file - Politechnika Śląska

Transkrypt

file - Politechnika Śląska
22nd Conference
‘C o m p u t e r N e t w o r k s’
Announcement no 2
June 16-19, 2015
Table of Contents
The ‘Computer Networks CN2015’ Conference................................................................................ 3
History of the Conference................................................................................................................... 6
Program Committee CN2015 ........................................................................................................... 12
Organizing Committee CN2015 ....................................................................................................... 22
Technical Co-sponsor: IEEE Poland Section .................................................................................... 24
Technical Partner: iNEER ................................................................................................................ 27
Keynote Talks ................................................................................................................................... 28
Agenda ............................................................................................................................................. 32
Gala Dinner ...................................................................................................................................... 50
CN Publications................................................................................................................................ 51
List of entities participating in the CN2015 edition .......................................................................... 55
List of entities participating in the previous conference editions ...................................................... 56
About the Venue ............................................................................................................................... 59
Local Info ......................................................................................................................................... 64
Distances .......................................................................................................................................... 66
How to reach the venue? .................................................................................................................. 67
The road maps .................................................................................................................................. 68
General plan of the hotel area ........................................................................................................... 70
2
The ‘Computer Networks CN2015’ Conference
The conference has been organized by the Institute of Informatics
belonging to the Faculty of Automatic Control, Electronics and Computer
Science of the Silesian University of Technology every year since 1993.
In the year 2015, it is the 8th international edition and 22nd edition at all.
The main intention of the conference is integration of national and
international scientific and industrial environments, by enabling scientists
to exchange information related to research led by them. The Computer
Networks (CN) conference is dedicated to all activities related to
computer networks.
Our mission is to deliver a common platform for scientists,
academics, researchers, students, industrialists, and other people
interested in computer networks and involved in their usage and
development. The conference allows attenders to exchange and improve their knowledge,
experience, and skills. Special efforts are made to allow students participation too.
It was decided to divide accepted presentations into tracks which group listeners of similar
interests. The tracks of the conference refer to:
 computer networks
This track refers to all issues related directly to computer networks. This is the main track of the
conference and most of the presented reports refer to this track.
 teleinformatics and telecommunictaions
All topics connected with computer communication technologies considered in the context of
computer networking and informatics are considered in this track.
 new technologies
The brand new technologies, even from the edge of contemporarily familiar ones, which could
be used while networking, are included in this track.
 queues theory and queuing networks
In the ‘queueing’ track topics from the wide area of network modeling and analyzing are
presented and discussed.
 innovative applications
The CN conference gives also an opportunity to present applications from area of computer
networks. Only innovative solutions are taken.
The detailed and current list of the conference topics is available on the conference website. The
presented tracks and detailed topics do not limit the conference scope. The CN area constantly
evolves and is updated each year. This year, it is the third time when communications area is
expected and highlighted as a separate track.
The co-organizer of the conference is the Committee of Informatics
of the Polish Academy of Sciences, Section of Computer Network and
Distributed Systems. The conference has also the technical cosponsoring of the IEEE and the technical patronage of the iNEER. Both
organizations support us in keeping conference up to date, in
controlling level of its content as well as give us many suggestions,
opinions and useful guidance. More about IEEE and iNEER is
presented in the next chapters. The high level of the CN proceedings is
also ensured by our members of Technical Program Committee, by
Editors, and by the Editorial Board.
3
The organizers of CN conference are always open for special session proposals. It is possible to
arrange a session connected with any specific subject matter of networking aspects.
The detailed agenda of the CN2015 is available in this
booklet, on the CN website, and at the posters displayed
during the conference in the main halls of the hotel
buildings. Nonetheless, the concise description of the key
events is presented below.
At the beginning of the conference, on Tuesday, June
16, during the plenary session, very interesting keynote
lectures are delivered by our eminent guests:
 Rajiv BAGAI (Wichita State University, USA) –
Anonymity on the Web
 Peter van de VEN (Centrum Wiskunde & Informatica – CWI, Netherlands) – Packet-Level
Scheduling for Joint Transmission in Cellular Networks with CoMP
Other key-note talks are delivered during the next days:
 Bogdan M. WILAMOWSKI (Auburn University, USA) – Learning Architectures and Training
Algorithms
 Aleksander MALINOWSKI (Bradley University, USA) – Current Challenges for the Internet of
Things Ecosystem
 Vladimir MITYUSHEV (Pedagogical University of Cracow, Poland) – Deterministic and
Random Graphs Related to Optimal Packing of Spheres
The special sessions are finished by a panel intended for asking questions and discussing with our
experts. Finally, after the conference closure, a free discussion panel is available. We encourage to
attend this panel and share your thoughts with others. More information about the topics and
professional profiles of the lecturers are presented in one of the following chapters.
Additionally, IEEE speeches will be delivered by professor Bogdan M. Wilamowski. Professor,
being an IEEE Fellow, former IEEE Board of Directors, and former Editor in Chief of the highest
ranked IEEE journals, will present the IEEE and will try to answer the ultimate question of writing
successful and well cited papers.
On Wednesday, Thursday morning as well as Friday morning
keynote and regular sessions are planned. During these
sessions, participants of the CN2015 will give their
speeches. There are 7 keynotes and 42 regular presentations
in English. During the WIP/LCA session additional 7
speeches are planned. Please notice, that the time provided
for a single speech contains also the time for discussion.
The conference closing is scheduled for Friday about
noon. The CN participants are expected to check out on
Friday before 1 pm.
At the very end, after the CN closing, an additional event is planned. It is a WIP/LCA (Work in
Progress and Local Communities Activities) special session. There are 7 speeches connected with
this session. The WIP/LCA session is dedicated only for those participants who declared attendance
while registration. The check out for them is expected on Saturday before 10 am.
Materials associated with the lectures as well as photos can be downloaded from the conference
website. The papers connected with the presented topics are available on the publishers’ websites.
During the CN2015 conference, over 58 reports will be delivered. More than 70 participants
from 15 countries are expected: Belarus, Czech Republic, France, Iran, South Korea, Netherlands,
Norway, Poland, Russia, Slovakia, Switzerland, Turkey, UK, Ukraine, USA.
4
CN2009
Please be advised, that we want to take a common picture on Wednesday before dinner. We cordially
encourage you to come.
CN2010
A guided tour around the palace is scheduled on Tuesday evening, about 7.30 pm.
Another guided tour to the Czocha Castle and its surroundings is planned on Thursday after lunch.
The trip is available only to participants who have declared attendance in it while sending
participation form. Please be on time. The coach will depart at 2 pm. The duration of the trip is
approximately 4 - 5 hours.

5
History of the Conference
The ‘Computer Networks’ conference was established in 1993 in the Institute of Informatics which
belongs to the Faculty of Automatic Control, Electronics and Computer Science of the Silesian
University of Technology, Gliwice, Poland.
The main originator, organizer and chief of the conference Program Committee was Professor
Andrzej Grzywak, the prominent specialist of network systems.
The first five editions of the conference took place in the halls of the Faculty of Automatic
Control, Electronics and Computer Science of the Silesian University of Technology. In 1999 the
conference was organized as an open event for the first time. The venue was the capital of the Polish
Tatra Mountains, Zakopane. Each of the next editions was organized outside Gliwice, always in the
mountains regions so far.
Edition Date
Venue
I
February 1993
AEI Faculty, Silesian University of Technology Gliwice
II
February 1995
AEI Faculty, Silesian University of Technology Gliwice
III
February 1996
AEI Faculty, Silesian University of Technology Gliwice
IV
February 1997
AEI Faculty, Silesian University of Technology Gliwice
V
February 1998
AEI Faculty, Silesian University of Technology Gliwice
VI
June 23-26, 1999
‘Barbara’ Hotel
Zakopane
VII
June 14-16, 2000
Central Sport Center
Zakopane
VIII
June 18-20, 2001
Conference Center ‘Czarny Potok’
Krynica
IX
June 11-14, 2002
‘Zakopane’ Military Holiday Center
Kościelisko
X
June 10-13, 2003
‘Orle Gniazdo’ Congress & Recreation Center
Szczyrk
XI
June 23-25, 2004
‘Zakopane’ Military Holiday Center
Kościelisko
XII
June 22-24, 2005
ECC ‘Anatałówka’
Zakopane
XIII
June 21-23, 2006
ECC ‘Anatałówka’
Zakopane
XIV
June 17-20, 2007
ECC ‘Anatałówka’
Zakopane
XV
June 17-21, 2008
ECC ‘Anatałówka’
Zakopane
XVI
June 16-20, 2009
‘Vestina’ Hotel
Wisła
XVII
June 15-19, 2010
RCC ‘Muflon’
Ustroń
XVIII
June 14-18, 2011
RCC ‘Muflon’
Ustroń
XIX
June 19-23, 2012
‘Meta’ Hotel
Szczyrk
XX
June 17-21, 2013
The Brunów Palace
Lwówek Śląski
XXI
June 23-27, 2014
The Brunów Palace
Lwówek Śląski
XXII
June 16-19, 2015
The Brunów Palace
Lwówek Śląski
From the very beginning, for many years, Ms. Halina Węgrzyn worked actively during the
conference organization, becoming the main stem of the Organization Committee. In 2007, prof.
6
Andrzej Kwiecień became the chief of the Technical Program Committee (TPC), whereas Mr. Piotr
Gaj went in for being in the chair of the Organization Committee.
In 2008 the conference form was changed into international with
two official languages: English and Polish, and it gave guests from
abroad an opportunity to participate. Since then, the number of foreign
guests is constantly increasing. Since 2015 the official language is only
English.
The conference organizers have always cared about strong contact
with industry. Thus, during many editions it was possible to meet
representatives of various Polish and foreign companies, who shared their knowledge and
experience with our participants, and simultaneously took advantage from obtaining contacts with
academic society.
The extension of the conference formula became an ambition of the organizers. The scope of the
conference is updated each year in consultation with partners, co-organizers, and the TPC members.
The contemporary topics as well as ones from untypical domains are welcome. There are certain
domains of knowledge, which apparently seem to be not directly connected with computer
networks. They have been allowed to be presented during the conference, provided that they have
direct connections with networking issues. The examples are domains related to nanoinformatics,
quantum technologies, molecular networks, as well as biological and chemical aspects of
informatics.
In the conference history, there were also events not directly connected with the subject of the
conference. E.g., in 2012, a special session ‘Stefan Węgrzyn in Memoriam’ has been organized. The
session was dedicated to the memory of a longtime member of the TPC. Professor Węgrzyn was
a co-creator (1964) of the Faculty of Automatic Control (currently the Faculty of Automatic Control,
Electronics and Computer Science) of Silesian University of Technology in Gliwice. Initially he was
the head of the Chair of the Automatic Control Theory and later, in years 1971 to 1995, he was
director of the Institute of Informatics at the University. Professor Stefan Węgrzyn passed away on
28 July 2011.
CN2011
Among the conference TPC members are specialists from various areas of the CN domain. Since the
very beginning, the number of TPC members is increasing. Only the best specialists in their fields
are engaged in the TPC activities. Starting from 16 Polish members, now there are 74 members from
7
20 countries: Australia, Belarus, Canada, Colombia, Czech Republic, Germany, Greece, France,
Italy, Netherlands, Mexico, Poland, Russia, South Africa, Switzerland, Taiwan, Turkey, Ukraine,
UK, USA.
During all these years, the conference has become a platform of knowledge, experience, and
achievements, possible to be shared, as well as facilitated in the publications of research and
applications results. For many years the conference materials were published by Silesian University
of Technology Publishing as ‘Science Copybooks’ in Informatics series, which had been released
since 2000 as the ‘Studia Informatica’ series. In addition, based on the conference papers,
monographs were also created and published by the Polish WKŁ Publishing House. Moreover,
proceedings named ‘Computer Networks’ were created in Communications in Computer and
Information Science (CCIS) series by Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg Publisher from Germany.
The cooperation between CN and Springer continues from 2009. The CCIS series is indexed by
DBLP, EI, Scopus and it is submitted for the inclusion in ISI Proceedings and Inspec. However, the
availability in the Web of Science database is always up to decision of the service owner and with
a delay. The papers published in proceedings of 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, and 2014 conference
editions have been already indexed by the Web of Science database.
In the current year the papers are published in CCIS series. Copies of printed books are always
included free of charge in the registration packages for full participants. Below is the table with
a concise summary of the conference proceedings history and basic statistics as well. Be informed,
that the number of rejected papers is significantly higher than specified, because of the usage of
‘reject and resubmit’ procedure. Thanks to this way and thanks to the kindness of our reviewers, we
give an opportunity to the authors to improve theirs papers in case they refer to valid and interesting
topics but the content is unacceptable in the submitted form. We always make a great effort to
ensure high level of papers being published. The acceptance level in the current edition is below
55%.
8
Publisher
Volume
‘Informatyka’ series
PL ISSN 0208-7286
 Vol. 24 issue 1222
40
30
21
I
Science series
of SUT
1993
II-V
Science series
of SUT
1995
‘Informatyka’ series
PL ISSN 0208-7286
 Vol. 28 issue 1270
40
35
28
‘Informatyka’ series
PL ISSN 0208-7286
 Vol. 30 issue 1315
55
45
38
III
Science series
of SUT
1996
‘Informatyka’ series
PL ISSN 0208-7286
 Vol. 32 issue 1356
55
45
33
IV
Science series
of SUT
1997
Science series
of SUT
1998
‘Informatyka’ series
PL ISSN 0208-7286
 Vol. 34 issue 1381
60
50
47
V
Number of papers
No of
participants submit publish.
.
Science series
of SUT
1999
‘Informatyka’ series
PL ISSN 0208-7286
 Vol. 36 issue 1414
60
50
47
VI
Edition
Publication
VII
VIII
‘Studia Informatica’ series
PL ISSN 0208-7286
 Vol. 21 issue 1 (39)
70
55
46
SUT Press
2001
‘Studia Informatica’ series
PL ISSN 0208-7286
 Vol. 22 issues 2, 3, 4 (43, 49, 50)
110
95
81
SUT Press
2002
‘Studia Informatica’ series
PL ISSN 0208-7286
 Vol. 23 issues 2A, 2B, 3 (48, 49, 50)
110
90
80
SUT Press
2003
‘Studia Informatica’ series
PL ISSN 0208-7286
 Vol. 24 issues 2A, 2B, 3 (53, 54, 55)
120
105
97
WNT Warsaw
2004
Monograph
PL ISBN 83-206-3011-9
“Współczesne problemy sieci
komputerowych”
 Vol. 1. „Nowe Technologie”
 Vol. 2. „Zastosowanie
i bezpieczeństwo”
120
110
97
Monograph
PL ISBN 83-206-1573-9
„Wysokowydajne sieci komputerowe”
 Vol. 1. „Nowe Technologie”
 Vol. 2. „Zastosowanie
i bezpieczeństwo”
120
110
102
WKŁ Warsaw
2006
Monograph
PL ISBN 978-83-206-1610-7
„Nowe technologie sieci komputerowych”
 Vol. 1 and 2.
120
115
112
WKŁ Warsaw
2007
Monograph
PL ISBN 978-83-206-1649-1
„Sieci komputerowe”
 Vol. 1. „Nowe technologie”
 Vol. 2. „Aplikacje i zastosowania”
100
98
39/39
84
41/28
27
21
XI
X
IX
SUT Press
2000
XIV
XIII
XII
WNT Warsaw
2005
XV
WKŁ Warsaw
2008
SUT Press
2009
Monograph
PL ISBN 978-83-206-1693-4
 Vol. 1. „Współczesne Aspekty Sieci
Komputerowych”
 Vol. 2. ‘Contemporary Aspects of
Computer Networks’
‘Studia Informatica’ series
PL ISSN 0208-7286
 Vol. 29 issue 4B (81)
88
9
Springer-Verlag Series CCIS Vol. 39
2009
PL ISSN 1865-0929
 ‘Computer Networks’
XVI
WKŁ Warsaw
2009
PKJS Gliwice
2009
Monograph
PL ISBN 978-83-206-1738-2
 „Techniczne i teoretyczne aspekty
współczesnych sieci komputerowych”
72
Monograph
PL ISBN 978-83-60716-69-4
 ‘Geology & Information Technology’
Springer-Verlag Series CCIS Vol. 79
2010
ISSN 1865-0929
 ‘Computer Networks’
XVII
WKŁ Warsaw
2010
Monograph
PL ISBN 978-83-206-1778-8
 „Współczesna problematyka sieci
komputerowych”
75
Springer-Verlag Series CCIS Vol. 160
2011
ISSN 1865-0929
 ‘Computer Networks’
48
40
33
23
9
6
42
37
28
22
61
50
24
19
54
48
20
17


72
58
21
18
XVIII
75
SUT Press
2011
Series Studia Informatica
PL ISSN 0208-7286
 Vol. 32, No. 3A (98)
XIX
Springer-Verlag Series CCIS Vol. 291
2012
ISSN 1865-0929
 Computer Networks
SUT Press
2012
Series Studia Informatica
PL ISSN 0208-7286
 Vol. 33, No. 3A (107)
SUT Press
2012
Stefan Węgrzyn In Memoriam
PL ISBN 978-83-7335-955-0
70
Springer-Verlag Series CCIS Vol. 370
2013
ISSN 1865-0929
 ‘Computer Networks’
XX
100
10
SUT Press
2013
Series Studia Informatica
PL ISSN 0208-7286
 Vol. 34, No. 3 (113)
Springer-Verlag Series CCIS Vol. 431
2014
ISSN 1865-0929
 ‘Computer Networks’
59
34
Series Studia Informatica
PL ISSN 0208-7286
 Vol. 35, No. 3 (117)
12
7
Springer-Verlag Series CCIS Vol. 522
2015
ISSN 1865-0929
 ‘Computer Networks’
78
42
10
7
XXI
65
SUT Press
2014
SUT Press
2015
Series Studia Informatica
70
(only for WIP/LCA Special Session)
XXII
PL ISSN 1642-0489 (former 0208-7286)
 Vol. 36, No. 2 (120)
Since 1999 the conference has its own website (address: http://cn.polsl.pl). All previous editions are
available via item ‘Archive’ of the main menu of the current conference edition website.

CN2012
11
Program Committee CN2015
Honorary Members
12
Win
AUNG
International Network for Engineering Education and
Research (iNEER)
USA
Klaus
BENDER
Technische Universität München
Germany
Adam
CZORNIK
Silesian University of Technology
Poland
Andrzej
KARBOWNIK
Silesian University of Technology
Poland
Bogdan M.
WILAMOWSKI
Auburn University
USA
Technical Program Committee Members
Omer H.
ABDELRAHMAN
Imperial College London
United Kingdom
Anoosh
ABDY
Realm Information Technologies
USA
Iosif
ANDROULIDAKIS
University of Ioannina
Greece
Tülin
ATMACA
Institut Mines-Telecom/Telecom SudParis
France
Rajiv
BAGAI
Wichita State University
USA
Zbigniew
BANASZAK
Warsaw University of Technology
Poland
Robert
BESTAK
Czech Technical University in Prague
Czech Republic
Leszek
BORZEMSKI
Wroclaw University of Technology
Poland
13
14
Markus
BREGULLA
University of Applied Sciences Ingolstadt
Germany
Ray-Guang
CHENG
National Taiwan University of Science and Technology
Taiwan
Andrzej
CHYDZIŃSKI
Silesian University of Technology
Poland
Homero Toral
CRUZ
University of Quintana Roo
Mexico
Tadeusz
CZACHÓRSKI
Silesian University of Technology
Poland
Andrzej
DUDA
INP Grenoble
France
Alexander
DUDIN
Belarusian State University
Belarus
Peppino
FAZIO
University of Calabria
Italy
Max
FELSER
Bern University of Applied Sciences
Switzerland
Holger
FLATT
Fraunhofer IOSB-INA
Germany
Jean-Michel
FOURNEAU
Versailles Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines University
France
Rosario G.
GARROPPO
University of Pisa
Italy
Natalia
GAVIRIA
Universidad de Antioquia
Colombia
Erol
GELENBE
Imperial College London
United Kingdom
Roman
GIERELAK
University of Zielona Gora
Poland
Mariusz
GŁĄBOWSKI
Poznan University of Technology
Poland
15
16
Adam
GRZECH
Wroclaw University of Technology
Poland
Edward
HRYNKIEWICZ
Silesian University of Technology
Poland
Zbigniew
HUZAR
Wroclaw University of Technology
Poland
Jacek
IZYDORCZYK
Silesian University of Technology
Poland
Jürgen
JASPERNEITE
Ostwestfalen-Lippe University of Applied Science
Germany
Jerzy
KLAMKA
The Institute of Theoretical and Applied Informatics
of the Polish Academy of Sciences in Gliwice
Poland
Demetres D.
KOUVATSOS
University of Bradford
UK
Stanisław
KOZIELSKI
Silesian University of Technology
Poland
Henryk
KRAWCZYK
Gdansk University of Technology
Poland
Andrzej
KWIECIEŃ
Silesian University of Technology
Poland
Wolfgang
MAHNKE
ABB
Germany
Francesco
MALANDRINO
Politecnico di Torino
Italy
Aleksander
MALINOWSKI
Bradley University
USA
Kevin
McNEILL
BAE Systems
USA
Vladimir
MITYUSHEV
Pedagogical University of Cracow
Poland
Diep N.
NGUYEN
Macquarie University
Australia
TPC Chief
17
18
Sema F.
OKTUG
Istanbul Technical University
Turkey
Michele
PAGANO
University of Pisa
Italy
Nihal
PEKERGIN
Versailles Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines University
France
Piotr
PIKIEWICZ
Academy of Business in Dabrowa Gornicza
Poland
Jacek
PISKOROWSKI
West Pomeranian University of Technology
Poland
Bolesław
POCHOPIEŃ
Silesian University of Technology
Poland
Oksana
POMOROVA
Khmelnitsky National University
Ukraine
Silvana
RODRIGUES
Integrated Device Technology (IDT)
Canada
Vladimir
RYKOV
Russian State Oil and Gas University
Russia
Akash
SINGH
IBM Corporation
USA
Alexander
SCHILL
Technische Universität Dresden
Germany
Mirosław
SKRZEWSKI
Silesian University of Technology
Poland
Tomáš
SOCHOR
University of Ostrava
Czech Republic
Maciej
STASIAK
Poznan University of Technology
Poland
Kerry-Lynn
THOMSON
Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University
South Africa
Oleg
TIKHONENKO
Czestochowa University of Technology
Poland
19
20
Arnaud
TISSERAND
Institute for Research in Computer Science and Random
Systems (IRISA)
France
Leszek
TRYBUS
Rzeszow University of Technology
Poland
Adriano
VALENZANO
National Research Council of Italy (CNR)
Italy
Bane
VASIC
University of Arizona
USA
Peter
VAN DE VEN
Centrum Wiskunde & Informatica (CWI)
Netherlands
Miroslav
VOZNAK
VŠB – Technical University of Ostrava
Czech Republic
Krzysztof
WALKOWIAK
Wroclaw University of Technology
Poland
Sylwester
WARECKI
Intel Corporation
USA
Jan
WEREWKA
AGH University of Science and Technology
Poland
Tadeusz
WIECZOREK
Silesian University of Technology
Poland
Józef
WOŹNIAK
Gdansk University of Technology
Poland
Hao
YU
Auburn University
USA
Grzegorz
ZARĘBA
University of Arizona
USA
CN2013
21
Organizing Committee CN2015
Members (all: Silesian University of Technology, Gliwice, Poland)
22
Halina
WĘGRZYN
Honorary Member
Aleksander
CISEK
Technical service, graphics & multimedia
Piotr
GAJ
Chief
Małgorzata
GŁADYSZ
Office, finance, accommodation
Piotr
KUŹNIACKI
eConf administrator
Piotr
STERA
Technical editor of English language publications
Jacek
STÓJ
Technical & office support. Public Relations, marketing.
Technical editor of Polish language publications
Coordinators of technical partronage and consponsorship
Jacek IZYDORCZYK Poland Section IEEE Chapter Coordinator
Win AUNG
iNEER Partnership Coordinator
CN2014
23
Technical Co-sponsor:
IEEE Poland Section
IEEE is an international non-profit organization whose purpose is to support the development of
technology in electronics, electrical engineering, computer engineering and related disciplines. The
world has more than 470 thousand members in 160 countries: scientists, engineers, and 80 thousand
students. IEEE publishes approximately 30% of the world's technical literature devoted to the
electrical, electronics and computer engineering, including 144 newspapers and more than 400
publications and conference annually.
As the world's largest technical association, IEEE is comprised of a variety of groups, active in
publications, conferences, and building technical communities. These units involve member
outreach at both, the local and global level. There are two ways to get involved with IEEE – by area
of interest or by geographic location.
Knowledge Groups
IEEE knowledge groups are member- and volunteer-driven communities, providing cutting-edge
research and knowledge sharing on various topics.
Technical Councils
IEEE technical Councils are groups of Societies working together in broad areas of technology.
Technical Councils sponsor member activities such as technical meetings, publishing, promoting
educational activities, and developing standards. Currently, there are 7 councils as follows.
o IEEE Biometrics Council (BIO-46)
o IEEE Council on Electronic Design Automation (CEDA-44)
o IEEE Nanotechnology Council (NANO-42)
o IEEE Sensors Council (SEN-39)
o IEEE Council on Superconductivity (CSC-41)
o IEEE Systems Council (SysC-45)
o IEEE Technology Management Council (TMC-14)
Technical committees
Technology is constantly evolving. In order to quickly respond to new innovations, IEEE has
a variety of technical committees and activities, including:
o IEEE Committee on Earth Observation (ICEO)
o IEEE Technical Committee on RFID
Standards Association & working groups
IEEE Standards Association (IEEE-SA) working groups aim to set priorities and develop
appropriate standards. IEEE-SA working groups are open to everyone and participants need not be
IEEE-SA members.
Societies
IEEE has 38 technical Societies that provide benefits to members within specialized fields of
interest. Society memberships enable you stay current within your chosen technology profession,
keep in touch with your peers, and invest in your career. Membership in Society includes:
o Society peer-reviewed publications and conferences,
o significant discounts on society publications, conference registration, and other products,
o an expansive professional network of worldwide technology experts in your field.
24
Please reference the list below to look at IEEE societies that may interest you. Details of all societies
can be found on the IEEE website.
o IEEE Aerospace and Electronic Systems
Society
o IEEE Antennas and Propagation Society
o IEEE Broadcast Technology Society
o IEEE Circuits and Systems Society
o IEEE Communications Society
o IEEE Components, Packaging,
and Manufacturing Technology Society
o IEEE Computational Intelligence Society
o IEEE Computer Society
o IEEE Consumer Electronics Society
o IEEE Control Systems Society
o IEEE Dielectrics and Electrical Insulation
Society
o IEEE Education Society
o IEEE Electron Devices Society
o IEEE Electromagnetic Compatibility Society
o IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology
Society
o IEEE Geoscience and Remote Sensing Society
o IEEE Industrial Electronics Society
o IEEE Industry Applications Society
o IEEE Information Theory Society
o IEEE Instrumentation and Measurement
Society
o IEEE Intelligent Transportation Systems
Society
o IEEE Magnetics Society
o IEEE Microwave Theory and Techniques
Society
o IEEE Nuclear and Plasma Sciences Society
o IEEE Oceanic Engineering Society
o IEEE Photonics Society
o IEEE Power Electronics Society
o IEEE Power & Energy Society
o IEEE Product Safety Engineering Society
o IEEE Professional Communications Society
o IEEE Reliability Society
o IEEE Robotics and Automation Society
o IEEE Signal Processing Society
o IEEE Society on Social Implications
of Technology
o IEEE Solid-State Circuits Society
o IEEE Systems, Man, and Cybernetics Society
o IEEE Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics, and
Frequency Control Society
o IEEE Vehicular Technology Society
For instance, the Computer Society is the largest society within IEEE. Membership to the Computer
Society includes free access to 3,500 self-paced online technical and business courses, free access to
1,100 online technical and business books, six e-newsletters, 12 monthly issues of Computer
magazine, discounts on 170+ Society-sponsored conferences and two software development
certifications, up to 50 percent off subscriptions to 26 peer-reviewed journals and magazines, and
more. Network and learn from fellow professionals through automatic membership to one of 350+
worldwide chapters, and participate in more than 40 technical committees. Field of interest is in
range of all major areas of computing and information technology: computer hardware, software,
multimedia, IT, security, networking, mobile computing, and more.
Another example can be IEEE Industrial Electronics Society (IES). It delivers an access
breakthrough technical information in the industrial and manufacturing theory and applications of
electronics, controls, communications, instrumentation, and computational intelligence.
Membership benefits include a (printed and online) subscription to the IEEE Industrial Electronics
Magazine and online access to IEEE Transactions on Industrial Electronics and IEEE Transactions
on Industrial Informatics, discounted fees for all IES-sponsored conferences, conference travel
grants for student members, opportunities to participate in more than 20 Technical Committees and
access to a vast professional network of 50 chapters and members in 106 countries. Abridged field
of interest is focused on industrial and manufacturing theory and applications of electronics,
controls, communications, instrumentation, and computational intelligence.
Virtual networks
A virtual network is a Web-based community of individuals that have a shared purpose or common
interests. IEEE bridges geographical boundaries and provides additional opportunities for IEEE
members, volunteers, staff, and governance to communicate and collaborate through use of online
communities.
25
In Your Area
IEEE is divided into ten worldwide geographic regions. Within the regions, there are local sections,
chapters and affinity groups. Together, these units conduct over 10,000 meetings a year and enable
members to network and explore their technical interests as a community.
Local Sections & Chapters
Local meetings are organized by Sections and Chapters within ten Regions. IEEE members
automatically become members of their local Section.
o Region 1 (Northeastern U.S.)
o Region 6 (Western U.S.)
o Region 2 (Eastern U.S.)
o Region 7 (Canada)
o Region 3 (Southern U.S.)
o Region 8 (Africa, Europe, Middle East)
o Region 4 (Central U.S.)
o Region 9 (Latin America)
o Region 5 (Southwestern U.S.)
o Region 10 (Asia and Pacific)
In the regions there are many local sections. For instance, in Region 8 are presently 42 sections. One
of them is IEEE Poland Section. It was founded by prof. Adam Smoliński in 1972 and is currently
headed by prof. Ryszard Jachowicz from Warsaw University of Technology. Section is divided into
more than 20 thematic units representing more than 1000 members. Among them is nearly 200
undergraduate and graduate students who are associated in five student’s branches in Opole, Poznań,
Szczecin, Wrocław and Warsaw. One of the main objectives of the IEEE Poland Section is to
promote new ideas coming from Polish engineers and scientists and to exchange experiences
through organization and active support of scientific conferences. Currently, there are about 10
conference technically co-sponsored by the IEEE PS per year. CN is one of them. IEEE Poland
Section cooperates closely with the Association of Polish Electrical Engineers (SEP), Polish Society
of Theoretical and Applied Electrical (PTETiS) and the Polish Association of the Photonic (SPIE
Poland Chapter).
Student Branches
Student Branches provide an opportunity for student members to begin networking in their areas of
interest, and future profession. There are nearly 2,000 student branches in 80 countries, at various
educational institutions.
Affinity and special interest groups
IEEE affinity and special interest groups are local units of IEEE organizational units or standing
committees.
Geographic units and activities
IEEE Member and Geographic Activities (MGA) is focused on supporting and meeting the
members' needs and IEEE membership recruitment and retention strategies and implementation.
IEEE local geographic organizational units (Sections, Chapters, Affinity Groups, and Student
Branches) provide unique opportunities for members to attend technical presentations, create strong
peer-to-peer connections, and participate in leadership opportunities that can make a positive
distinction in IEEE members' jobs and careers.
More about IEEE and its structure:
http://www.ieee.org
http://www.ieee.pl
Selected from IEEE sources and website by
Grzegorz Pankanin (senior member IEEE) and Piotr Gaj (senior member IEEE ).

