planning’of’iot2010’in’japanweb.mit.edu/edmund_w/www/downloads/iot2010_plan09.pdfnov.29...
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Planning of IOT2010 in Japan
January 14, 2010 Auto-‐ID Lab Japan
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Mission
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The Internet of Things Conference 2010 will explore the technical requirements and business challenges of integraHng physical items into today’s internet. This Internet of Things shall be applied to address various societal challenges: health monitoring systems to support the aging society, distributed awareness to help predict natural disasters, transparency of transportaHon to reduce carbon footprint, product lifeHme informaHon to improve recyclability, and general visualizaHon of processes to opHmize efficiency.
www.iot2010.org
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Call
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The "Internet of Things (IoT)" disrupts with the today's Internet limitaHons of human-‐entered data: technologies like RFID, short-‐range wireless communicaHons, real-‐Hme localizaHon, and sensor networks empower computers to perceive the world for themselves. Standardized infrastructures capable of managing, sharing and processing this captured data will be necessary in order to bring the Internet of Things into commercial use. This interlinking of physical world and cyberspace foreshadows an exciHng endeavor that is highly relevant to researchers, corporaHons, and individuals. The three-‐day event will feature keynotes from industrial and academic visionaries, technical presentaHons of cuWng-‐edge research, reports on the user-‐experience from seasoned pracHHoners, panel discussions on hot topics, poster sessions summarizing late-‐breaking results, and hands-‐on demos of current technology. Be sure to mark your calendars if you want to know more about:
• Green by Internet of Things / Green of Internet of Things Technology • Design of future sustainable technologies linking the physical and virtual world • Novel services and applicaHons to facilitate environmental responsibility • Emerging Internet of Things business models and process changes • CommunicaHon systems and network architectures for the IoT • Experience reports from the introducHon and operaHon of networked things in areas such as healthcare, logisHcs & transport • Emerging applicaHons and interacHon paradigms for everyday ciHzens • Social impacts and consequences, such as security, privacy, opportuniHes and risks
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Program Agenda
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Date Technical program Industrial exhibi7on/ Demos
Social Event
Nov.29 Tutorial/Workshop n/a Welcome RecepHon
Nov.30 IoT 2010 Conference Dinner
Dec.1 IoT 2010
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Possible Agenda Set-‐Up Day 1
Opening (15‘) Keynote 1 Scien7fic (45‘) Keynote 2 Industrial (45‘)
10:00
12:00 Lunch break
13:30
15:00
1 (30‘)
15:30
17:00
Break
Break
Panel Discussion Wrap-‐up Day 1 Outlook Day 2
17:30
18:30 Break
Evening Event 19:30
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4 5 6
7 8 9
10 11 12
13 14 15
16 17 18
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A&I
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Possible Agenda Set-‐Up Day 2
9:00
10:30
11:00
12:30
Break
Lunch break
Keynote 3 (45‘) (Keynote 4 (45‘) ?) Wrap-‐up Day 2 Farewell
14:00
15:15/16:00
End
28 29 30
31 32 33
34 35 36
19 20 21
22 23 24
25 26 27
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A&I
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I and A&I Track: PresentaHon types
Industrial – ImplementaHon report [about 9 slots]
• Key Industries (Auto, Pharma, Retail / CP, LogisHcs Provider, Manufacturing, Telecom (BT, Docomo, Vodafone?), )
• Scope • Benefits • Lessons learned
ScienHfic & Industrial – Industrial Vision [3-‐5 slots]: e.g. Nokia, Google, SAP – Public Policy/Research Vision & Frameworks/METI [2-‐3 slots] – Technology / AdopHon of InnovaHons (“controversial”) [0-‐2] – Success Story / Transfer (e.g. Smart Store) [1-‐3]
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Sponsors as Speaker candidates
SAP NTT Docomo Nokia IBM Google others to be defined jointly
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Types of sponsoring
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• Gold Sponsors (max 2) – 2mil JPY – Acknowledgement as a Gold Sponsor in Web and Conference
Proceedings
– Three free registraHon – One novelty in conference tote bag – Booth in exhibiHon hall
• Silver Sponsors – 1mil JPY – Acknowledgement as a Sliver Sponsor in Web and
Conference Proceedings
– Two free registraHon – One sheet of ad. In conference tote bag – Booth in exhibiHon hall
• Bronz Sponsors – 0.5 mil JPY – Acknowledgement as Bronze Sponsor in Web and
Conference Proceedings
– One free registraHon
Conference Dinner Sponsor 2mil JPY
Acknowledgement as conference dinner sponsor in Web and Conference Proceedings
Free two registraHon
Conference RecepHon Sponsor 1mil JPY
Acknowledgement as conference recepHon sponsor in Web and Conference Proceedings
Free two registraHons
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Core Dates
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Dead line Ac7vity
End of September Finalize Venue Preliminary Call for paper
End of October Finalize Key sponsors Call for paper Launch of website
End of October Corporate design/logo
November 9 FinalizaHon of PC
June 1 Submission Deadline Full papers
June 1 Deadline for proposals: workshop/exhibiHon/demo/tutorials
June 4 Review assignments
July 2 Deadline for reviews
July 9 Virtual PC meeHng – discussion phase
July 15 NoHficaHon of paper acceptance
July 15 NoHficaHon of acceptance (workshop/exhibiHon/demo/tutorials)
August 12 Camera-‐ready versions to publisher (springer?)
