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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 continued as the
Mobile IPv6 Systems Research Laboratory,
based around a large-scale industrially funded
network testbed.
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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;
operating systems and systems architecture.
Current projects include the EU Intersection project;
EU ANA project, looking at autonomic networking; GpENI
and the UK Level-0 networks, which are deploying
large-scale network testbeds.
The IPv6 group he established at Lancaster produced
a number of early implementations of Mobile-IPv6,
including for
Cisco Systems and
Microsoft;
the latter was
shipped with Microsoft operating
systems and recognised by
Bill
Gates
with the first
Microsoft Windows Embedded Academic Excellence Award.
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Bill Gates presents award
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Andrew was a winner of the
Lancaster University
Prize for Commercialisation in 2003 and was nominated
for the University teaching prize in 2006.
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He has participated in a number of European
collaborative projects and run several
EPSRC
projects. He has been a project evaluator for both the
EU IST programme and the UK
EPSRC,
and has served on the technical programme committees for a
number of international conferences and workshops. Andrew
is a member of the
BCS,
IET (IEE),
ACM and
IEEE,
and has served on a number of
IET
committees.
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Andrew is also a member of
ACM
SIGCOMM,
SIGOPS,
EuroSys,
the IEEE
Computer and
Communications
Societies, and has
been a
Microsoft MVP.
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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. |
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© Andrew Scott 2006 -
2010
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