26
Technical Partner:
iNEER
About iNEER
Focused on promoting advances in education and research worldwide through international
partnerships, the International Network for Engineering Education and Research (‘iNEER
Network’) is a non-profit professional organization formed by the world community in engineering
and allied fields to foster communication and collaboration. The widening iNEER network of
educators and researchers currently covers 98 countries, and is linked by information disseminated
through the iNEER website, e-mails, book publications, and annual conferences, workshops, and
retreats. There is no membership fees.
Annually, iNEER publishes books in the Innovations Series. Papers are accepted and reviewed
on a first come first served basis. The hard cover iNEER Innovations Series constitute the annual
Special Volumes that have been published every year since 2002. The series has an International
Standard Serial Number ISSN number 1553-9911 and a U.S. Library of Congress Control No.
2004215784, and each book is identified by a distinct ISBN number. Past issues are still available
through iNEER. Each volume is edited by an international Board of Editors, and each paper is peer
reviewed.
Books in the iNEER Innovations Series seek to disseminate advances in teaching worldwide as
faculty strive to improve teaching and student learning, upgrade the courses taught at universities
and colleges around the world, help establish new degree or certificate programs, create new courses
or course modules, design innovative programs to involve students in research, or otherwise work
on the integration of research and education. iNEER believes that there is great benefit for the
authors and the institutions they represent in disseminating and publicizing these and other
innovations, sharing experiences and lessons learned, and further enhancing innovation and the
productivity of their work through a dialog with members of the international peer community.
Copies of Innovations books are included free of charge in the registration packages for most of
the iNEER-sponsored conference. More details on ineer.org.
Since 1994, iNEER has partnered with univerties around the world to hold international
conferences and workshops dealing with engineering education reform. In July 2015, an iNEER
conference will take place in Zagreb, Croatia. Recent past iNEER conference cities include:
Hamilton, Canada (2014); Riga, Latvia (2014); Cape Town, South Africa (2013); Marrakesh,
Morocco (2013); Turku, Finland (2012); Saratov, Russia (2012); Belfast, Northern Ireland (2011)
and Gliwice, Poland (2010).
iNEER is a partner of the International Conference on Computer Networks, and has been
a proud technical sponsor for CN2012, CN2013, CN2014, and CN2015.
Win Aung, Ph.D., Dr.h.c.
Secretary-General
International Network for Engineering Education and Research (iNEER)
Potomac, MD, USA

