Call for Posters
The APNet poster session offers an opportunity for presenting late-breaking preliminary works, ongoing research projects, and speculative or innovative works-in-progress. We invite submissions relevant to the area of computer networking and systems from both academic and industry, which would address the topics of mentioned in the main conference call for papers. This poster session will vote a Best Poster by the attendance.
Why should you submit a Poster?
Presenting a poster is a great opportunity, especially for new topics targeting SIGCOMM/NSDI/CONEXT. Poster presentations allow researchers to present and to receive direct feedback from a knowledgeable crowd about significant work in progress and bleeding-edge work, which is best communicated in an interactive or graphical fashion.
Note that accepted posters will be included in the conference proceedings.
Expected Poster formation
A poster is A0 paper size in portrait mode (841 x 1189mm), to which you can affix visually appealing material that describes your research topic/direction. You should prepare the best material (visually appealing and succinct) that effectively communicates your targeted problem, why it is important, what is the state-of-the-art, what is wrong/missing, your insight, initial design, preliminary results (if any), and why it is novel. Presenting a birds' eye view on your topic/direction is encouraged.
At least one author of each accepted poster must register for the conference and present the poster.
What to submit
You can submit a two-page extended abstract in PDF format, using ACM SIG Alternate conference style. Posters will be reviewed and judged based on the potential of your idea. All submissions must be original and cannot be concurrently submitted to other workshops or posters during the poster/demo review period.
Where to submit
Please submit your abstract at poster submission site. Submissions are single blind, so please include authors and affiliations.
Important Dates
| Submission Deadline | |
| Acceptance Notification |
Poster Chairs
Huaxi Gu (Xidian University, China)
Dan Li (Tsinghua University, China)