trust and Identity (24 Nov. 9.00-11.00) Objective: Understand what the results of the sessions of 23 November imply for the further work of the Trust and Identity group. Identify possible topics and format of FIA Valencia. 09:00 – 09:10, Introduction to session Trust and Identity. Caretakers 09:10 – 09:45, Recap of day 1 sessions - presentations by chairs J. Clarke – eID approaches V. Lotz – How to measure Trust N. Wainwright – Smart cities, FIRE 09:45 – 10:15, Brainstorm relevant topics for FIA Valencia All participants 10:15 – 10:35, Next steps towards FIA Valencia; Starting point: process described at 7th Oct, Trust and Identity workshop (see http://security.future-internet.eu/index.php/Stockholm_Public_page) Initial ideas for post FIA Valencia. All participants 10:35 – 10:45, How to make FIA work better for us all ; eg, steps for better out-reach (and in-reach) from other FIA domains). All participants 10:45 – 10:55, Preparation time for plenary slides, All participants 10:55 – 11:00, AOB, All participants
IV.4. Usage of facilities (24 Nov. 9.00-11.00) Objective: Understand what the results of the sessions of 23 November imply for the further work of the Usage of facilities group. Identify possible topics and format of FIA Valencia. The objective of this session is to understand the results and conclusions of the cross-topic sessions held on 23 November and to possibly develop a roadmap for further work in the area of “Usage of FIRE facilities and experimentally driven research” group.
The session should conclude with the identification of topics and session formats for the next FIA to be held in April 2010 in Valencia, Spain. Possible outcome 1: actions for creating necessary specifications to satisfy deployment requirements on FIRE facilities Possible outcome 2: ideally kick-off an action to draft a paper elaborating on the methodology and its benefits Introduction Anastasius Gavras, Eurescom GmbH 5 min Conclusions from session “Deploying on FIRE” Anastasius Gavras, Eurescom GmbH 10 min Doing experimentally-driven research on WISEBED - preparations, deployment, evaluation Mesut Günes, Freie Universität Berlin 15 min Future P2P systems and experiments Charalabos Skianis, Aegean Univ. 15 min Conclusions from session “What does it mean to conduct experimentally driven research?” Nancy Alonistioti, Univ. of Athens 10 min Experimentation experiences in N4C Maria Uden, Lulea University of Technology, Sweden 15 min Towards being Always Best Connected – the PERIMETER way Markus Fiedler, Blekinge Institute of Technology, Sweden 15 min Experimentation process for the assessment of Self-management behaviour in FI Nancy Alonistioti 15 min Plenary discussion, conclusions Moderators, Anastasius Gavras, Nancy Alonistitoti 20 min IV.5. Future Internet Service Offer (FISO) (24 Nov. 9.00-11.00) Objective: Understand what the results of the sessions of 23 November imply for the further work of the FISO group. Identify possible topics and format of FIA Valencia.
5 min
Conclusions from session “Deploying on FIRE”
Doing experimentally-driven research on WISEBED - preparations, deployment, evaluation
Mesut Günes, Freie Universität Berlin
Future P2P systems and experiments
Charalabos Skianis, Aegean Univ.
Conclusions from session “What does it mean to conduct experimentally driven research?”
Nancy Alonistioti, Univ. of Athens
Experimentation experiences in N4C
Maria Uden, Lulea University of Technology, Sweden
Towards being Always Best Connected – the PERIMETER way
Markus Fiedler, Blekinge Institute of Technology, Sweden
Experimentation process for the assessment of Self-management behaviour in FI
Plenary discussion, conclusions
Moderators, Anastasius Gavras, Nancy Alonistitoti
20 min
9:00 Introduction (John Domingue and Stefano de Panfilis)
9:15 Report back from Cross-theme Sessions from Rapporteurs (5 minutes report back 10 minutes discussion)
Different architectures for different business models, Sergio Gusmeroli
eID and routing, Patrick Hayden
Orchestration among networks, content, services and things, Nuria De Lama
FI for enterprise, Stefan Schuster
Discovery and search, John Domingue
Deploying on FIRE, Ricardo Jimenez-Peris
What does it mean to conduct experimentally driven research?, Klaus Tochtermann
Smart Cities, Marco Pistore
10:30 - General Discussion and FISO Action Plan for FIA Valencia
11:00 Closing
IV.6. Real-world Internet (24 Nov. 9.00-11.00) Objective: Understand what the results of the sessions of 23 November imply for the further work of the RWI group. Identify possible topics and format of FIA Valencia. Introduction – RWI mission and evolution from Bled to Prague, overview of session (15 min)
Summary of the cross-domain topics in the plenary from participating representatives of the cross-topic sessions (15 min)
- Discovery and search (Manfred Hauswirth)
Orchestration (Stephan Haller) Smart City (Alex Gluhak) Business architectures /Enterprise (TBC) Identity and Trust (Neeli Prasad)
-Knowledge cafe based on the core areas of RWI, reflecting on the input from the cross-domain sessions (60 min session). There will be four tables with the following care takers:
-Internet of Things/Network of the Future (Alex Gluhak, Mirko Presser)
Real World Knowledge (Manfred Hauswirth, Srdjan Krco) Service Layer Integration (Stephan Haller – TBC) Security, Privacy and Trust (Neeli Prasad)
Synthesis of ideas and further approach towards Valencia (Mirko Presser) (25min)
Steps to align the discussion in the knowledge cafes towards a common strategy for RWI and the way towards Valencia
For more information, visit the RWI Wiki
http://rwi.future-internet.eu/index.php/RWISession_Stockholm
Future Content Networks (24 Nov. 9.00-11.00) Objective: Understand what the results of the sessions of 23 November imply for the further work of the FCN group. Identify possible topics and format of FIA Valencia. Agenda:
09:00-09:35: Rosalia Lloret, TVE, “Broadcasting and the FI”.
09:35-09:50: George Pavlou, UCL, “Evolutionary, Innovative and revolutionary approached on Content Centric Network”
09:50-10:10: Federico Alvarez, UPM, nextMEDIA CA presentation, Coordination Action on "Future Media Internet” 10:10 - 10:35: Content Centric Networking Panel. Chairman: Norbert Niebert (Ericsson). Members of the panel: Lieven Vermaele (EBU), Pierre-Yves Danet (FT/Orange) , Börje Ohlman (Ericsson), George Pavlou (UCL) 10:35 - 11:00 Quality of Experience panel. Chairman: Vali Lalioti (BBC). Members of the panel: Ian Mecklenburgh (Digital TV Group), Pierre-Yves Danet (FT/Orange), Rosalia Lloret (TVE ), Federico Alvarez (UPM), Hans Einsiedler (DT) Plenary Closing Session (24 Nov. 11.30 – 13.30) Future Internet as seen by Ericsson – Hakan Eriksson, Senior Vice President, Chief Technology Officer and head of Group Function Technology & Portfolio Management (30') Summary of Achievements, by the Breakout Session Rapporteurs (70')
Future Internet Socio Economics
Management & Service aware Networking Architecture
Trust and Identity
Usage of facilities
Future Internet Service Offer
Real-world Internet
Future Content Networks The Future Internet Conference in Valencia – Host introduction (10') - Jesus Cañadas, MITYC, Spain
Closing message by Mario Campolargo (5')
FIA Conclusions