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Distinguished Lecture Series
4/13/2006 11:00 am
CoRE Lecture Hall (Room 101)

Towards Seamless Mobility on Pervasive Hardware

Mahadev Satyanarayanan, Carnegie Mellon University

Faculty Host: Liviu Iftode

Abstract

Preserving one's uniquely customized computing environment as one moves to different locations is an enduring challenge in mobile computing. In this talk, we will examine why this capability is valued so highly, and what makes it so difficult to achieve for personal computing applications. We describe a new mechanism called Internet Suspend/Resume (ISR) that overcomes many of the limitations of previous approaches to realizing this capability. ISR enables a hands-free approach to mobile computing that appears well suited to future pervasive computing environments in which commodity hardware may be widely deployed for transient use. We show that ISR can be implemented by layering virtual machine technology on distributed file system technology. We also report on measurements from a prototype that confirm that ISR is already usable today for some common usage scenarios.

Bio

Satya is the Carnegie Group Professor of Computer Science at Carnegie Mellon University.  He has pioneered research in mobile and pervasive computing, including milestone projects like Coda File System, Odyssey, Aura, Diamond, and Internet Suspend/Resume. From May 2001 to May 2004 he served as the founding director of Intel Research Pittsburgh, one of four university-affiliated research labs established worldwide by Intel to create disruptive information technologies through its Open Collaborative Research model. Satya received the PhD in Computer Science from Carnegie Mellon, after Bachelor's and Master's degrees from the Indian Institute of Technology, Madras. He is a Fellow of the ACM and the IEEE, and was the founding Editor-in-Chief of IEEE Pervasive Computing.