27
Keynote Talks
 Bogdan M. WILAMOWSKI
Auburn University, USA
Topic: ‘Learning architectures and training algorithms’
Abstract: The traditional approach for solving complex problems and processes usually follows the
following steps: At first we are trying to understand them, and then we are trying to describe them in
the form of mathematical formulas. This classical Da Vinci approach was used for the last several
centuries, and unfortunately it cannot be applied for many current complex problems. These
problems are very difficult to understand and process by humans. Notice that many environmental,
economic, and often engineering problems, such as computer networking, cannot be described by
equations, and it seems that adaptive learning architectures are the only solution to tackling these
complex problems. Many smaller scale problems were already solved using shallow architectures
such as ANN, SVM, or ELM. However, for more complex problems, more deep learning systems
with enhanced capabilities are needed. It has already been demonstrated that new super compact
architectures have 10 to 100 times more processing power than commonly used learning
architectures like MLP. It turns out that the power of learning systems grows linearly with their
widths and exponentially with their depth. For example, a shallow MLP architecture with 10
neurons can solve only a Parity-9 problem, but a deep FCC architecture with the same 10 neurons
can solve as large a problem as a Parity-1023. Therefore, a natural approach would be to use these
deep architectures. Unfortunately, because of the vanishing gradient problem, these deep
architectures are very difficult to train, so a mixture of different approaches is used with a partial
success. Until now, it is assumed that it is not possible to train neural networks with more than 6
hidden layers so the shallow architectures, such as SVM and ELM, are preferred. Both SVM and
ELM can be trained very fast because not all but only easing to train parameters are being adjusted
there. As consequence but both SVM and ELM requires 10 to 100 times larger networks than
needed. We have demonstrated that the size of the same shallow architectures can be reduced 30 to
100 times, if all but not only easy to adjust parameters are trained. Also, we have shown that that
with new architectures and the new NBN algorithm it is possible to efficiently train even much
deeper networks than 6 layers.
Beside the keynote lecture, professor will deliver an additional speech.
Topic: ‘How to write successful well cited paper’
Abstract: This speech is focused on a bunch of guidelines for researchers and papers’ authors.
A discussion is planned and welcome.
Bogdan M. WILAMOWSKI received his MS in computer engineering
in 1966, PhD in neural computing in 1970, and Dr. Habil. in integrated
circuit design in 1977. He received the title of full professor from the
President of Poland in 1987. He was the Director of the Institute of
Electronics (1979-1981) and the Chair of the Solid State Electronics
Department (1987-1989) at the Technical University of Gdansk. He was
Professor at the University of Wyoming (1989-2000). From 2000 to 2003
he was the Associate Director of Microelectronics Research and
Telecommunication Institute at University of Idaho. Currently he is the
Director of ANMSTC (Alabama Nano/Micro Science and Technology Center) and Alumna
Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering Department at Auburn University. Dr.
Wilamowski was with the Communication Institute at Tohoku University, Japan (1968-1970), and
he spent one year at the Semiconductor Research Institute, Sendai, Japan as a JSPS Fellow (19751976). He was a visiting scholar at Auburn University (1981-1982 and 1995-1996), and a visiting
28
professor at the University of Arizona, Tucson (1982-1984). He is the author of 9 books, more than
300 refereed publications, and has over 30 patents. He was the major professor for about 160
graduate students. His main areas of interest are: semiconductor devices and sensors, mixed signal
and analog signal processing, network programming, and computational intelligence.
Dr. Wilamowski was one of four founders of the IEEE Computational Intelligence Society then
the President of the IEEE Industrial Electronics Society (2004-2005). From 2012 to 2014 he was
member of the IEEE Board of Directors.
He has served as an associate editor in several journals and more recently he was the Editor-inChief of IEEE Trans. on Industrial Electronics (2007-2010) and the Editor-in-Chief of IEEE Trans.
on Industrial Informatics (2011-2013). Both are one of the highest ranked IEEE journals (#3 with
IF=6.5 and #1 with IF=8.8).
Prof. Wilamowski is an IEEE Fellow; Fellow of the Kosciuszko Foundation, and an Honorary
Member of the Hungarian Academy of Science. In 2008 the President of Poland awarded him with
the Commander Cross of the Order of Merit of the Republic of Poland for outstanding service in
proliferation of international scientific collaborations and for achievements in areas of
microelectronics and computer science. He is a member of the CN TPC since 2007.
 Rajiv BAGAI
Wichita State University, USA
Topic: ‘Anonymity on the Web’
Abstract: Many tasks performed on the Internet today require hiding the identity of the users
performing those tasks. Some examples of such tasks are online voting, making donations, posting
frank opinion on electronic forums, etc. As the Internet was not designed with user anonymity in
mind, several systems have been developed that enable anonymous communication. This talk will
give an overview of standard concepts and techniques for providing anonymity on the web. It will
include an introduction to what anonymity is and what it is not, different types of anonymity,
methods for achieving anonymity, recognized attacks on anonymous systems, and measurement of
anonymity. Some current and promising future research directions, and connections with other areas
involving anonymity, such as anonymous data publishing and location privacy, will also be
mentioned.
Rajiv BAGAI Dr. Rajiv Bagai received his BS degree in Computer
Science from the Birla Institute of Technology and Science, India, and his
MS and PhD degrees in Computer Science from the University of Victoria,
Canada. He is presently an Associate Professor in the Deptartment of
Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at the Wichita State
University, USA. His current research area is web anonymity, but in the
past he worked in logic programming and paraconsistent databases. He is a
member of the CN TPC since 2014.
 Peter van de VEN
Centrum Wiskunde & Informatica (CWI), Netherlands
Topic: ‘Packet-Level Scheduling for Joint Transmission in Cellular Networks with CoMP’
Abstract: Due to the current trend towards smaller cells, an increasing number of users of cellular
networks reside on the edge between two cells; these users typically receive poor service as a result
of the relatively weak signal and strong interference. Coordinated Multi-Point (CoMP) with Joint
Transmission (JT) is a cellular networking technique allowing multiple Base Stations (BSs) to
jointly transmit to a single user. This improves the users’ reception quality and facilitate better
service to cell-edge users. In this talk we consider a CoMP-enabled network, comprised of multiple
BSs interconnected via backhaul. We formulate the OFDMA Joint Scheduling (OJS) problem of
29
determining a subframe schedule and deciding if and how to use JT in order to maximize some
utility function. We show that the OJS problem is NP-hard. We develop optimal and approximation
algorithms for specific and general topologies, respectively. We consider a time dimension and study
a queueing model with packet arrivals in which the service rates for each subframe are obtained by
solving OJS. We prove that when the problem is formulated with a specific utility function and
solved optimally in each subframe, the resulting scheduling policy is throughput-optimal. We show
that the bulk of the gains from CoMP with JT can be achieved with low capacity backhaul.
Moreover, our algorithms distribute the network resources evenly, increasing the inter-cell users’
throughput at only a slight cost to the intra-cell users.
Peter van de VEN is a tenure-track researcher at CWI, Amsterdam. He
received the PhD degree in applied mathematics at Eindhoven
University of Technology in 2011, and worked at the IBM T.J. Watson
Research Lab in New York as a postdoctoral researcher (2011-2013) and
research staff member (2013-2014). His research interests are in
modeling and analysis of large stochastic systems across different
applications.
Dr. Van de Ven is the recipient of the Beta PhD award 2012 for best
PhD thesis of the Beta research school, the IBM Goldstine Fellowship
Award 2011-2012, and runner-up for the VvS+OR PhD thesis award for best thesis in The
Netherlands in OR and statistics, 2010-2012. He is associate editor of 4OR and member of various
conference program committees. He is a member of the CN TPC since 2015.
 Aleksander MALINOWSKI
Bradley University, USA
Topic: ‘Current Challenges for the Internet of Things Ecosystem’
Abstract: Four challenges need to be resolved to allow continuing growth of IoT infrastructure.
Those are need for common infrastructure, need for uniform standards, problem of limited battery
life, and the question of data ownership (data security, sharing and control). The presentation
provides examples of IoT devices and addresses the aforementioned problems in the classes of
applications: wearables, connected cars, smart homes and building automation, smart connected
cities, and industrial automation.
Aleksander MALINOWSKI is an Associate Professor at the Electrical
and Computer Engineering Department of the Bradley University. He is
with Bradley since 1998 and enjoys both teaching and doing research at
this excellent medium size private not for profit institution. Before he
was briefly visiting with University of Wyoming.
Dr. Malinowski is also a Senior Member of IEEE and a Senior
Administrative Committee Member for the IEEE Industrial Electronics
Society. In November 2003 he received the Anthony J. Hornfeck
Service Award from the Society. Dr. Malinowski is the author of 6
journal papers, 5 book chapters, and 47 other refereed publications. The areas of his main interests
are networked cyber physical systems, computer networks, Ethernet, factory automation, Internet of
Things, computational intelligence, autonomous mobile agents with emphasis on their navigation.
He is a member of the CN TPC since 2015.
30
 Vladimir MITYUSHEV
Pedagogical University of Cracow, Poland
Topic: ‘Deterministic and random graphs related to optimal packing of spheres’
Abstract: Besides pure mathematical interest, deterministic and random optimal packing of spheres
in Rd has applications to the design of codes for a bandlimited channel with white Gaussian noise
and to the material sciences (effective properties of composites, stir casting processes etc). In this
talk, the packing and associated physical problems are stated in a periodic toroidal d-dimensional
space. The energy E of spheres is introduced and estimated. It depends on the Voronoi tessellation
(the Delaunay graph) associated to the centers of spheres. It is demonstrated that the minimum of E
over locations of spheres is attained at the optimal packing. Simulations were performed for 2D
deterministic and random graphs when disks are uniformly distributed on the flat torus without
overlapping. The obtained analytical formulae can be considered in the framework of the
probabilistic distributions and averaged over the locations of disks. As a result, we arrive at the
analytical formulae for the effective properties of random composites and develop a new RVE
theory. Such analytic formulae yield descriptions of such new effects as memory of stirring, fractal
local behavior of physical fields and others.
Vladimir MITYUSHEV is an Professor at the Pedagogical University
in Krakow. He was Professor at the Pedagogical University in Slupsk
(1992-2004), Associate Professor at the Belarussian State University in
Minsk (1988–1992), Associate Professor at the Belarussian
Technological Univeristy in Minsk (1984–1988) and Engineer at the
Institute of Geochemistry and Geophysics (1980-1984). He is also a
Guest Research Professor/ Senior Researcher at Equipe Milieux Poreux
et Fractures, Sisyphe, Universite Paris VI in France since 1998 till
present.
He received his PhD in mathematics in 1984 by Belarussian State University in Minsk, and
habilitation in technology in 1997 by Poznan University of Technology. He received the title of full
professor in mathematics from the President of Poland in 2010.
His research interests are in mathematical modeling and computer simulations, industrial
mathematics, boundary value problems and their applications, Riemann-Hilbert problem for
multiply connected domains, iterative functional equations and their applications, elliptic PDE,
effective properties of composites with deterministic and random structure, fiber composites, RVE,
porous media, permeability and diffusion, Navier–Stokes equations in domains with complex
geometry, viscous flow in wavy channels, elasticity, thermoelasticity and mechanics of fracture,
electroosmotic phenomena, symbolic computations, packing and deterministic and random graphs.
He is a member of the American Mathematical Society and a reviewer of Mathematical Reviews
and Zentralblatt für Mathematik. He is a member of the CN TPC since 2015.

31
Agenda
Monday 15 June 2015

Check in
-
The Main Entrance of The Palace
– Hotel & CN Reception
16:00
6:00
22:00

>> DINNER
-
HOTEL RESTAURANT (Former Carriage Depot)
20:00
1:00
21:00

Start Duration Stop

Tuesday 16 June 2015
– Morning: Accommodation
32
Start Duration Stop
>> BREAKFAST
-
HOTEL RESTAURANT (Palace)
8:00
0:45
8:45

Conference Check in
-
The Main Entrance of The Palace
– Hotel & CN Reception
8:30
4:30
13:00
>> LUNCH
-
HOTEL RESTAURANT (Former Carriage Depot)
13:00
0:45
13:45


Monday/Tuesday
Tuesday 16 June 2015
– Afternoon: Sessions
Start
Duration
Stop

Special Session
– Opening & keynote lectures
The Main Conference Room
– Former Carriage Depot
chairman: prof. Andrzej Kwiecień
14:00
2:00
16:00

Topic
Lecturer
Start
Duration
Stop

Official Opening
Goals and Mission of the CN Conference
prof. Andrzej Kwiecień
—
Silesian University of Technology, Poland
14:00
0:20
14:20

Anonymity on the Web
prof. Rajiv Bagai
—
Wichita State University, USA
14:20
0:40
15:00

Packet-Level Scheduling for Joint Transmission in Cellular
Networks with CoMP
prof. Peter van de Ven
—
Centrum Wiskunde & Informatica – CWI,
Netherlands
15:00
0:40
15:40

Experts Panel – free discussion
Moderator: prof. Andrzej Kwiecień
—
Silesian University of Technology
15:40
0:15
15:55

>> BREAK
Former Carriage Depot
15:55
0:30
16:25

Tuesday
33
Tuesday 16 June 2015
– Afternoon: Sessions
Duration
Stop

TRACK A – SESSION A.1
Computer Networks
The Main Conference Room
– Former Carriage Depot
chairman: prof. Rajiv Bagai
16:25
1:40
18:05

Topic
Lecturer
Start
Duration
Stop

16:25
0:20
16:45

16:45
0:20
17:05

17:05
0:20
17:25

Waterfall Traffic Identification: Optimizing Classification
Cascades
Estimating the Intensity of Long-Range Dependence in Real
and Synthetic Traffic Traces
Data Suppression Algorithms for Surveillance Applications of
Wireless Sensor and Actor Networks
Michele Pagano,
Paweł Foremski, Christian Callegari
—
University of Pisa, Italy
IITiS PAN, Poland
Adam Domański,
Joanna Domańska, Tadeusz Czachórski
—
Silesian University of Technology, Poland
IITiS PAN, Poland
Bartłomiej Płaczek, Marcin Bernaś
—
University of Silesia, Poland
Energy Aware Object Localization in Wireless Sensor Network
based on Wi-Fi Fingerprinting
Marcin Bernaś, Bartłomiej Płaczek
—
University of Silesia, Poland
17:25
0:20
17:45

LTE or WiFi? Client-side Internet Link Selection for
Smartphones
Paweł Foremski, Krzysztof Grochla
—
IITiS PAN, Poland
17:45
0:20
18:05

>> DINNER
HOTEL RESTAURANT (Former Carriage Depot)
18:30
0:45
19:15

The Brunów Palace
– trip around the Palace
The Main Entrance
- guided by Palace's Householder
19:30
0:30
20:00

Sports event
– a football match
Court
- animator: Jacek Stój
The Fireplace Room
– Back-Premises
Moderator: prof. Andrzej Kwiecień
20:00
1:00
21:00

20:00
1:00
21:00

Program & Organization Committees meeting
34
Start
Tuesday
Wednesday 17 June 2015
– Morning
Start Duration
Stop

>> BREAKFAST
HOTEL RESTAURANT (Palace)
8:00
0:45
8:45

Special Session (cont.)
– Keynote lectures
The Main Conference Room
– Former Carriage Depot
chairman: prof. Tadeusz Czachórski
9:00
1:35
10:35

Topic
Lecturer
Start
Duration
Stop

Learning Architectures and Training Algorithms
prof. Bogdan M. Wilamowski
—
Auburn University, USA
9:00
0:40
9:40

Current Challenges for the Internet of Things Ecosystem
prof. Aleksander Malinowski
—
Bradley University, USA
9:40
0:40
10:20

Experts Panel – free discussion
Moderator: prof. Tadeusz Czachórski
10:20
0:15
10:35
>> BREAK
Former Carriage Depot
10:35
0:30
11:05


Wednesday
35
Wednesday 17 June 2015
– Morning
36
Start
Duration
Stop

TRACK A – SESSION A.2
Computer Networks
The Main Conference Room
– Former Carriage Depot
chairman: prof. Aleksander Dudin
11:05
1:40
12:45

Topic
Lecturer
Start
Duration
Stop

Attractiveness Study of Honeypots and Honeynets in Internet
Threat Detection
Sochor Tomas, Zuzčák Matej
—
University of Ostrava, Czech Republic
11:05
0:20
11:25

User Trust Levels and Their Impact on System Security and
Usability
Henryk Krawczyk, Paweł Lubomski
—
Gdańsk University of Technology, Poland
11:25
0:20
11:45

Deploying Honeypots and Honeynets: Issues of Liability
Maroš Andrejko, Pavol Sokol
—
Pavol Jozef Safarik University in Kosice, Slovakia
11:45
0:20
12:05

Speech Quality Measurement in IP Telephony Networks by
Using the Modular Probes
Filip Řezáč, Jan Rozhon, Jiří Šlachta,
Miroslav Vozňák
—
CESNET z.s.p.o., Czech Republic
VSB-Technical University of Ostrava, Czech
Republic
12:05
0:20
12:25

Applying Software-defined Networking Paradigm to Tenantperspective Optimization of Cloud Services Utilization
Dominique Jullier,
Marek Konieczny, Sławomir Zieliński
—
Open Systems AG, Switzerland
Akademia Górnicza-Hutnicza, Poland
12:25
0:20
12:45

>> LUNCH
HOTEL RESTAURANT (Former Carriage Depot)
13:00
0:45
13:45

Wednesday
Wednesday 17 June 2015
– Afternoon
Start
Duration
Stop

Special Session (cont.)
– Keynote lectures
The Main Conference Room
– The Former Carriage Depot
chairman: prof. Oleg Tikhonenko
14:00
0:45
14:45

Topic
Lecturer
Start
Duration
Stop

Deterministic and Random Graphs Related to Optimal Packing
of Spheres
prof. Vladimir Mityushev
—
Pedagogical University of Cracow, Poland
14:00
0:40
14:40

Experts Panel – free discussion
Moderator: prof. Oleg Tikhonenko
14:40
0:05
14:45

Wednesday
37
Wednesday 17 June 2015
– Afternoon
Duration
Stop

TRACK D – SESSION D.1 (in Parallel: A.3)
Queueing Theory
The Main Conference Room
– The Former Carriage Depot
chairman: prof. Michele Pagano
14:45
2:50
17:35

Topic
Lecturer
Start
Duration
Stop

Multi-server Queueing System MAP/M/N(r)/∞ Operating in
Random Environment
Alexander Dudin,
Chesoong Kim, Sergey Dudin, Olga Dudina
—
Belarusian State University, Belarus
Sangji University, South Korea
14:45
0:20
15:05

