Appel
à Contributions
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The series Colloquia on Structural Information and Communication Complexity (SIROCCO) encourage high-quality research focused on the relationship between computing and communication, i.e., the study of those factors which are significant for the computability and the communication complexity of problems, and on the interplay between structure, knowledge and complexity. The Colloquium provides an opportunity to bring together specialists interested in the fundamental principles underlying all computing through communication. Original papers are solicited in distributed computing, high-speed networks, interconnection networks, mobile computing, optical computing, parallel computing, wireless networks, and related areas. Topics
of interest include (but are not limited to): communication complexity,
information dissemination, routing protocols, distributed data-structures,
models of communication, network topologies, sense of direction, structural
properties and computability, topological awareness and metric information. Carole
Delporte-Gallet (Paris, France), David Peleg
(Rehovot, Israel) A. Bar-Noy,
Brooklyn College, U.S.A. Authors are invited to submit a PostScript/PDF version of their paper (not exceeding 10 pages) together with at most 20 lines of abstract in ASCII format, via the conference web page http://sirocco.informatika.sk (preferably) or by e-mail to siroccoPC@informatika.sk, no later than January 10, 2005. Short notes (1-2 pages) contributing to the open problems session are also welcome. Authors who are unable to submit electronically should contact the organizers. The proceedings
of the conference will be published in the Lecture Notes of Computer Science
series of Springer Verlag. The
conference will be held at Mont-St-Michel which is one of the main tourist
attractions in France. Perched on a rocky islet in the midst of vast sandbanks
exposed to powerful tides between Normandy and Brittany it comprises a
magnificent Benedictine gothic abbey surrounded by a complex of medieval
buildings justly called "La Merveille de l'Occident" (The Wonder
of the West). Elisabeth Lebret, Lydie
Mabil and Florence Santoro(Rennes, France)
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