The 12th International Symposium on
Distributed Objects, Middleware, and Applications (DOA'10)

Crete, Greece, Oct 25 - 27, 2010


Proceedings will be published by Springer Verlag
 

Chaired by:

Ernesto Damiani, Università degli Studi di Milano, Italy
Kai Hwang, University of Southern California, USA

Call for papers DOA 2010

Distributed computation is undergoing a radical paradigm shift, where users and developers alike are becoming fully decoupled from the technology infrastructure where their applications are executed. Computations details are abstracted by an increasingly deep virtualization layer, veiling distributed execution by means of the same "cloud" that supports it. Together, the notion of Cloud Computing and the related one of service-orientation are enabling new business models based on the seamless provision of dynamically scalable, virtualized resources as services made available “over the cloud”, to be accessed via a web browser.
 
For this vision to come true, a number of problems need to be solved, involving the nuts-and-bolts of virtualization as well as the reliability, scalability, security and distribution transparency of cloud-based computations, and the abstractions leading their development (e.g.  service composition versus on-line architectural transformations). Along with the rapid evolution of these fields, the Cloud vision requires a huge research and development effort in the underlying technologies, whose advances will  broaden the scope of the Cloud's applicability.
 
DOA 2010 will investigate all issues related to the potential of the Cloud notion as a metaphor for the future Internet Services, providing semantically rich service descriptions and seamless interfaces to (virtual images of) locally held devices and other technologies such as the traditional Web, distributed datacenters and peer-to-peer systems.

Research & Practice

Besides posing a number of fundamental research problems, the notion of Cloud has suggested many new   opportunities for creating value. Indeed, a crucial claim of Cloud Computing is that it will create an entirely new value chain with respect to the one of traditional software development. According to this claim, new value will be continuously built along the Cloud value chain by smooth resource sharing among service consumers, brokers, and vendors. Sharing will provide  opportunities for virtual hardware management at the infrastructure level, for middleware-as-a-service at the middleware level and for hosting business applications on the cloud at the application level. 
 
DOA explicitly intends to provide a forum to foster these new opportunities via exchange of ideas  among researchers interested in all different aspects of Cloud-enabled value creation. Submissions are therefore welcomed along two dimensions: research (virtualization fundamentals, cloud principles, models, and algorithms) and practice (cloud applications,  case studies, and lessons learned).

Contributions attempting to bridge the gap between these two dimensions are particularly encouraged. We are fully aware of the differences between academic and industrial research and development; therefore, DOA submissions will be carefully reviewed not only for scientific rigor (in the case of "academic research" papers), but also for their originality and relevance (in the case of "case study" papers).

About DOA

DOA 2010 is part of a joint event that  (OnTheMove) co-locates three related and complementary conferences in the areas of networked information systems, covering key issues in distributed infrastructures and enabling technologies (DOA), data and Web semantics (ODBASE), and cooperative information systems (CoopIS).  This year, the conferences will cover three strictly interrelated themes: Cloud Computing Infrastructures, The Internet of Things or Cyberphysical Systems, and (Semantic) Web 2.0 and Social Computing for the Enterprise Also, OTM includes a number of Workshops. More details about this federated event can be found a http://www.onthemove-conferences.org
 

TOPICS OF INTEREST

The topics of this symposium include, but are not limited to:

•    Virtualized Computing Infrastructures
•    Service-Oriented Architecture on Clouds
•    Datacenter Architecture and Management
•    Distributed Computing  technologies
•    Cloud Security and Privacy
•    Cloud Models and Development Tools
•    Cloud Operation and Resource Management
•    Cloud Performance Modeling and Benchmarks
•    Cloud Business Applications and Case Studies
•    Content distribution on Internet Clouds
•    Reliability, fault tolerance, quality-of-service support
•    Formal methods and tools for Cloud computing
•    Interoperability with other technologies

IMPORTANT DATES

Paper Submission Deadline:  EXTENDED July 12
Acceptance Notification:  Aug 2
Camera Ready Due:  Aug 13
Registration Due:  Sep 3

OTM Conferences:  October 25 - 29, 2010
DOA Conference: Oct 25-27 
  

SUBMISSION GUIDELINES

Papers submitted to DOA 2010 must not have been accepted for publication elsewhere or be under review for another workshop or conference.

All submitted papers will be carefully evaluated based on originality, significance, technical soundness, and clarity of expression. All papers will be refereed by at least three members of the program committee, and at least two will be experts from industry in the case of practice reports. All submissions must be in English.

The final proceedings will be published by Springer Verlag as LNCS (Lecture Notes in Computer Science). Author instructions can be found at:
http://www.springer.de/comp/lncs/authors.html

Submissions must not exceed 18 pages in the final camera-ready paper style.

The paper submission site is located at:
http://www.onthemove-conferences.org/index.php/submitpaper 

Failure to comply with the formatting instructions for submitted papers will lead to the outright rejection of the paper without review.
Failure to commit to presentation at the conference automatically excludes a paper from the proceedings.
  

ORGANISATION COMMITTEE

OTM 2010 General Co-Chairs
Robert Meersman, VU Brussels, Belgium
Tharam Dillon, Curtin University Perth, Australia

DOA 2010 Program Committee Chairs

Ernesto Damiani, Università degli Studi di Milano, Italy
Kai Hwang, University of Southern California, USA

Program Committee Members (to be confirmed)

Subbu Allamaraju, Yahoo!
Mark Baker, Coactus Consulting, Canada
Boualem Benatallah, University of New South Wales, Australia
Elisa Bertino, Purdue University, USA
Lionel Brunie INSA-Lyon, France
Athman Bouguettaya, CSIRO ICT Center, Australia
Judith Bishop, University of Pretoria, South Africa
Gordon Blair, Lancaster University, UK
Harold Carr, Sun, USA
Geoffrey Coulson, Lancaster University, UK
Schahram Dustdar, Technical University of Vienna, Austria
Frank Eliassen, University of Oslo, Norway
Pascal Felber, Université de Neuchâtel, Switzerland
Benoit Garbinato, University of Lausanne, Switzerland
Niels Gruschka, NEC Research, UK
Medhi Jazayeri, University of Lugano, Switzerland
Eric Jul, University of Copenhagen, Denmark
Nick Kavantzas, Oracle, USA
Deyi Li, National Science Foundation, China
Ling Liu, Geogia Institute of Technology, USA
Joe Loyall, BBN Technologies, USA
Frank Manola, OBJS, USA
Gero Mühl, Berlin University of Technology, Germany
Nikola Milanovic, Model Labs, Germany
Graham Morgan, Newcastle University, UK
Lionel Ni, University of Science and Technology, Hong Kong
Rui Oliveira, University of Minho, Portugal
Francois Pacull, Xerox Research Centre Europe
Arno Puder, San Francisco State University, USA
Michel Riveill, Université de Nice, Sophia Antipolis France
Luis Rodrigues, INESC-ID/IST
George Spanoudakis, City University of London, UK
Joerg Schwenk, University of Bochum, Germany
Cyrus Shahabi, University of Southern California, US
Azzel Taleb-Bendiab, Liverpool John Moores University, UK
Gaogang Xie, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China
Kokou Yentongon, Université de Bourgogne, France
Albert Zomaya, University of Sydney, Australia