A Model of Erlang''s Ideal Grading with Multi-Service Traffic
Sources
Sławomir Hanczewski, Maciej Sobieraj
—
Poznan University of Technology, Poland
15:05
0:20
15:25

15:25
0:20
15:45

15:45
0:20
16:05

16:05
0:30
16:35

16:35
0:20
16:55

16:55
0:20
17:15

17:15
0:20
17:35

Asymptotically Work-conserving Disciplines in Communication
Systems
Unreliable Queueing System with Cold Redundancy
>> BREAK
Egalitarian Processor Sharing System with Demands of
Random Space Requirement
Stochastic Bounds for Markov Chains with the Use of GPU
The Analysis of the Extracted Parts of Opte Internet Topology
38
Start
Evsey Morozov, Lyubov Potakhina
—
Karelian Research Centre and Petrozavodsk State
University, Russia
Valentina Klimenok, Vladimir Vishnevsky
—
Belarusian State University, Belarus
Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia
Former Carriage Depot
Oleg Tikhonenko
—
Częstochowa University of Technology, Poland
Jarosław Bylina, Marek Karwacki, Jean-Michel
Fourneau, Franck Quessette, Nihal Pekergin
—
UMCS Lublin, Poland
Université de Versailles St Quentin, France
Université Paris Est Créteil Val de Marne, France
Tadeusz Czachórski, Monika Nycz, Tomasz Nycz
—
IITiS PAN, Poland
Wednesday
Wednesday 17 June 2015
– Afternoon
Start
Duration
Stop

TRACK C – SESSION C.1 (in Parallel: A.4)
New Technologies
The Main Conference Room
– Former Carriage Depot
chairwoman: prof. Tülin Atmaca
17:35
1:00
18:35

Topic
Lecturer
Start
Duration
Stop

Tracing of an Entanglement Level in Short Qubit and Qutrit
Spin Chains
Marek Sawerwain, Joanna Wiśniewska
—
University of Zielona Gora, Poland
Military University of Technology, Poland
17:35
0:20
17:55

A Novel Multicast Architecture of Programmable Networks
Michał Hoeft, Jakub Kiciński
—
Gdańsk University of Technology, Poland
17:55
0:20
18:15

Mobile Offloading Framework: Solution for Optimization of
Mobile Applications using Cloud Computing
Michał Nykiel,
Henryk Krawczyk, Jerzy Proficz
—
Gdańsk University of Technology, Poland
18:15
0:20
18:35

Wednesday
39
Wednesday 17 June 2015
– Afternoon
40
Start
Duration
Stop

TRACK A – SESSION A.3 (in Parallel: D.1)
Computer Networks
The 'Cristal' Conference Room
– Palace
chairman: prof. Mirosław Skrzewski
14:45
1:20
16:05

Topic
Lecturer
Start
Duration
Stop

Analysis of Objective Trees in Security Management of
Distributed Computer Networks of Enterprises and
Organizations
Olga Dolinina, Ekaterina Kulakova,
Vadim Kushnikov
—
Yuri Gagarin State Technical University of Saratov,
Russia
14:45
0:20
15:05

Method of Visual Information Processing based on Gridcalculations
Olga Dolinina, Alexander Ermakov,
Alexander Shvarts
—
Yury Gagarin State Technical University of Saratov,
Russia
15:05
0:20
15:25

On the Balancing Security Against Performance for IT systems
Damian Rusinek,
Bogdan Ksiezopolski, Adam Wierzbicki
—
Maria Curie-Sklodowska University, Poland
Polish-Japanese Academy of Information
Technology, Poland
15:25
0:20
15:45

A Technique for the Botnet Detection Based On DNS-Traffic
Analysis
Oksana Pomorova,
Sergii Lysenko, Andrii Kryshchuk,
Oleg Savenko, Kira Bobrovnikova
—
Khmelnitsky National University, Ukraine
15:45
0:20
16:05

>> BREAK
Former Carriage Depot
16:05
0:30
16:35

Wednesday
Wednesday 17 June 2015
– Afternoon
Start
Duration
Stop

TRACK A – SESSION A.4 (in Parallel: C.1)
Computer Networks
The 'Cristal' Conference Room
– Palace
chairman: prof. Aleksander Malinowski
16:35
2:00
18:35

Topic
Lecturer
Start
Duration
Stop

Simulation-based Analysis of a Platform as a Service
Infrastructure Performance from a User Perspective
Wojciech Rząsa
—
Rzeszow University of Technology, Poland
16:35
0:20
16:55

Color-aware Transmission of SVC Video over DiffServ Domain
Sławomir Przyłucki, Dariusz Czerwiński
—
Lublin University of Technology, Poland
16:55
0:20
17:15

Ontology-based Integrated Monitoring of Hadoop Clusters in
Industrial Environments with OPC UA and RESTful Web
Services
Marcin Fojcik, Kamil Folkert
—
Sogn og Fjordane University College , Norway
17:15
0:20
17:35

SysML-based Modeling of Token Passing Paradigm in
Distributed Control Systems
Marcin Jamro, Dariusz Rzońca
—
Rzeszow University of Technology, Poland
17:35
0:20
17:55

Automatic Scenario Selection of Cyclic Exchanges in
Transmission via Two Buses
Michał Maćkowski,
Andrzej Kwiecień, Błażej Kwiecień
—
Silesian University of Technology, Poland
17:55
0:20
18:15

IFMANET: Interoperable Framework for Mobile Ad-hoc
Networks
Hamid Hassan,
Philip Trwoga, Izzet Kale
—
University of Westminster, UK
18:15
0:20
18:35

Wednesday
41
Wednesday 25 June 2014
– Evening
Start Duration Stop



COMMON PICTURE
The Palace main hall or courtyard
18:15
0:00
18:15
>> GALA SUPPER
Former Carriage Depot
19:30
3:00
22:30
19:30
1:30
21:00

21:00
1:00
22:00

in the meantime:
 The Basics of Wine Testing – Kondrat Wine Selection*
 Awards ceremony
in the break:
 The Taste of Music – Semplice*

*
details on the page 50
42
Wednesday
Thursday 18 June 2015
– Morning
Start Duration
Stop

>> BREAKFAST
HOTEL RESTAURANT (Palace)
8:00
0:45
8:45

Special Session (cont.)
– IEEE Session
The Main Conference Room
– Former Carriage Depot
chairman: prof. Peter van de Ven
9:00
1:15
10:15

Topic
Lecturer
Start
Duration
Stop

About IEEE
prof. Bogdan M. Wilamowski
—
IEEE HQ, USA
9:00
0:20
9:20

How to Write Successful Well Cited Paper
prof. Bogdan M. Wilamowski
—
Auburn University, USA
9:20
0:40
10:00

Free Discussion Panel
Moderator: prof. Peter van de Ven
10:00
0:15
10:15

Thursday
43
Thursday 18 June 2015
– Morning
44
Start
Duration
Stop

TRACK B – SESSION B.1 (in Parallel: E.1)
Teleinformatics & Telecommunications
The Main Conference Room
– Former Carriage Depot
chairman: prof. Tomas Sochor
10:15
2:10
12:25

Topic
Lecturer
Start
Duration
Stop

Convergent Access Networks: Energy Saving Solutions
Glenda Gonzalez, Tülin Atmaca,
Tadeusz Czachórski
—
IMT/Télécom SudParis, France
IITiS PAN, Poland
10:15
0:20
10:35

A Dynamic Energy Efficient Optical Line Terminal Design for
Optical Access Network
Özgür Can Turna, Muhammed Ali Aydın,
Tülin Atmaca
—
Istanbul University, Turkey
IMT/Telecom SudParis, France
10:35
0:20
10:55

>> BREAK
Former Carriage Depot
10:55
0:30
11:25

Mobility Robustness in LTE based on Automatic Neighbour
Relation Table
Konrad Połys, Krzysztof Grochla
—
Proximetry Poland Sp. z o. o., Poland
IITiS PAN, Poland
11:25
0:20
11:45

Influence of Corpus Size on Speaker Verification
Adam Dustor, Piotr Kłosowski, Jacek Izydorczyk,
Rafał Kopański
—
Silesian University of Technology, Poland
11:45
0:20
12:05

Stopping Criteria Analysis of the OMP Algorithm for Sparse
Channels Estimation
Grzegorz Dziwoki, Jacek Izydorczyk
—
Silesian University of Technology, Poland
12:05
0:20
12:25

Thursday
Thursday 18 June 2015
– Morning
Start
Duration
Stop

TRACK E – SESSION E.1 (in Parallel: B.1)
Innovative Applications
The 'Cristal' Conference Room
– Palace
chairman: prof. Tadeusz Wieczorek
10:15
1:50
12:05

Topic
Lecturer
Start
Duration
Stop

Scheduling of Isochronous Data Transactions in Compliance
with QoS Restrictions in the USB 3.0 Interface
Andrzej Kwiecień, Michał Sawicki
—
Silesian University of Technology, Poland
10:15
0:20
10:35

Decentralized Social Networking Using Named Data
Leonid Zeynalvand,
Mohammed Gharib, Ali Movaghar
—
Sharif University of Technology, Iran
10:35
0:20
10:55

>> BREAK
Former Carriage Depot
10:55
0:30
11:25

USB Data Capture and Analysis in Windows based on
USBPcap and Wireshark
Wojciech Mielczarek, Tomasz Moń
—
Silesian University of Technology, Poland
Espotel Poland Sp. z o.o. Wroclaw Technology Park,
Poland
11:25
0:20
11:45

Reliability of Bluetooth Smart Technology for Indoor
Localization System
Michał Maćkowski,
Andrzej Kwiecień, Marek Kojder, Maciej Manczyk
—
Silesian University of Technology, Poland
11:45
0:20
12:05

>> LUNCH
HOTEL RESTAURANT (Former Carriage Depot)
13:00
0:45
13:45

Thursday
45
Thursday 18 June 2015
– Afternoon
46
Start Duration Stop



Guided Tour
– Chocha Castle & Surroundings
Guided trip by coach
14:00
4:30
18:30
>> GRILL&BEER
HOTEL COURTYARD
19:30
2:30
22:00
in the meantime:
 Sports event
– the game of boules
Courtyard
- animator: Jacek Stój
20:00
1:00
21:00
Thursday

Friday 19 June 2015
– Morning
Start
Duration
Stop

>> BREAKFAST
HOTEL RESTAURANT (Palace)
8:00
0:45
8:45

TRACK E – SESSION E.2
Innovative Applications
The Main Conference Room
– Former Carriage Depot
chairman: prof. Andrzej Kwiecień
9:00
1:00
10:00

Topic
Lecturer
Start
Duration
Stop

9:00
0:20
9:20

9:20
0:20
9:40

9:40
0:20
10:00

10:00
1:55
11:55

Start
Duration
Stop

10:00
0:20
10:20

10:20
0:20
10:40

10:40
0:15
10:55


Applications of Secure Data Exchange Method Using Social
Media to Distribute Public Keys
Speaker Verification Performance Evaluation Based on Open
Source Speech Processing Software and TIMIT Speech
Corpus
Digital Filter Implementation in Hadoop Data Mining System
Special Session
– LCA
Topic
Supervised Learning Classification Applied to Users of
e-Commerce Sites
Stability of Computer Networks Independent of the Queuing
Delays
Closing Speech and the CN2014 Official Closure
Piotr Milczarski, Krzysztof Podlaski, Artur Hłobaż
—
University of Lodz, Poland
Piotr Kłosowski, Adam Dustor, Jacek Izydorczyk
—
Silesian University of Technology, Poland
Dariusz Czerwinski
—
Lublin University of Technology, Poland
The Main Conference Room
– Former Carriage Depot
chairman: prof. Andrzej Kwiecień
Lecturer
Grażyna Suchacka
—
Opole University, Poland
Jolanta Tańcula
—
Opole University, Poland
prof. Andrzej Kwiecień
—
SUT, Poland
>> BREAK
Former Carriage Depot
10:55
0:30
11:25
Experts Panel – free discussion
Moderator: prof. Andrzej Kwiecień
11:25
0:30
11:55
>> LUNCH
HOTEL RESTAURANT (Former Carriage Depot)
13:00
0:45
13:45
Check out of regular participants
Hotel Reception
10:00
2:00
Friday


12:00 
47
Friday 19 June 2015
– Afternoon: Special Session
Duration
Stop

Check in for the WIP/LCA session
Main Entrance of The Palace
– Hotel & CN Reception
12:00
2:00
14:00

>> LUNCH
HOTEL RESTAURANT (Former Carriage Depot)
13:00
0:45
13:45

Special Session
– WIP/LCA
The Main Conference Room
– Former Carriage Depot
chairwoman: dr inż. Grażyna Suchacka
14:00
2:50
16:50

Topic
Lecturer
Start
Duration
Stop

14:00
0:20
14:20

14:20
0:20
14:40

14:40
0:20
15:00

15:00
0:20
15:20

15:20
0:30
15:50

15:50
0:20
16:10

16:10
0:20
16:30

16:30
0:20
16:50

A Novel Approach to Users' Authentication and Authorization
Inhomogeneous CTMC Model of a Call Center with Balking and
Abandonment
Multi Criteria Evaluation of Wireless Local Area Network
Designs
An Approach to Video-Streaming Tests in Mobile WiMAX Using
Low-Cost Time-Reference
>> BREAK
The Internet of Things in Energy Management Systems for
Residential Prosumers
The Ability to Ensure a Fair Distribution of Network Resources
for Video Streaming Services Based on DASH Standard
The Use of SVC Coding and http Proxy For Adaptive Video
Streaming Services Based on the DASH Standard
48
Start
Robert Sekulski, Marek Woda
—
Wroclaw University of Technology, Poland
Maciej Rafał Burak
—
West Pomeranian University of Technology, Poland
Remigiusz Olejnik
—
West Pomeranian University of Technology, Poland
Adam Flizikowski, Marcin Przybyszewski,
Witold Hołubowicz, Tomasz Olejniczak,
Mateusz Płócienniczak
—
UTP University of Science and Technology, Poland
Former Carriage Depot
Robert Wójcicki
—
Silesian University of Technology, Poland
Sławomir Przyłucki, Dariusz Czerwiński
—
Lublin University of Technology, Poland
Sławomir Przyłucki
—
Lublin University of Technology, Poland
Friday
Saturday 20 June 2015
Start Duration Stop

>> BREAKFAST
HOTEL RESTAURANT (Palace)
8:00
0:45
8:45

Check out of the WIP/LCA participants
Hotel Reception
7:00
3:00
10:00

Saturday
49
Gala Dinner
Wednesday, June 17, 2015
Place: Brunów Palace
– Former Carriage Depot
‘Taste & Culture’
Informal attire (business wear expected)
The Basics of Wine Tasting – Kondrat Wine Selection
The presenter is Paweł Baranowski. For 7 years he have been
working professionally with wine. He finished oenological
postgraduate studies at the Jagiellonian University and the course
Wine & Spirit Education Trust Level 1 School of Sommeliers in
Krakow. He is a member of the Polish Association of
Sommeliers, too.
During the banquet he will try to present you some fine
wines from the collection “KONDRAT WINE SELECTION”.
We hope that the wine tasting will be a nice complement to
dinner at Brunów Palace.
Please visit webpage: www.marekkondrat.pl
The Taste of Music – The Semplice band
The SEMPLICE band has been founded in 2003 and the
originator was Łukasz Pietrzak. The repertoire consists mainly of
Latin American music compositions (Astor Piazzolla, Antonio
Carlos Jobim), Balkan, French and standards of jazz and film. All
songs are authoring.
On a daily basis, team members are teachers at the State
Music School name of Janina Garścia in Jelenia Góra.
Please visit webpage: www.semplice.pl
50
CN Publications
Publications of CN2015
Due to the conference 2015, two publications were prepared:

Conference proceedings ‘Computer Networks’ published by Springer-Verlag in series CCIS
522, ISSN 1865-0929
This book constitutes the peer-to-peer reviewed English language proceedings of the CN2015.
The whole material has been peer reviewed by at least three independent reviewers from the
Technical Program Committee of CN2015. The 42 (below 55%) peer revised full papers have
been carefully reviewed and selected for inclusion in the book.

Special Session (WIP/LCA): The SUT science copybook volume 36, No. 2 (120) in series
‘Studia Informatica’ published by SUT Press, Gliwice, PL ISSN 1642-0489
This book constitutes the refereed papers of WIP/LCA Special Session. The whole material has
been peer reviewed by two independent reviewers from the Technical Program Committee of
CN2015. The 7 full papers have been selected for inclusion in the book.
Series info: www.springer.com/series/7899
Online:
si.polsl.pl
Publications of CN2014
Due to the conference 2014, two publications were prepared:

‘Computer Networks’, Springer-Verlag, CCIS 431
ISSN 1865-0929, ISBN 978-3-319-07941-7
The 34 (below 60%) peer revised full papers have been carefully selected for inclusion in the book.

‘Studia Informatica’, vol. 35, No. 3 (117), SUT Press, Gliwice
PL ISSN 1642-0489 (former 0208-7286), ISBN 978-83-7335-955-0
The 7 peer revised full papers have been carefully selected for inclusion in the book.
Online:
www.springer.com/978-3-319-07940-0
Online:
si.polsl.pl
51
Publications of CN2013
Due to the conference 2013, two publications were prepared:

‘Computer Networks’, Springer-Verlag, CCIS 370
ISSN 1865-0929, ISBN 978-3-642-38865-1
The 58 full papers have been included in the book.

‘Studia Informatica’, vol. 34, No. 3 (113), SUT Press, Gliwice
ISBN 978-83-7335-955-0
The 18 full papers have been selected for inclusion in the book.
Online:
www.springer.com/gp/book/9783642388644
Online:
si.polsl.pl
Publications of CN2012
Due to the conference 2012, two publications were prepared:

‘Computer Networks’, Springer-Verlag, CCIS, vol. 291
ISSN 1865-0929, ISBN 978-3-642-31217-5
The 48 full papers have been carefully reviewed and selected for inclusion in the book.

‘Studia Informatica’, vol. 33, No. 3A (107), SUT Press, Gliwice
ISBN 978-83-7335-955-0
The 17 revised full papers presented have been carefully selected for inclusion in the book.

‘Stefan Węgrzyn In Memoriam’, SUT Press, Gliwice
ISBN 978-83-7335-955-0
The book contains personal and professional memories of late Professor Stefan Węgrzyn, and
scientific studies on the areas in which the Professor was interested. The authors are members of the
family of the Professor, as well as his friends and colleagues. The book contains 14 chapters.
Online:
www.springer.com/gp/book/9783642312168
Online:
si.polsl.pl
Publications of CN2011
Due to the conference 2011 two publications were prepared:

‘Computer Networks’, Springer-Verlag, CCIS 160
ISSN 1865-0929, ISBN 978-3-642-21771-5
52
Online:
unavailable
The 50 full papers have been carefully reviewed and selected for inclusion in the book.
 ‘Studia Informatica’, vol. 32, No. 3A (98), SUT Press, Gliwice
ISSN 0208-7286
The 19 full papers have been carefully reviewed and selected for inclusion in the book.
Online:
http://www.springer.com/gp/book/9783642217708
Online:
si.polsl.pl
Publications of CN2010
Due to the conference 2010 two publications were prepared:

‘Computer Networks’, CCIS 79, Springer-Verlag
ISSN 1865-0929, ISBN 978-3-642-13861-4
The 37 full papers have been carefully reviewed and selected for inclusion in the book.

‘Contemporary Issues of Computer Networks’, WKŁ Warsaw
ISBN 978-83-206-1778-8
The 22 full papers have been carefully reviewed and selected for inclusion in the book.
Online:
http://www.springer.com/gp/book/9783642138607
Online:
unavailable
Publications of CN2009
Due to the conference 2009 three publications were prepared:

‘Computer Networks’, CCIS 39, Springer-Verlag
ISSN 1865-0929, ISBN 978-3-642-02671-3
The book contains 40 revised full papers in English.

‘Technical and Theoretical Aspects of Contemporary Computer Networks’, WKŁ Warsaw
ISBN 978-83-206-1738-2
The 23 revised full papers are presented in Polish.

‘Geology & Information Technology’, PKJS Gliwice
ISBN 978-83-60716-69-4
This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the GIT Special Session. The whole material has
been reviewed by two independent reviewers. The book contains 6 revised full papers in English.
53
Online:
http://www.springer.com/gp/bo
ok/9783642026706
Online:
unavailable
Online:
unavailable
Publications of CN2008
Due to the conference 2008 one publication in two volumes was prepared, and additionally the postconference volume ‘Studia Informatica’.
Multiauthors monograph by WKŁ Warsaw: PL ISBN 978-83-206-1693-4
 Vol. 1. „Współczesne Aspekty Sieci Komputerowych” contains 41 revised in Polish.
 Vol. 2. ‘Contemporary Aspects of Computer Networks’ contains 28 revised papers in English.
Series Studia Informatica: PL ISSN 0208-7286
 Vol. 29 issue 4B (81) contains 21 revised post-conference papers.
Online:
unavailable
Publications of CN2007
Due to the conference 2007 one publication in two volumes was prepared.
Multiauthors monograph by WKŁ Warsaw: PL ISBN 978-83-206-1649-1
It totally contains 78 revised papers.
Online:
unavailable

