The 5th IFIP/IEEE International Conference on Management of Multimedia
NetworksandServices(MMNS) washeld inSanta Barbara, California. Thiswas
the ?fthyearthatMMNSbroughttogetherresearchersanddeveloperstodiscuss the
latestadvancesandexplorefuture directionsfor managingmultimedia inthe
Internet. As in pastyears, MMNS continues to be a competitive
conference, attracting excellentpaperswithsomeofthetopnewideas.
Thisyearwereceived76papers, of which 27 were accepted for inclusion in
the program. What was particularly impressive this year was the large
percentage of very high quality papers. The submissions made the job of
the program committee extremely di?cult. The span of topics this year
ranged from network-layer tra?c di?erentiation to application-layer
consideration for multimedia tra?c. At the network layer, a number of
papers attempt to develop better solutions for di?erentiated s- vices in
the Internet. The issue of bandwidth sharing, particularly in wireless
networks, is the focus of another set of papers. Next, by increasing the
level of abstraction slightly, researchers are focusing on managing
"services". In part- ular, these services include one-to-many
communication and video distribution architectures. Finally, from the
user perspective there are two problems. What can applications do to
help achieve better quality from the Internet? And, how
cantechnologybeappliedto enterprisemanagementsystems?Takingthepapers in
the MMNS program together, they o?er a range of solutions to key
problems in managing multimedia tra?c in the Internet. The success of
MMNS can largely be attributed to high caliber committee members who
worked hard to make the conference the best it could be. Each paper
submitted was typically sent to four reviewers.