Achieving scalability and expressiveness in an Internet-scale event notification service
Proceedings of the nineteenth annual ACM symposium on Principles of distributed computing
Design and evaluation of a wide-area event notification service
ACM Transactions on Computer Systems (TOCS)
The JEDI Event-Based Infrastructure and Its Application to the Development of the OPSS WFMS
IEEE Transactions on Software Engineering
Publish/Subscribe Tree Construction in Wireless Ad-Hoc Networks
MDM '03 Proceedings of the 4th International Conference on Mobile Data Management
Distributed Asynchronous Collections: Abstractions for Publish/Subscribe Interaction
ECOOP '00 Proceedings of the 14th European Conference on Object-Oriented Programming
Looking into the past: enhancing mobile publish/subscribe middleware
Proceedings of the 2nd international workshop on Distributed event-based systems
Performance of publish/subscribe middleware in mobile wireless networks
WOSP '04 Proceedings of the 4th international workshop on Software and performance
REDS: a reconfigurable dispatching system
Proceedings of the 6th international workshop on Software engineering and middleware
Design and Evaluation of a Support Service for Mobile, Wireless Publish/Subscribe Applications
IEEE Transactions on Software Engineering
A pro-active mobility management scheme for pub/sub systems using neighborhood graph
Proceedings of the 2009 International Conference on Wireless Communications and Mobile Computing: Connecting the World Wirelessly
Mobility Support Through Caching in Content-Based Publish/Subscribe Networks
CCGRID '10 Proceedings of the 2010 10th IEEE/ACM International Conference on Cluster, Cloud and Grid Computing
A novel mobility prediction algorithm based on user movement history in wireless networks
AsiaSim'04 Proceedings of the Third Asian simulation conference on Systems Modeling and Simulation: theory and applications
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The prediction of mobility is among the most important problem that requires to be examined for the management of mobility in mobile computing systems. In this paper, we offer a new algorithm for predicting accurately the next reached broker of a mobile subscriber in a publish/subscribe system. In the first step of our work, the mobility patterns between the different brokers are collected from the history of the handoffs. In the second step, the threshold values and handoff probabilities for the different brokers are calculated from these patterns. In the last step, mobility predictions are achieved by using the different calculated values.