Embedding the Internet: introduction
Communications of the ACM
Directed diffusion: a scalable and robust communication paradigm for sensor networks
MobiCom '00 Proceedings of the 6th annual international conference on Mobile computing and networking
SPINS: security protocols for sensor networks
Wireless Networks
Denial of Service in Sensor Networks
Computer
Data Gathering Algorithms in Sensor Networks Using Energy Metrics
IEEE Transactions on Parallel and Distributed Systems
An application-specific protocol architecture for wireless microsensor networks
IEEE Transactions on Wireless Communications
Routing security in wireless ad hoc networks
IEEE Communications Magazine
Sensor node selection for execution of continuous probabilistic queries in wireless sensor networks
Proceedings of the ACM 2nd international workshop on Video surveillance & sensor networks
Proceedings of the 2nd international workshop on Information quality in information systems
SpyGlass: a wireless sensor network visualizer
ACM SIGBED Review - Special issue: Best of sensys 2004 work-in-progress
Algorithms and Simulation Methods for Topology-Aware Sensor Networks
Algorithmics of Large and Complex Networks
Light-weight protocol simulation for binary data exchange over heterogeneous networks
SpringSim '10 Proceedings of the 2010 Spring Simulation Multiconference
Mobile medical application model for heterogeneous networks
Proceedings of the 14th Communications and Networking Symposium
Using cloud computing for medical applications
Proceedings of the 15th Communications and Networking Simulation Symposium
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We visualize the world as a fully connected information space where each object communicates with all other objects without any temporal and geographical constraints. We can model this fully connected space using fine granularity processing which can be implemented using sensors technology. We regard sensors as atomic computing particles which can deployed to geographical locations for capturing and processing data of their surrounding. This report introduces a number of excellent research articles which present unique problems and their success in finding efficient solutions for them. It also peeks in to the future of ever changing information processing discipline.