IP-based protocols for mobile internetworking
SIGCOMM '91 Proceedings of the conference on Communications architecture & protocols
The process group approach to reliable distributed computing
Communications of the ACM
Improving TCP/IP performance over wireless networks
MobiCom '95 Proceedings of the 1st annual international conference on Mobile computing and networking
Implementation and Performance Evaluation of Indirect TCP
IEEE Transactions on Computers - Special issue on mobile computing
Agile application-aware adaptation for mobility
Proceedings of the sixteenth ACM symposium on Operating systems principles
General Purpose Proxies: Solved and Unsolved Problems
HOTOS '97 Proceedings of the 6th Workshop on Hot Topics in Operating Systems (HotOS-VI)
Improving the performance of reliable transport protocols in mobile computing environments
IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications
Optimizing TCP forwarder performance
IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking (TON)
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Most network applications assume continuous connectivity-an assumption that does not “migrate” to wireless environments. The authors present the design of a communication layer for mobile computing that dynamically adapts to changes in network connections. Our work was part of AMIGOS (Advanced Mobile Integration in General Operating Systems), a collaboration between researchers at the University of Copenhagen in Denmark and the University of Minho in Portugal. The AMIGOS project provides transparent support for semi connected operations on mobile computers running a standard operating system; the project home page is at http://www.econ.cbs.dk/people/birger/AMIGOS/. Briefly, our design lets a mobile user connect a mobile host to a LAN, then disconnect the host from it. The user then can reconnect, for example, via a Global System for Mobile Communications (GSM) cellular modem without losing TCP/IP connections. We want to allow existing TCP/IP based applications to be used in a mobile environment, without application modifications