Dr Andrew Scott G7VAV

My photo
Senior Lecturer [D35]
Computing Department
InfoLab 21, South Drive
Lancaster University
Lancaster, LA1 4WA
United Kingdom
 
November 2008
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Research
Applications: If you are interested in doing research at Lancaster you should apply by following the departmental application procedure.
For taught courses at both undergraduate and postgraduate level see the ‘Studying at Lancaster’ pages.
Andrew Scott is a Senior Lecturer in the Computing Department at Lancaster University, UK. He has been a member of the former Distributed Multimedia Research Group since the late eighties, initially working on process control systems. Andrew then moved onto the development of networked multimedia workstations and devices, at a time when this demanded custom hardware and parallel processing. After working on ATM based systems, he became interested in wireless networks, which indirectly led to the University deploying a regional wireless network; this eventually evolved into Cleo.
Andrew worked on early web based systems developing user tracking and Internet mapping systems, establishing the University web presence along the way.
Following this, he established Lancaster's IPv6 group in early 1997. This work has continued as the Mobile IPv6 Systems Research Laboratory, which has a large-scale industrially funded network testbed at its core.
Other work has included the development of an Active Network router and host architecture (LARA) that was probably unique in being shown to be usable in real networks at typical line speeds. His current interests include network testbeds; network architectures and protocols, particularly those relating to mobile and ad hoc systems; embedded (including mobile) devices and systems. Current projects include the EU ANA project, looking at autonomic networking, and the UK Level-0 network, which is deploying a UK wide network testbed.
He continues to lead the IPv6 group at Lancaster which has recently completed implementations of Mobile-IPv6 for Cisco Systems and Microsoft; the latter has been shipped with Microsoft operating systems and was recognised by Bill Gates with the first Microsoft Windows Embedded Academic Excellence Award.

Current Projects
EU
Autonomic Network Architecture ANA
UK EPSRC
(P)=Principal Investigator, (C)=Co-Investigator, (R)=Recognised Researcher:
Virtual Routers: A Technology for Enabling Internet Innovation (C) EP/D05835X/1 / EP/D061628/1
Other
JANET "Level-0" Network
Plus...
Various work relating to communications and networked/ embedded systems.
More will appear here...
ANA Poster (>1MB)

Previous Projects
EU
PeterPan (PeterPan)
Collaborative Browsing (CoBrow)
Just In-Time Open Learning (JITOL)
UK EPSRC
(P)=Principal Investigator, (C)=Co-Investigator, (R)=Recognised Researcher:
Programmable Network Support for Mobile Services (P) GR/R31461/01
JREI: Active network support for distributed ultimedia research and applications (C) GR/L86609/01
ROPA: Adapting heterogeneous networks and end systems to support common distributed multimedia applications (P) GR/L59603/01
Multimedia information modelling for distributed systems (C) GR/J78129/01
Scalable multimedia storage servers (C) GR/J11065/01
A Quality of Service Architecture (QOS-A) for multimedia communications systems (C) GR/H77194/01
Multimedia Network Interface (MNI) GR/000000/01
Other
Anaconda funded by Microsoft Research
Mobile-IPv6 funded by Microsoft [Some publicity material]
Mobile-IPv6 Systems Research Laboratory funded by Cisco, Microsoft Research and Orange
JANET Wireless Advisory Group funded by UKERNA
Lancaster and Microsoft Active Research Collaboration (LandMARC) funded by Microsoft Research
Bermuda funded by UKERNA
Anytime, Anywhere Learning funded by Microsoft
Education Departments' Superhighways Initiative (EDSI) funded by Department for Education
BT University Research Initiative (BT-URI) on Multi-Service Networks funded by BT
Various contracts and consultancies
First Lancaster Active Router
Cerberus: the first LARA active router


© 2006 - 2008 Andrew Scott