Economics of Grids, Clouds, Systems, and Services, 2014 11th International Conference, GECON 2014, Cardiff, UK, September 16-18, 2014. Revised Selected Papers. Computer Communication Networks and Telecommunications Series
Coordonnateurs : Altmann Jörn, Vanmechelen Kurt, Rana Omer F.
Keynote.- Economics, Security and Innovation.- Cloud Adoption.- A Metrics Suite for Cloud Computing Adoption Readiness.- An Agency Perspective to Cloud Computing.- Work in Progress on Market Dynamics.- Goliath vs. a Federation of Davids: A Two-Sided Market Analysis of Competition between Clouds.- Analysis of the Social Effort in Multiplex Participatory Networks.- Cost Optimization.- Energy-Aware Cloud Management through Progressive SLA Specification.- Cloud Tracker: Using Execution Provenance to Optimize the Cost of Cloud Use.- Migration to Governmental-Cloud Digital Forensics Community: Economics and Methodology.- Work in Progress on Pricing, Contracts and Service Selection.- Performance Evaluation for Cost-Efficient Public Infrastructure Cloud Use.- Balancing Leasing and Insurance Costs to Achieve Total Protection in Cloud Storage Multi-Homing.- A WS-Agreement Based SLA Implementation for the CMAC Platform.- A Domain Specific Language and a Pertinent Business Vocabulary for Cloud Service Selection.- Economic Aspects of Quality of Service.- Towards Petri Net-Based Economical Analysis for Streaming Applications Executed Over Cloud infrastructures.- Autonomous Management of Virtual Machine Failures in IaaS Using Fault Tree Analysis.- How Do Content Delivery Networks Affect the Economy of the Internet and the Network Neutrality Debate?.
Includes supplementary material: sn.pub/extras
Date de parution : 01-2015
Ouvrage de 231 p.
15.5x23.5 cm
Thème d’Economics of Grids, Clouds, Systems, and Services :
Mots-clés :
Cloud computing; Cloud economics; Collaborative and social computing; Computing and business; Decision support systems; Economic impact; Electronic commerce; Grid computing; Intellectual property; Internet economics; Interoperability; Network economics; Programming interfaces; Self-organizing autonomic computing; Socio-technical systems; Software as a service orchestration systems; Software infrastructure; System description languages; algorithm analysis and problem complexity