This year, WORLDS will again feature a demo session in which researchers will have the opportunity to demonstrate the real, running distributed systems they have built.
The demo session will take place during the Welcome Get-Together for OSDI '06, which is co-located with WORLDS '06.
Accepted Demos
Persistent Personal Names for Globally Connected Mobile Devices
Bryan Ford, Jacob Strauss, Chris Lesniewski-Laas, Sean Rhea,
Frans Kaashoek, and Robert Morris, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
iPlane: An Information Plane for Distributed Services
Harsha V. Madhyastha, Thomas
Anderson, and Arvind Krishnamurthy, University of
Washington; Arun Venkataramani, University of Massachusetts Amherst
A Random Membership Sampler Based on Guided Random Walks
Ming Zhong and Kai Shen, University of Rochester
Colyseus: A Distributed Architecture For Online Multiplayer Games
Ashwin Bharambe, Jeffrey Pang, and Srinivasan Seshan,
Carnegie Mellon University
Measuring the Internet's edge with Illuminati
Michael Freedman and Martin Casado, Stanford University
PrMon: A Fast Distributed Monitoring System for PlanetLab
NAVENDU Jain, Dmitry Kit, and Prince Mahajan, University of Texas at
Austin; Praveen Yalagandula, HP Labs; Mike Dahlin and Yin Zhang University of Texas at Austin
Fern: Scalable Certificate Dissemination and Revocation for P2P
Ryan Spring and Eric Freudenthal, University of Texas at El Paso
Resource Management for Global Public Computing: Many Policies Are Better Than (N)one
Evangelos Kotsovinos, Deutsche Telekom Laboratories; Iulia Ion, International University in Germany; Tim Harris, Microsoft Research Cambridge
Plush: An Infrastructure for Managing and Visualizing Distributed Applications
Jeannie Albrecht, Ryan Braud, John Jersin, Nickolay
Topilski, Christopher Tuttle, Alex C. Snoeren, and Amin Vahdat,
University of California, San Diego