James P.G. Sterbenz

Associate Professor
The University of Kansas
  Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science     Communications and Networking Systems Laboratory  
School of Engineering Edwards Campus   Information & Telecommunication Technology Center  
3036 Eaton Hall 125U Regents Center 154 Nichols Hall
1520 West 15th St 12600 Quivira Rd 2335 Irving Hill Rd
Lawrence Overland Park Lawrence
Kansas Kansas Kansas
66045-7621 66213-2402 66045-7612
USA USA USA
38.9576°N 95.2527°W 38.8989°N 94.7249°W 38.9521°N 95.2640°W
+1 785 864 8846 +1 913 897 8538 +1 785 864 7890
<jpgs@eecs.ku.edu> <jpgs@ittc.ku.edu>
[KU teaching and EECS correspondence] [KU and ITTC research correspondence]
jpgs photo: brown hair, mustache
Visiting Professor of Computing
Computing Department
InfoLab 21
Faculty of Applied Sciences
Lancaster University
Lancaster, Lancashire, UK
54.005°N 2.784°W
<jpgs@comp.lancs.ac.uk>
<jpgs@tik.ee.ethz.ch>
[Lancaster and European research correspondence]
CV at http://jpgs.sterbenz.org
ACM <jpgs@acm.org> PO Box 4050
IEEE <jpgs@ieee.org> Lawrence, KS 66046-1050 USA
IEEE ComSoc <jpgs@comsoc.org> +1 508 944 3067
IEICE (Japan) <jpgs@m.ieice.org> Skype: jpgsterbenz
IEE (UK) <jpgsterbenz@iee.org> <jpgs@sterbenz.org>
[professional society correspondence] [other correspondence and urgent telephone calls]

Office Hours

Spring 2009
Wed. 16:00–18:00 125U Regents Center, Edwards Campus (beginning 21 Jan.)
or by appointment 154 Nichols, Lawrence Campus  
  by appointment 3036 Eaton, Lawrence Campus  

I am generally in my 154 Nichols office when not teaching, holding posted office hours, or travelling. Since I maintain a research office in Nichols Hall, a teaching office in Eaton Hall, may be on Edwards campus, or travelling, I strongly advise emailing or calling before expending any significant effort in finding me.


Research

Interests and Projects

My research interests span a wide range of areas in networking and communication among distributed systems and applications, particularly in new, challenging, and novel contexts and application scenarios. The current emphasis is on resilient and survivable networking in the context of future Internet design and engineering.

Current Projects

Past Projects

Students

I am looking for a new PhD student and a few new MS students in the coming year.
Important: Prospective students must read this information before contacting me.

Publications

My book High-Speed Networking: A Systematic Approach to High-Bandwidth Low-Latency Communication


Teaching

Future, Current, Recent Classes and Tutorials

KU EECS 983 – Resilient and Survivable Networking
KU EECS 882 – Mobile Wireless Networking
KU EECS 881 – High-Performance Networking
KU EECS 780 – Communication Networks
KU EECS 140 – Introduction to Digital Logic Design
Lancaster CSM8 – Advanced Networking and the Internet: Switching and Routing
Tutorial – Active and Programmable Networks

Old Classes and Tutorials


Professional Activities and Service

Coming soon.

Science Fair


Links


Last updated 02 January 2009 – Valid XHTML 1.1Lynx inspectedW3C AAA Conformance
©1994–2009 James P.G. Sterbenz <jpgs@ittc.ku.edu.org>