DAY 1 - MONDAY - 10th December 2012
Venue: Grand Papua Hotel, Mary Street, Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea.
Conference & Tutorial on Practical Network Topics and Exchanges
08:30-09:00: Registration
09:00-09:45: Welcome Remarks
- Charles Litau, CEO, Telikom PNG
- Kumaran Sentheyval, International Training Institute
- Fred Christopher, PacNOG
09:50: APNIC Update.
10:10: Keynote Address.
- Mr Sapmanga Apuqahe, Deputy Secretary, Department of
Communications & Information Technology
10:20: PITA Update.
- Fred Christopher, General Manager, Pacific Islands Telecoms
Association.
10:30: Presentation & Launch of Internet Security Training Centre.
- Kumaran Sentheyval, International Training Institute
- Cecil Goldstein, Team Cymru
10:45: Group Photo followed by Tea Break.
11:35: Telinet case presentation: Collaboration in practice
11:50: The Underground Economy: An overview of the Miscreant
Ecosystem and the Asia Pacific Threat Profile
- Presentation slides not published
- Cecil Goldstein, Team Cymru
12:40: Case Study by Solomon Telekom/ISP
12:45 Vanuatu e-Government infrastructure, and Internet
Exchange
- Jethro Webston, Vanuatu Government
13:00 PNG University of Technology: Connectivity
Challenges
13:10 Pacific Computer Emergency Response Team (PacCERT)
13:15: Lunch Break
14:10: PNG eGOV project; IGIS Case study from design to implement
- Presentation slides not published
- Winifred Amani, IGIS*Net Project Manager
14:30: A day in the Life of a Bot
- Presentation slides not published
- This tutorial will trace the "life-cycle" of a bot (compromised
machine), from when it was first infected, (the way it was
infected, the malware that was used both to exploit it and turn it
into a bot), to how it was then used to carry out malicious
activities, and finally, to its identification and detection.
- Cecil Goldstein, Team Cymru
15:50: Afternoon Break
16:05: Measuring the quality of Real-Time Internet traffic
- Presentation slides
- In the Pacific, Internet connectivity is made possible mostly
by high latency/low bandwidth satellite links terminating in low
bandwidth local networks. This is a problem for VOIP and other
real-time protocols as data transferred from high speed networks in
NZ, Australia and the US to low bandwidth in the Pacific encounters
variations of delay (jitter) which eventually contribute to
congested links. This talk will present current methods used to
gain insights into the status of jitter in links between New
Zealand and countries such as Canada, Fiji, Tonga, Tuvalu, Cook
Islands and Kiribati. We extend our findings by projecting the
entropy of jitter over time. Lastly we discuss how network coded
TCP could improve voice and data transmission over congested
links.
- Etuate Cocker, PhD Student, University Of Auckland
16:40: Peering, Transit and IXP Design
- Presentation
Slides
- The presentation covers the essentials of Peering, Transit, and
the functional design elements required for the formation of an
Internet Exchange Point. Also covered are the best practices for
IXP design and operation.
- Philip Smith, APNIC
17:20 Instructors Briefing
- Track 1 by Philip Smith
- Track 2 by Cecil Goldstein & Champika Wijayatunga
17:35: Acknowledgements and Closing
17:45: Welcome Reception hosted by Telikom PNG
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