News

September, 2009 blip, the Berkeley Low-Power IP stack has been fully integrated into TinyOS. See the release notes or the tutorial.

July, 2009 Our paper, "Experiences with A High-Fidelity Wireless Building Energy Auditing Network," has been accepted and will be presented at SenSys 2009, right here in Berkeley, CA! This paper takes a close look at energy consumption data from our recent deployment of ACme throughout our Computer Science Building.

June, 2009 Prabal Dutta will be joining the EECS Department at the University of Michigan as Assistant Professor in 2010.

Berkeley WEBS

The research vision of Berkeley WEBS (Wireless Embedded Systems) is focused on real-world wireless devices that communicate wirelessly to perform tasks such as sensing and actuation. Such systems often contain highly embedded and networked devices, often interact with people and their physical environment, and are highly constrained in resources such as computation and energy. These aspects raise significant systems research challenges, while at the same time presenting exciting opportunities to improve the technology of the future.

Projects

  • ACme: Wireless AC Meter/Switch Real-time, fine-grained electricity metering
  • blip An IPv6 stack for TinyOS
  • Quanto Testbed: a 500-node testbed with fine-grained energy accounting
  • tinyos An operating system for networked, deeply embedded devices
  • LoCal: A Network Architecture for Localized Electrical Energy Reduction, Generation and Sharing
  • Networking and MAC-layer Studies: Connectivity Measurements

People

Visiting Researchers

Graduate Students

Undergraduates

  • Minh Van Ly

Meeting Notes


WEBS Resources


This material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation under grants #0435454 and #0454432, and the NSF Graduate Research Fellowship Program. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation.