Speaker will be me! Next week is Yoshi Ota of the School of Marine &
Environmental Affairs

ABSTRACT
Mobile network operators (MNOs) are a critical component of today’s
Internet access landscape. Originally borne of wireline voice telephony
access, innovations in wireless data connectivity (such as GPRS and LTE)
have enabled these operators to become the world's dominant Internet
providers, connecting more people to the Internet than wireline networks.
However, the increasing centralization of the MNO ecosystem (down to just
three providers in the US) is in contrast to the general design goals of
the internet, which was built to allow multiple regional autonomous systems
to work together to provide connectivity. In this talk, we will discuss my
group's ongoing attempts to leverage advances in wide area technology,
specific open source LTE and NR, to recreate distributed access networks
and help small organizations provide connectivity to their communities
while still achieving the at-scale efficiencies of modern MNOs. This
journey starts with an MNO partnership for GSM networks in the rural
Philippines and continues in our current work with local NGOs on urban NR
infrastructure.

SPEAKER BIO
Kurtis Heimerl is an assistant professor of Computer Science at the
University of Washington working on Information and Communication
Technology and International Development (ICTD), specifically universal
Internet access. Before that, he received his PhD from the University of
California, Berkeley, working under Professors Eric Brewer and Tapan
Parikh. Kurtis cofounded Endaga, which joined Facebook in 2015 and has also
published widely, including top conferences such as ICTD, CSCW, CHI,
MobiCom, and NSDI. He was a recipient of the 2014 MIT “35 under 35” award,
the 2018 UW early career Diamond Award, and has won paper awards at CHI,
NSDI, COMPASS, ASSETS, and DySPAN.

-- 
Website: https://kurti.sh/
Public Key: https://flowcrypt.com/pub/kheim...@cs.washington.edu
_______________________________________________
change mailing list
change@change.washington.edu
https://changemm.cs.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/change

Reply via email to