54
List of entities participating in
the CN2015 edition
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
29.
30.
31.
32.
33.
34.
35.
36.
37.
38.
39.
40.
AGH University of Science and Technology
Auburn University
Belarusian State University
Bradley University
Centrum Wiskunde & Informatica (CWI)
CESNET z.s.p.o.
Computer Center of SUT
Częstochowa University of Technology
Espotel Poland Sp. z o.o. Wroclaw Technology Park
Gdansk University of Technology
Høgskulen i Sogn og Fjordane
IEEE Poland Section
IITIS Polish Academy of Sciences
Institut National de Télécommunication
Institute of Control Science RAS
Istanbul University
Karelian Research Centre and Petrozavodsk State University
Khmelnytsky National University
Lublin University of Technology
Open Systems AG
Pedagogical University of Cracow
Poznan University of Technology
Rzeszów University of Technology
Sangji University
Sharif University of Technology
Silesian University of Technology
UMCS – Maria Curie-Skłodowska University
University of Lodz
University of Opole
University of Ostrava
University of Pavol Jozef Šafárik University in Košice
University of Pisa
University of Silesia
University of Westminster
University of Zielona Góra
VSB-Technical University of Ostrava
West Pomeranian University of Technology
Wichita State University
Wroclaw University of Technology
Yuri Gagarin State Technical University of Saratov
Poland
USA
Belarus
USA
Netherlands
Czech Republic
Poland
Poland
Poland
Poland
Norway
Poland
Poland
France
Russia
Turkey
Russia
Ukraine
Poland
Switzerland
Poland
Poland
Poland
South Korea
Iran
Poland
Poland
Poland
Poland
Czech Republic
Slovakia
Italy
Poland
UK
Poland
Czech Republic
Poland
USA
Poland
Russia
55
List of entities participating in the previous
conference editions
Universities and research centers
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
56
AGH – University of Science and Technology – Kraków
Poland
Akademia Rolnicza – Szczecin
Poland
Akademia Świętokrzyska – Kielce
Poland
ATH – University of Bielsko-Biala
Poland
Belarusian State University
Belarus
Bielska Wyższa Szkoła Biznesu i Informatyki im. J. Tyszkiewicza –
Poland
Bielsko Biała
Centrum Sieciowo-Superkomputerowe Politechniki Wrocławskiej
Poland
CERN – Geneva
Switzerland
ChungNam National University
South Korea
Computer Center of SUT – Gliwice
Poland
Cyber Space Research Institue
Iran
Czestochowa University of Technology
Poland
Department of Telecommunications Networks and Services
France
Gdańsk University of Technology
Poland
Gdynia Maritime University
Poland
Gubkin Oil and Gas University
Russia
Høgskulen i Sogn og Fjordane – Førde
Norway
Hrodna State University
Belarus
IEEE Poland Section
Poland
IITIS Polish Academy of Sciences – Gliwice
Poland
Imperial College London
UK
iNEER
USA
inIT – Institut Industrial IT
Germany
Institut National de Télécommunication
France
Institute of Control Science RAS
Russia
Institute of Innovative Technologies EMAG
Poland
Jagiellonian University – Kraków
Poland
Jožef Stefan International Postgraduate School
Slovenia
Karelian Research Centre RAS
Russia
Kazimierz Wielki University – Bydgoszcz
Poland
Khmelnytsky National University
Ukraine
Koszalin University of Technology
Poland
Kraków University of Technology
Poland
KUL – John Paul II Catholic University of Lublin
Poland
Liege University
Netherland
Lodz University of Technology
Poland
Lublin University of Technology
Poland
Lviv Polytechnic National University
Ukraine
Military University of Technology
Poland
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
NASK – Naukowa i Akademicka Sieć Komputerowa – Warsaw
National Institute of Posts and Telecommunications
National University “Lviv Politechnik”
Opole University of Technology
Państwowa Wyższa Szkoła Zawodowa w Jarosławiu
Peregrine Semiconductor – San Diego
Polish Academy of Sciences
Poznań University of Economics
Poznań University of Technology
Rzeszów University of Technology
Sangji University – Wonju
Silesian University of Technology
Sogn og Fjordane University College
Szkoła Wyższa im. Pawła Włodkowica – Płock
Technical University of Ostrava
Technische Universität Dresden
The Islamia University of Bahawalpur
Thomson Reuters
Tlemcen University
UMCS – Maria Curie-Skłodowska University – Lublin
University of Applied Sciences – Ingolstadt
University of Arizona
University of Computer Sciences and Skills – Łódź
University of Economics – Katowice
University of Gdańsk
University of Information Technology and Management – Rzeszów
University of Ioannina
University of Limerick
University of Lodz
University of Łódź
University of Management and Administration – Zamość
University of Opole
University of Ostrava
University of Pisa
University of Silesia
University of Silesia – Katowice
University of Versailles-Saint-Quentin
University of Warsaw
University of Western Sydney
University of Zielona Gora
UTM – Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
VSB – Technical University of Ostrava
Warsaw University of Technology
WAT – Military University of Technology – Warsaw
West Pomeranian University of Technology – Szczecin
Poland
Morocco
Ukraine
Poland
Poland
USA
Poland
Poland
Poland
Poland
South Korea
Poland
Norway
Poland
Czech Republic
Germany
Pakistan
Poland
Algeria
Poland
Germany
USA
Poland
Poland
Poland
Poland
Greece
Ireland
Poland
Poland
Poland
Poland
Czech Republic
Italy
Poland
Poland
France
Poland
Australia
Poland
Malaysia
Czech Republic
Poland
Poland
Poland
57
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
Wichita State University
Wroclaw University of Economics
Wroclaw University of Technology
WSB – University of Dabrowa Gornicza
WSEI – University of Economics and Innovation – Lublin
Wyższa Szkoła Biznesu – National Louis University – Nowy Sącz
Wyższa Szkoła Informatyki i Zarządzania – Bielsko Biała
USA
Poland
Poland
Poland
Poland
Poland
Poland
Companies
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
58
2-Si – Sieciowe Systemy Informacyjne
BAP Image Systems GmbH
BP BiT Leader – Wrocław
C&C Partners Telecom – Katowice
Centralny Ośrodek Informatyki
Górnictwa – Katowice
Centrum Inżynierii Bezpieczeństwa
Systemów Komputerowych SOTEL
CLICO Sp. z o.o.
Comarch S.A. – Kraków
ComputerLand S.A.
DELL Polska
Domena A S.C. Andrzej i Paweł
Ogonowscy
DrukArt – wydawca miesięcznika
„Napędy i Sterowanie”
Ericsson Research Hungary
ESA Projekt – Katowice
GAMBIT Sp. z o. o.
Generał Discount Polska – Warszawa
Instytut Maszyn Matematycznych
Instytut Podstaw Informatyki PAN –
Warszawa
Instytut Techniki i Aparatury Medycznej –
Zabrze
ISPIK – Gliwice
ISS – Chorzów
Komenda Główna Policji
Komenda Wojewódzka Policji w
Katowicach
MON – Biuro Ochrony Informacji
Niejawnych
MSWiA – Biuro ds. Organizacji Centrum
Łączności Resortowej
MSWiA – Biuro Generalnego Inspektora
Ochrony Danych Osobowych
Narodowy Bank Polski
28.
29.
30.
31.
32.
33.
34.
35.
36.
37.
38.
39.
40.
41.
42.
43.
44.
45.
46.
47.
48.
49.
50.
51.
52.
53.
54.
55.
56.
Networks Integrators Associates,
Parkland, USA
OPTIMUS – Oddział Katowice
Ośrodek Informatyki – Siedlce
Ośrodek Informatyki – Urząd
Wojewódzki Warszawa
Ośrodek Informatyki Śląskiego Urzędu
Wojewódzkiego – Katowice
PNO Polska
PPH SOFTHOUS – Leżajsk
PROLOC Sp. z o. o. – Katowice
Proximetry Poland Sp. z o. o. – Katowice
Przedsiębiorstwo "UTEX" – Rybnik
Przedsiębiorstwo Komunikacji Miejskiej
– Świerklaniec
PZU – Oddział w Rzeszowie
RDS INCET CJSC – Moscow
SAP Polska
Siemens Polska
Silesian Electronic Team – Zabrze
SKG Systemy Komputerowe Główka
S.A. – Bielsko-Biała
Springer-Verlag – Germany
TELBANK – Katowice
Urząd Miasta Chorzów
Urząd Miasta Katowice
Urząd Miasta Pszów
Urząd Miasta Żory
Volvo Polska
WASKO Gliwice
WKŁ Warszawa
WNT Warszawa
Wojskowe Służby Informacyjne
ZEG Tychy
About the Venue
The Region
Silesia (pron.: /saɪˈliːʒə/ or /saɪˈliːʃə/) is a historical region of Central Europe located mostly in
Poland, with smaller parts in the Czech Republic and Germany. Silesia is rich in mineral and natural
resources and includes several important industrial areas. Silesia's largest city and historical capital
is Wrocław. Other large Polish cities in the region are Opole, Gliwice, and Katowice; Ostrava and
Opava in the Czech Republic; and Görlitz in Germany. The main
river is the Oder (Odra).
Lower Silesia (Polish: Dolny Śląsk; Czech: Dolní Slezsko, Latin:
Silesia Inferior; German: Niederschlesien; Silesian German:
Niederschläsing; Silesian: Dolny Ślůnsk) is the northwestern part
of the historical and geographical region of Silesia. The Upper
Silesia, where the organizer’s University is located, is to the
southeast.
Throughout its history Lower Silesia has been under the
control of the medieval Kingdom of Poland, the Kingdom of
Bohemia and the Austrian Habsburg Monarchy from 1526. In
1742 nearly all of the region was annexed by the Kingdom of Prussia and became part of the
German Empire in 1871, except for a small part which formed the southern part of the Lower
Silesian Duchy of Nysa and had been incorporated into Austrian Silesia in 1742. After 1945 the
main part of the former Prussian Province of Lower Silesia fell to the Republic of Poland, a smaller
part west of the Oder-Neisse line remained with East Germany.
The conference is organized in Lower Silesian Voivodeship. It is one of the 16 voivodeships into
which Poland is currently divided. Its capital and largest city is Wrocław. The Conference venue is
located in Brunów neer Lwówek Śląski. This small town is located on the foothills of Kaczawskie
and Izerskie Mountains. The Skopiec (724 m, 2375 ft) peek is the higher one in Kaczawskie
Mountains. The highest peak of Izerskie Mountains is Wysoka Kopa (Hinterberg, 1,127 m, 3,698
feet) near the town of Szklarska Poręba. On the south of the Kaczawskie Mountains is Jelenia Góra
valley (Polish: Kotlina Jeleniogórska; German: Hirschberger Tal). It is a big valley at the Silesian
northern side of the Western Sudetes and next to Kłodzko Valley the largest intramontane basin of
the Sudetes. It lies at the foot of the Karkonosze, which are also its southern limit.
The Karkonosze Mountains are located on the southwest of
the region. This mountain range is the highest one of the much
broader Sudetes mountains stretching horizontally from southwestern Poland along the northern border of the Czech Republic
to eastern Germany. It is also the most attractive in the region. Its
highest peak is Śnieżka (1,602 m, 5,256 ft), forming a triangle
with Śnieżnik, 1,424 metres (4,672 ft), as well as Ślęża peak,
further apart. They are connected by a red hiking trail only for
qualified tourists. Śnieżka is unique in its rounded, treeless cap,
which stands in sharp contrast to other, lower peaks. The
Karkonosze Mountains are situated on the division of the
European water system between the basins of two major rivers –
the Elbe and the Oder – which means that it also separates the basins of the Baltic Sea and North
Sea. Many of the Karkonosze’s streams come down the hills, creating waterfalls, the largest of
which in the Polish part of the mountains (300 m) is created by the Łomniczka stream.
The distance from the conference venue to the Karkonosze range is about 50 km (30 mils).
Elaborated on the basis of: wikipedia.org.
59
Lwówek Śląski County
Lwówek Śląski County (Polish: powiat lwówecki) is a unit of territorial administration and local
government in Lower Silesian Voivodeship. It came into being on January 1, 1999, as a result of the
Polish local government reforms passed in 1998. The county covers an area of 709.9 square
kilometres (274.1 sq mils). Its administrative seat is the town of Lwówek Śląski, and it also contains
the towns of Gryfów Śląski, Mirsk, Wleń, and Lubomierz.
Everyone who comes to District of Lwówek Śląski, even for a short time, feels enchanted by its
unique character which includes, among other things, a differentiated landscape, uncommon natural
values, tourist attractions, and its rich history surrounded by unique European class relics. The
Communities create the treasure of the Province as they offer a lot of attractions and possibilities to
do both practicing sport and relaxations. Walking, biking, and water tourist trails, thanks to which
getting to know the uncommon atmosphere of the area becomes easy and available, add up to whole.
The time spent here creates a challenge or an inspiration for various shows organized by particular
communities. Whoever comes to the picturesque District of Lwówek Śląski is welcomed
friendliness and goodwill of the inhabitants and with an abundant output of lots of generations and
he will come back here enchanted be the beauty and hospitality of the region.
Elaborated on the basis of: wikipedia.org and www.powiatlwowecki.pl.
Lwówek Śląski
Lwówek Śląski [ˈlvuvɛk ˈɕlɔs̃ kʲi] (German: Löwenberg) is a town in which
suburbs the conference venue, the Brunów Palace, is located. Lwówek Śląski is
situated on the Bóbr River, about 30 km NNW of Jelenia Góra and has
a population of about 10,300 inhabitants.
The vicinity of Lwówek Śląski, densely wooded and located on the inner side
of the unsettled Silesian Przesieka, was gradually cleared and populated by
German peasants in the first half of the 13th century during the Ostsiedlung. The
town was founded by Duke of Poland Henry the Bearded who designated it for an administrative
center in a previously uninhabited, borderline Polish - Lusatian territory. By 1217 the settlement,
founded by the Duke of Wrocław, had important privileges, such as rights to brew, mill, fish, and
hunt within a mile from settlement. German colonists expanded upon the preexisting settlement and
in 1217 it received town rights as the second town in Silesia. Its style of governance was duplicated
by other local towns, such as Bunzlau (Bolesławiec), as Löwenberg Rights or Lwówek Śląski
Rights. The dukes then constructed a castle, documented for the first time in 1248. In the second
half of the 13th century Löwenberg became the capital of a Silesian Piast principality, whose duke
took the title of a Duke of Silesia and Lord of Löwenberg.
After the death of Duchess Agnes of Habsburg, the widow of Bolko II, the last Piast of
Świdnica, the region was inherited with the Duchy of Świdnica-Jawor (Schweidnitz-Jauer) by the
Kingdom of Bohemia in 1393. Löwenberg's placement on a trade route allowed it to become one of
the more prosperous towns in Bohemia. It passed with the Bohemian crown to the Habsburg
Monarchy of Austria in 1526. During the Thirty Years'
War, Löwenberg was devastated by Swedish and Imperial
troops, especially between 1633-1643. By the Peace of
Westphalia in 1648, the town was largely destroyed and
had a decimated population of only hundreds.
Löwenberg slowly recovered during its reconstruction,
but began to prosper again after its acquisition by the
Kingdom of Prussia in 1741 during the Silesian Wars.
Troops of the First French Empire occupied Löwenberg in
May 1813, and Napoleon Bonaparte stayed in the town
from August 21-23 while organizing his defenses against
60
the Prussian troops of General Gebhard von Blücher. A few days later the
Prussian army defeated the Frenchmen; more than 3,000 French soldiers
drowned in the flooding Bober (Bóbr) as they retreated.
Löwenberg was included within the Province of Silesia after the 1814
Prussian administrative reorganization. Like the rest of the Kingdom of
Prussia, the town became part of the German Empire in 1871 during the
unification of Germany. It became part of the Prussian Province of Lower
Silesia after World War I.
In the last days of World War II, Löwenberg's medieval center was 40%
destroyed and numerous buildings of Gothic, Renaissance, and Baroque
were lost. At war's end the town was placed under Polish administration as
Lwówek Śląski according to the Potsdam Agreement.
Geographical Location: N 51°06′40,3″E 15°34′20,8″(N 51,111183 E 15,572451)
Altitude: 209 m
Elaborated on the basis of: wikipedia.org and www.powiatlwowecki.pl.
The Brunów Palace
The CN2013 conference venue is in the palace located in a small village Brunów [ˈbrunuf]
(German: Braunau). This village is a manorial village on the River Bóbr in the administrative
district of Lwówek Śląski, within Lwówek Śląski County, Lower Silesian Voivodeship, in
southwestern Poland. Prior to 1945 it was in Germany. It lies approximately 2 kilometres (1 mi)
north of Lwówek Śląski, and 102 kilometres (63 mi) west of the regional capital Wrocław. The
village has a population of 125.
Although first recorded in 1351, it is believed to have been
founded earlier, in the 12th century. The first mention of
a Gothic manor house in Brunów dates back to the 15th century.
It was probably a defensive structure, whose shape resembled
that of residential towers preserved in the vicinity. The Manor at
that time belonged to a well-known and wealthy Silesian family
of Zedlitz, who held numerous landed estates in the Duchy of
Świdnica and Jawor.
During the period 1740-1750 it was owned by Earl Bernhard von Schmettau. It was he who
converted the defensive manor house into a modest-size palace. He decided to rebuild the old
mansion by changing the older buildings into a small two-storey baroque building on a square. Back
then, it must already have had working manorial buildings such as an outbuilding, a cowshed or
a granary
Thirty-seven years later, in 1787, it changed ownership to Krzysztof Henry and Ernest von
Schweinitz. Three weeks after the purchase of the property a fire broke out and destroyed nearly all
the buildings, including the late Baroque annexed that might have been the original defensive manor
house. After two years, on ruins von Schweinitz built a new Baroque, two storey residence. Two
Silesia’n architects were responsible for reconstruction:
Mohrenberg and Scholtz.
Other owners of the palace were the family of Cottenet,
which acceded to the vigorous expansion of assumptions palace
in typical style of the nineteenth century. It was then that stables
with a coach house (carriage depot), a fountain at the palace, and
new dwellings for manor workers and servants were built. In
1865, a spacious English-style park with typical landscape
architecture was created around the residence to a design of the
brilliant Prussian landscape architect, Carl Eduard Petzold. An
61
octagonal summerhouse and a Cottonet family mausoleum still remain today. At the peak wall of the
stable right at the entrance is the Cottenet family coat of arms.
The main conversion of the residence, which has determined the present appearance of the
whole manor complex, took place in the early 20 th century. The work carried out in 1900-1901,
founding the southern wing of the palace and converted the Baroque palace into a Classical structure
with a polygonal corner tower and an orangery from the garden's side. The conversion also affected
the remaining elements of the manor. The stables received new elevations, richly adorned with
sandstone elements, including the coat of arms of the Cottonet family at the gable end from the side
of the entrance gate.
In the 1930’s the Hitler Youth set up a chapter in the palace school sports hall. At the end of World
War II it become a training center of Volkssturm. Following World War II the palace was a billet for
Soviet troops for several months.
Immediately after the war, Palace belongs to Poland and
unfortunately was left to degrade. Here was a head quarter of
Road Administration. In courtyard was a parking for buses, and
other vehicles, in Carriage was a garage for broken busses and
cars. Later, whole complex were set for auction.
Today, the palace is private property. Only after the purchase
by new owners in 2004, the palace complex has undergone
thorough renovations. It houses a luxury hotel for 140 guests
with a restaurant and a leisure complex, while the manorial
buildings have been adapted to accommodate a large conference
complex. Palace and its park is open to visitors and is one of the
most attractive tourist sites in the county Lwówek. The palace was specially appreciated in 2007 by
Lower Silesia Tourist Organization. It was the winner of the contest organized by it in the category
of the most interesting tourist attraction. So, it really deserve for an attention. Brunów Palace has
stylish interiors decorated in the spirit of past centuries. You will find no two identical rooms.
The palace complex is registered with the National Institute for Heritage list of monuments,
including:

