CALL FOR PARTICIPATION 2nd International Conference on Distributed Computing & Internet Technology (ICDCIT 2005) Bhubaneswar, 21-24 December, 2005 Kalinga Institute of Industrial Technology (KIIT),Bhubaneswar (http://www.kiit.org) Main conference website:http://www.cse.iitk.ac.in/users/pmitra/ICDCIT05/ Scope: ------ The International Conference on Distributed Computing and Internet Technology (ICDCIT) is established as a forum for presenting the latest research results on the use of Internet and distributed networked systems for mobile and web-based computing. Technical ----------------- * 21 contributed technical sessions featuring 57 regular and short paper presentations on 5 tracks: * Distributed Computing * Internet Technology * Systems Security * Data Mining * Software Engineering * Keynote Speech by Prof. R.K. Shyamasundar, IBM India Research Lab, India * Plenary talk by S.S. Iyenger, Louisiana State University, USA * Invited talk by Clemence Magnien, University of Paris, Ravinder N. Madan, Office of Naval Research, USA Apart from this it also includes: * 2 Tutorials on Trends and Challenges in Software Engineering and MATLAB: An Essential tool for engineers Registration: http://www.cse.iitk.ac.in/users/pmitra/ICDCIT05/html/registration.html ------------- Registration fees include admission to all tutorials on the first day. Fees also include lunch and dinner for the four days of conference. All registered participants (except faculty members from India registered under academic category INA-II, and students from India under INS) will get a printed copy of the proceedings published by Springer-Verlag under the LNCS series. For registration fees: http://www.cse.iitk.ac.in/users/pmitra/ICDCIT05/html/registration.html The online copy of ICDCIT 2004 proceeding is now available at: http://link.springer-ny.com/link/service/series/0558/tocs/t3347.htm Organized in collaboration with: Lenovo India, Microsoft, Tata Consultancy Services and Congnizant Technology Solutions Regards, Smruti Ranjan Mandal -- It is never too late, to be what you might have been.