The Computer Laboratory is a academic department within the University or Cambridge that encompasses Computer Science, along with many aspects of Engineering, Technology and Mathematics. It consists of academic staff, support staff, research fellows, post-doctoral research workers and PhD students. We have over 300 undergraduates studying for Part I, II and III of the Computer Science Tripos and 36 graduate students studying for the MPhil in Advanced Computer Science.
NetOS runs a number of team-based research projects simultaneously, with a leaning towards real implementations and deployments. We work closely with other groups in the Computer Laboratory and University, as well as industrial partners such as Intel Research and Microsoft Research. The group is always interested to hear from individuals with strong systems skills as well as prospective students for the PhD degree.
See the Lab's pages for general contact information and travel directions. Individuals can be contacted using these details.
Systems Research Group – NetOS
Networks and Operating Systems group
Welcome to the web pages of NetOS, the Networks and Operating Systems group, which together with the Opera group makes up the Computer Laboratory's Systems Research Group. The group undertakes teaching and research into topics including computer architecture, operating systems design, network monitoring and protocol design, practical distributed systems and mobile communications.NetOS runs a number of team-based research projects simultaneously, with a leaning towards real implementations and deployments. We work closely with other groups in the Computer Laboratory and University, as well as industrial partners such as Intel Research and Microsoft Research. The group is always interested to hear from individuals with strong systems skills as well as prospective students for the PhD degree.
See the Lab's pages for general contact information and travel directions. Individuals can be contacted using these details.
Latest news: syslog blog
- misled by opportunistic routing…
- Live-blog from SenSys 2013 – Day 1
- Live-blog from SOSP 2013 – Day 2
- Live-blog from SOSP 2013
- Liveblog from Programming Languages and Operating Systems 2013
- Live-blog from LADIS 2013
- Liveblogging IMC 2013 – Day 3
- Liveblogging IMC 2013 – Day 2
- Liveblogging IMC 2013 – Day 1
- © 2013 Computer Laboratory, University of Cambridge
Information provided by Dimos Pediaditakis