November 29, 30, December 1 Event
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List of organizing roles
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Conference Chairs Jun MURAI (Keio University) Elgar Fleisch(ETH Zurich & Univ. St.Gallen) Friedemann Mapern (ETH Zurich) Sanjay Sarma (MIT)
Organizing Commipee Chair Osamu Nakamura (Keio University)
Program Chairs Florian Michahelles (ETH Zurich) Jin Mitsugi (Keio University)
Publicity Chair PublicaHons Chair Local Arrangement Chair Workshop Chair Poster Chair ScienHfic Demos Chair Industrial ExhibiHon Chair Financing Chair Student Volunteer Chair Video Chair Artwork Chair
Program Commipee
Emile Aarts (Philips) Karl Aberer (EPFL) Alessandro AcquisH (Carnegie Mellon University) Manfred Aigner (Technical University of Graz) Michael Beigl (Universität Braunschweig) Federico Casalegno (MIT Mobile Experience Lab, Design Lab) Shuo Yan Chou (NTUST) Peter Cole (University of Adelaide) ChrisHan Decker (Universitat Karlsruhe) Alois Ferscha (University of Linz) Elgar Fleisch (ETH Zurich & University of St. Gallen) ChrisHan Floerkemeier (Massachuseps InsHtute of Technology (MIT)) Kary Främling (University of Helsinki) Anatole Gershman (Carnegie Mellon University) Jens Grossklags (Princeton University) Jonna Hakkila (Nokia Research) Stephan Haller (SAP Research Zurich) Marcus Handte (University of Duisburg-‐Essen) Usman Haque (Pachube)
Mark Harrison (Cambridge University) Henry Holtzmann (MIT) Hiroki Horiuchi (KDDI) Gunter Karjoth (IBM Research Zurich) Stephan Karpischek (ETH Zurich) Yuusuke Kawakita (UEC) Fahim Kawsar (Lancaster University) Kwangjo Kim (KAIST) Gerd Kortuem (Lancaster University) Noboru Koshizuka (Tokyo University) Maphias Kranz (Technische Universität München) Sy-‐Yen Kuo (NaHonal Taiwan University) Marc Langheinrich (Università della Svizzera italiana) Tomás Sánchez López (University of Cambridge) Friedemann Mapern (ETH Zurich) Rene Mayrhofer (Vienna University) Osamu Nakamura (Keio University) Akiko Orita (Chuo University) Joe Paradiso (MIT) Aaron Quigley (Human Interface Technology Laboratory) Dave Raggep (W3C) Florian Resatsch (ServTag) Map Reynolds (Duke University)
Enrico Rukzio (Lancaster University) Albrecht Schmidt (Fraunhofer IAIS, St. AugusHn & IPEC, B-‐IT Bonn) Edmund Schuster (MIT) Sarah Spiekermann (Vienna University of Economics and Business) Joshua R. Smith (Intel Research) Mike Smith (W3C) Thorsten Staake (ETH Zurich) Jens Struker (University of Freiburg) Shigeya Suzuki (Keio University) Akira Taguchi (Tokyo City University) Kazunori Takashio (Keio University) Frederic Thiesse (University of St. Gallen) Yoshito Tobe (Tokyo Denki University) Dieter Uckelmann (Univ. Bremen) Keisuke Uehara (Keio University) Rob van Kranenburg (Founder of Council) Harald Vogt (SAP AG, Karlsruhe) Maphias Wagner (NTT Docomo Europe Labs) Woontack Woo (Gwangju InsHtute of Science and Technology (GIST)
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Planning of IOT2010 in Japan
January 14, 2010 Auto-‐ID Lab Japan
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