Baroque chateau from the second half of the eighteenth century. It was rebuilt in 1900 and in
1977,

Back-premises from the eighteenth century,

Chapel von Cottenet from the second half of the nineteenth century,

Former Carriage Depot (old stable) from the second half
of the nineteenth century,

Remains of park in the English style from the second half
of eighteenth century.
The Palace offer 100 accommodation places in the stylish
interiors of the palace, the back-premises and former carriage
depot. There are rooms with 1, 2, 3 and 4 beds, all of which
contain bathrooms and satellite TV. Internet connection is
additionally available in rooms of higher standard. Each room
is unique, decorated in a classical spirit. The buildings have full
wheelchair access. Payment cards are accepted.
Facilities:
o billards
In the vicinity of the Palace:
o tennis courts
o a lake
o café, bar
o bike trails
o playground
o forests
o secure car park
62
The palace offers a comprehensive conference service, providing accommodation, catering and
recreation (including sauna, jacuzzi, billard and tennis courts). The conference room is unusual and
charming, equipped with the necessary facilities for running conferences or training sessions
(including multimedia projector, screen, projector, TV).
In addition, English-style park with an area of 4.5 hectares is the ideal place to organize garden
parties as well as a walk.
Near the palace is also a Gold Mine Aurelia in Złotoryja carved in 1660. It is really interesting
for all devotees of gold. The historic brewery Brewery Lwówek from 1209 in Lwówek Śląski is
a real treat for lovers of golden drink and its history. It is possible to visit the museum of brewing.
The museum, which has been operating since July has been made available to visitors along with the
official opening of the brewery. It is the only place in Lower Silesia, which gathered nearly 400
exhibits documenting the history of brewing Lwówek.
Prepared on the base of brunow.pl, wikipedia.org, browar-lwowek.com.pl, and miasteria.pl.

63
Local Info
Important phone numbers
EMERGENCY
tel. 999
or +48757820104
FIRE
tel. 998
or +48757822222
HOTEL
+48 75 784 02 10
+48 75 784 68 28
EMERGENCY NUMBER FROM MOBILES
112
MOUNTAIN RESCUE
tel. 985
or +48601100300, +48757524734
POLICE
tel. 997
or +48756467200
CONFERENCE HELP
+48512331919
+48602748169
MEDICAL INFORMATION
9439
ATMs in Lwówek Śląski
Operator
Address
Working hours
BZ WBK
ul. Sienkiewicza 22
24h/7d
GBW
ul. Morcinka 16
24h/7d
PKO BP
Al. Wojska Polskiego 20
24h/7d
PKO BP
Plac Wolności 21
24h/7d
Pharmacies in Lwówek Śląski and surroundings
‘Apteka Pod Białym Krukiem’
ul. Juliusza Słowackiego
Lwówek Śląski
tel. +48756436856
‘Apteka Ław Chlebowych s.c’
Plac Wolności 21
Lwówek Śląski
tel. +48757822202
‘Pod Gołębiami’
Tadeusza Kościuszki
Wleń
tel. +48757136291
‘W Rynku’
Plac Wolności 19
Lwówek Śląski
tel. +48756478584
‘Pod Gryfem, Max Medicum’
Kolejowa 19C
Gryfów Śląski
tel. +48757811425
‘Melisana s.c.’
Plac Wolności
Lubomierz
tel. +48757833197
Weather in the region
Annual average temperature of the Wrocław area is 9.5 °C (49.1 °F). Average
temperature of the hottest month (July) is 19 °C (66 °F), and −0.5 °C (31.1 °F) of the
coldest month (January). The average amount of rainfall is 500-620 millimetres
(20-24 inches), with its maximum in July and minimum in February. The snow layer
disappears after 45 days.
Late spring and early autumn are the most favourable time for walking tours in Lower Silesia.
They are usually warm months, although the weather in the region might be changeable, especially
in winter. It is here that masses of oceanic and continental air come together. Despite that, the
climate of Lower Silesia is mild, and the lowlands of the Province are the warmest area of Poland.
64
The climate of the mountainous and submontane regions is different: in terms of temperature, the
climate of the Giant Mountains (Karkonosze), the highest range of the Sudeten, is similar to that of
sub-polar regions. The average annual temperature here is low, the winter long, and the summer
short and cold. The mountainous regions of the Province are famous for their strong winds, with
Śnieżka being one of the most windy places in Europe.
The health resorts, such as Karpacz or Szklarska Poreba, are not as crowded as during the
holiday period and skiing season. The bigger cities empty a little in the summer, while the slopes of
the Sudety Mountains are full of people relaxing. There are more and more guests in the health
resorts. While in the mountains, the ski season lasts from the end of November, to the beginning of
March.
Electric devices
Voltage in Poland is 230V, 50Hz.
The plugs of type CEE 7/5 socket (type E) are used in the majority of European countries.
Time
Poland is on Central-European Time, one hour behind Greenwich Mean Time.
From the end of March to the end of October daylight-saving time is in effect.
Currency
The Polish zloty (złoty, zł, PLN) is the currency of Poland. It is divided into grosses
(grosze, gr). There are 10, 20, 50, 100 and 200 złoty banknotes, while the coins are 1, 2,
and 5 zlotys.
Train Stop in Lwówek Śląski (departures)
Jelenia Góra: 9:15
Wrocław Nadodrze: 15:32
Bus Stop in Brunów (departures)
Bolesławiec
07:57 11:07 12:07 18:37
by Suszki:
07:22 12:44 13:34 14:54
15:32 16:44 20:06 21:46
by Ustronie, Stare Jaroszowice:
07:02 08:52 13:02
Chmielno
08:07 12:47 14:27 15:32
by Żerkowice: 07:27 12:44
Jelenia Góra
by Lwówek Śląski:
11:13 12:53 14:03 20:23
by Wleń:
06:19 08:24 15:54 17:14
by Lwówek Śląski, Wojciechów, Pasiecznik:
10:33
Lwówek Śląski
06:13 06:44 07:10 07:19 07:35 07:48
08:49 09:22 10:33 11:13 11:32 11:43
12:42 12:53 13:00 13:39 14:03 14:44
14:59 15:04 15:04 15:33 15:43 20:23
by Żerkowice, Rakowice Małe: 14:49
Skorzynice
12:47 15:31
by Skała:
06:49 13:42 14:47
by Chmielno: 08:07 12:47 14:27 15:32
Szklarska Poręba
by Lwówek Śląski, Świeradów-Zdrój: 15:43
Zbylutów
by Skorzynice: 15:31
Żeliszów
by Skała:
15:36
Prepared on the base of www.turystyka.dolnyslask.pl, dolnyslask.pl,
rozklad-pkp.pl, www.e-podroznik.pl, and wikipedia.org.
65
Distances
Examples of the road distances to the conference venue
Amsterdam, Netherlands
Athens, Greece
Auburn AL, USA
Bahawalpur, Pakistan
Białystok
Bielsko-Biała
Bydgoszcz
Częstochowa
Eindhoven, Netherlands
Førde, Norway
Gdańsk
Gdynia
Geneva, Switzerland
Gliwice
Hrodna, Belarus
Ingolstadt, Germany
Ioannina, Greece
Istanbul, Turkey
Jarosław
Johor, Malaysia
Katowice
Khmelnitsky, Ukraine
Košice, Slovakia
Koszalin
Kraków
Lemgo, Germany
Liege, Belgium
Limerick, Ireland
Ljubljana, Slovenia
London, UK
*
by plane
66
871 km
2189 km
8170 km *
7388 km
664 km
340 km
376 km
292 km
830 km
1718 km
543 km
566 km
1142 km
262 km
741 km
540 km
1930 km
2187 km
590 km
13882 km
293 km
943 km
621 km
554 km
370 km
588 km
851 km
2095 km
874 km
1316 km
Lublin
Lviv, Ukraine
Łódź
Maastricht, Netherlands
Minsk, Belarus
Moscow, Russia
Opole
Ostrava, Czech Republic
Paris, France
Peoria IL, USA
Petrozavodsk
Pisa, Italy
Potomac MD, USA
Poznań
Prague, Czech Republic
Rabat, Morocco
Rzeszów
San Diego CA, USA
Saratov, Russia
Seoul, South Korea
Sogndal, Norway
Sydney, Australia
Szczecin
Teheran, Iran
Warszawa
Wichita KS, USA
Wonju, South Korea
Wrocław
Zielona Góra
Zurich, Switzerland
559 km
697 km
335 km
833 km
1033 km
1765 km
195 km
343 km
1181 km
7604 km
2033 km
1336 km
7142 km
245 km
180 km
3351 km
537 km
9813 km
2465 km
8080 km
1615 km
15619 km
401 km
4627 km
474 km
8399 km
7821 km
117 km
110 km
887 km
*
*
*
*
*
*
How to reach the venue?
Address
The Brunów Palace address:
Brunów 27
59-600 Lwówek Śląski, Poland
tel.: +48 75 784 02 10
tel.: +48 75 784 68 28
e-mail: [email protected]
51° 06' 40,3'' N 15° 34' 20,8''E (51,111183°N, 15,572451°E)
Airports
The sugested airports and the distance to the conference venue:
 Kraków (KRK)
359 km
o Check details on: http://www.krakowairport.pl/en
 Katowice (KTW)
318 km
o Check details on: http://www.katowice-airport.com
 Wrocław (WRO)
118 km
o Check details on: http://airport.wroclaw.pl
Railway connections
There are direct trains to Lwówek Śląski from Jelenia Góra.
There are many indirect trains (with some changes) from many Polish cities, e.g.,
Kraków, Katowice, Warsaw, Wrocław.
Check connection details on: http://rozklad-pkp.pl.
After arrival in Lwówek Śląski it is suggested to take a taxi to Brunów.
The railway station of Lwówek Śląski is a local station. Please make sure the train stops there.
Journey by car


highway A4 and road 364 from Wrocław/Katowice/Kraków
highway A2, road 58, highway A4, and road 364 from Warsaw
Bus service
Visit: en.e-podroznik.pl, www.speedbus.com.pl, www.voyager.pl.
The Conference Bus
We assure transfer from Wrocław. Please select the appropriate option when confirming
your participation.
Please inform us about the date and time of your departure.
67
The route from Wroclaw Airport
The road maps
Prepared on the base of Google Maps
(© Google, PPWK, Tele Atlas)
68
Prepared on the base of Google Maps
(© Google, PPWK, Tele Atlas)
The location of the palace in relation to Lwówek Śląski
The center of Lwówek Śląski
69
General plan of the hotel area
H
F
B
Park
C
D
G
E
A
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
70
– Main Conference Room
– ‘Cristal’ Conference Room
– Fireplace Room
– Café & Restaurant
– Restaurant
– Bower
– Parlor
– Hotel & CN Reception
Additional information
The ‘Computer Networks’ Conference may be found at:
www.linkedin.com
www.facebook.com
twitter.com
We suggest visiting:
www.ieee.pl
www.springer.com
maps.google.com
www.ineer.org
www.springerlink.com
brunow.pl
www.polsl.pl
www.drukart.pl
www.powiatlwowecki.pl
CN2016
Planned date of the next conference edition
June 15-19, 2015

Preliminary deadline for authors
submission of papers and participation:
November 3, 2015 – January 15, 2016

Preliminary deadline for other guests
participation submission:
November 3, 2015 – May 20, 2016
The Call For Papers will be announced in October 2015
Bank account
Name of account holder: Politechnika Śląska
Bank name: ING Bank Śląski S.A. O/Gliwice
Account number: 60 1050 1230 1000 0002 0211 3056
SWIFT ID: INGB PL PW
transfers with note: ‘Conference CN’
Tax Identification Number of SUT:
PL 631-020-07-36
Thank you for participation in the 22nd edition of the ‘Computer Networks’ conference.
We encourage you to participate in the next one
71

Podobne dokumenty