Gary Wong
I am a research engineer in the Computer Science Department of Boston University, where I work on
various projects (such as synchronised video capture, safety in
user-provided system services, wireless sensor
networks and reliable routing for real-time data), all under the
Sensorium umbrella.
My contact information is:
- Office: Room 210 in the MCS building
- Phone: (617) 353 9777
- Mail:
Computer Science Department
Boston University
111 Cummington St
Boston, MA 02215
Publications
- P. Bridges, G. Wong, M. Hiltunen, R. Schlichting and M. Barrick. A configurable and extensible
transport protocol. IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking,
December 2007, pages 1254-1265.
- R. West and G. Wong. Cuckoo: a
language for implementing memory- and thread-safe system
services. Proceedings of the International Conference on
Programming Languages and Compilers (PLC 2005), June 2005,
pages 94-100.
- R. West, G. Wong and G. Fry. Comparison
of k-ary n-cube and de Bruijn overlays in QoS-constrained multicast
applications. Proceedings of the International Conference
of Parallel and Distributed Processing Techniques and Applications
(PDPTA 2005), June 2005, pages 1336-1342.
- M. Hiltunen, R. Schlichting and G. Wong. Dynamic Messages: A message
abstraction for complex communication protocols. Submitted for
publication.
- G. Wong, M. Hiltunen and R. Schlichting. A configurable and extensible
transport protocol. Proceedings of the 20th Annual Conference
of IEEE Communications and Computer Societies (INFOCOM 2001),
April 2001, pages 319-328.
- M. Hiltunen, R. Schlichting, C. Ugarte and G. Wong. Survivability
through customization and adaptability: the Cactus approach. DARPA
Information Survivability Conference and Exposition (DISCEX 2000), January
2000, pages 294-307.
- M. Hiltunen, R. Schlichting and G. Wong. Implementing integrated
fine-grain customizable QoS using Cactus. The 29th Annual International
Symposium on Fault-Tolerant Computing (Fast Abstract), June 1999,
pages 59-60.
- G. Wong. Adding multithreading to Linux. 1994 Projects in
Computer Science, Technical Report 99, Computer Science Department, University
of Auckland, September 1994.