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Workshop on 5G Technologies for Tactical and First Responder Networks
October 23, 2018 @ 8:00 am - 8:00 pm
Co-sponsored by: IEEE Future Networks Initiative, Washington DC & Baltimore Sections
Workshop: 8:00 a.m. – 5:30 p.m.
Networking Reception: 6:00 p.m – 8:00 p.m.
Complimentary registration link (on-site – register by October 16)
Registration is complimentary.
An EDAS account is required to register; create one here if needed: http://edas.info
Free livestreaming available via IEEE.tv:
Registration link for online livestreaming
Download the Call for Participation Flier
5G is not just the next evolution of 4G technology; it’s a paradigm shift. Not only is 5G evolutionary (providing higher bandwidth and lower latency than current-generation technology), more importantly, 5G is revolutionary—because it is expected to enable fundamentally new applications with much more stringent requirements in latency and bandwidth. 5G should help solve the last-mile problem and provide broadband access to the next billion users globally at much lower cost because of its use of new spectrum and its improvements in spectral efficiency.
Today, several standards organizations and forums, namely IEEE, 3GPP, and ITU, are working on defining the architecture and standardizing various aspects of 5G technologies. However, little has been studied to explore how 5G technologies can be useful to tactical and first responder networks. It is important to investigate how tactical and first responder communities can take advantage of 5G technologies to support massive bandwidth, massive sensing, and massive control type applications.
IEEE is hosting the workshop in collaboration with the JHU Applied Physics Lab. The workshop’s focus is to discuss the applicability of 5G technologies for tactical and first responder networks and related opportunities and challenges. The workshop will provide a platform to bring together 5G experts from industry, academia, and the standards, regulator, and defense communities to discuss various 5G-specific use cases and requirements. The one-day event has invited speakers from DARPA, DHS, FCC, NIST, NSF, Columbia University, NYU, Intel, National Instruments, Nokia, AT&T, CERDEC, IEEE, and 3GPP. This workshop will be a catalyst to develop relevant use cases, drive standards, and investigate deployment suitable for tactical and first responder networks.
Full details and the agenda can be found at: https://futurenetworks.ieee.org/conferences/workshop-on-tactical-and-first-responder-networks
For more information, please contact Ashutosh Dutta, IEEE Future Networks Initiative Co-Chair, Johns Hopkins University. Email: ashutosh.dutta@ieee.org or Ashutosh.Dutta@jhuapl.edu Tel: 908-642-8593
Agenda:
Time | Speaker | Affiliation | Talk Title |
7:30 | Registration/Breakfast | ||
8:30 | Welcome Remarks | ||
8:45 | Ashutosh Dutta | Johns Hopkins APL, IEEE 5G Initiative Co-Chair | IEEE Future Networks Initiative Overview |
9:00 | Christopher Sambar | AT&T FirstNet | Keynote Presentation: Path to 5G & Impacts to First Responders |
9:30 | Thomas Rondeau | DARPA | RF Convergence: From the Signals to the Computer |
10:00 | Break | ||
10:15 | Thayaga Nanadagopal | National Science Foundation (NSF) | Enhancing Community Response to Aid First Responders |
10:45 | Henning Schulzrinne | Columbia University | Networks Beyond the Reach of Networks: What Roles Can 5G Play? |
11:15 | David Griffith | National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) | Modeling Device-to-Device Communications for Wireless Public Safety Networks |
11:45 | National Instruments | The Next G: What does 5G mean for Critical Communications and Electromagnetic Spectrum Dominance? | |
12:15 | Leland Brown Issy Kipnis |
Intel | Commercial 5G Technology as a Building Block for Tactical Wireless Communications |
12:45 | Lunch | ||
1:45 | Antonio DeSimone | The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory | |
2:15 | Robert Dew | Department of Homeland Security |
5G and IoT Potential Public Safety and NS/EP Impacts |
2:45 | Paul Nikolich Rob Fish |
IEEE 802 Chair President-Elect, IEEE Standards Association |
IEEE 802 Standards – Enablers of Next Generation Networking
|
3:15 | Fred Moorefield | Department of Defense | Considerations in a Brave New World of More Spectrum Sharing |
3:45 | Break | ||
3:30 | Rapeepat Ratasuk | Nokia Bell Labs | Ultra Reliable Low Latency Communication for 5G New Radio |
4:30 | Julius Knapp |
Federal Communications Commission (FCC) |
FCC Activities to Support 5G |
5:00 | Michele Zorzi | University of Padova, Italy | mmWave Communications for Public Safety Applications |
5:30 | Jared Everett | Closing Remarks | |
6:00 | Networking Reception |
Location:
Room: Parsons Auditorium (lobby1)
The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory
11100 Johns Hopkins Road
Laurel, Maryland
20723