I am posting this for a friend. Please direct all enquiries to
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conference email address: ifi...@vancouver.osiware.bc.ca
==========================================
1992 IFIP International Conference
on
UPPER LAYER
PROTOCOLS, ARCHITECTURES AND APPLICATIONS
May 27 to 29, 1992
(Tutorials : May 25 to 26)
University of British Columbia
Vancouver,
Canada
Sponsored by:
IFIP Working
Group 6.5
Hosted by :
University of
British Columbia
OSIware Inc.
+------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
PLEASE NOTE
|
|
|
| This email announcement is
a repeat of one that was distributed in |
|
February. It contains more detailed information on the conference as
|
| well as a registration form that you can print off
and return by mail. |
| We regret that due to our not being able
to accept credit card |
| payment,
you CANNOT register via email.
|
|
|
| A hardcopy registration kit containing
the same information has |
| already
been mailed to everybody that responded to the February
|
| announcement. If you have received the
hardcopy version, then |
| you
should use the registration form contained in the
|
| registration
kit rather than the electronic version contained here.
|
|
|
| If you have been expecting to receive the
hardcopy registration kit, |
| and have not received it
by April 15 1992, then you can use this |
|
email version of the form to register.
|
|
|
| We apologize if this is a
duplicate message resulting from your being |
| on more
than one of our distribution lists.
|
|
|
| Conference Email Address : <ifi...@vancouver.osiware.bc.ca>
|
|
|
+------------------------------------------------------------------------+
CONFERENCE PROGRAMME
--------------------
The conference will provide an international forum for the
exchange of
information on the technical, economic, and social
impacts and experiences
with upper layer protocols,
architectures and distributed applications. The
format of the
conference will be two and a half days of conference paper
presentations and one half a day of workshops.
CONFERENCE FEE : $325 CDN before April 24, $360 CDN after April
24.
TUESDAY MAY 26, 5:00-7:00 Wine and Cheese Welcome
WEDNESDAY MAY 27
8:45-9:00 Opening remarks by Einar Stefferud, Conference
Chair
9:00-10:30 SESSION I - APPLICATION LAYER DEVELOPMENT
ENVIRONMENTS
Touring Machine: A Software Platform for Distributed Multimedia
Applications.
M. Arango et al., USA
Automating Specification of Network Applications: Issues for the
Composite
Systems Approach. Stephen Fickas and B. Robert Helm,
USA
ELROS - An Embedded Language for Remote Operations Service.
M.L. Branstetter, J.A. Guse, and D.M. Nessett, USA
11:00-12:30 SESSION II - GROUP COMMUNICATION
Developing International Standards for OSI Group Communication.
Steve Benford, Jacob Palme and Murray Turoff
Environment Support for Cooperative Working.
Manel
Medina and Tom Rodden Lancaster University Spain/England
A Framework for Modeling Collaborations. Harrick M. Vin and
Mon-Song Chen,USA
2:00-3:30 SESSION III - PRESENTATION LAYER
Measuring the performances of an ASN.1 compiler.
Christian
Huitema and Ghislain Chave, France.
Coding Rules for High Speed Networks. Martin Bever and Ulrich
Schaffer,Germany
Generating Object-Oriented Telecommunications Software using
ASN.1 Descriptions.
Juha Koivisto and James Reilly, Finland
4:00-5:30 SESSION IV - ELECTRONIC MAIL 1
Design and implementation of a mobile-access system to X.400
services.
Marcel Baveco and Bertjan Teunissen, The
Netherlands
X.400 Interconnection Considerations. Christopher Lueder, USA
Internet Multimedia Mail: Emerging Standards for
Interoperability.
Nathaniel S. Borenstein, USA
THURSDAY, MAY 28th
9:00-10:30 SESSION V - NETWORK MANAGEMENT
On Managing to be Managed. Owen Newman, USA
MHS Routing Framework. Cristian Constantinof, Canada
A Generic Management Information Base Browser.
G. Pavlou, J.
Cowan and J. Crowcroft, England
9:00-10:30 SESSION VI - APPLICATION LAYER MODELS AND
ARCHITECTURES
Object-Oriented Modeling of the Application Layer Structure.
Magdalena Feldhoffer, Germany
Application Context definition for a specific application layer
protocol
and rapid prototyping with Estelle.
C.T. Nguyen,
Ph. Hunel,and M.C. Vialatte, France
Object-Oriented Design for Distributed Systems and OSI Standards.
Gregor v. Bochmann, Stephane Poirier and Pierre Mondain-Monval
Canada
11:00-12:30 SESSION VII - DIRECTORY SERVICES
A Directory Model to support Cross-Context Naming and Addressing.
Gita Gopal and Sze-Ying Wuu, USA
Applying OSI Directory Naming Architecture to Integrated Network
Management.
Xinxin Zhang and Dominique Seret, France
Representing Authorization Information in the X.500 Directory.
Wolfgang Prinz, Germany
11:00-12:30 SESSION VIII - COMMUNICATIONS PROTOCOLS
Concurrent Multicast Checkpointing. Erwin Mayer, USA
Concatenation: A Contribution to High Speed Protocols.
Christiane Feder-Andres and Dieter Riexinger, Germany
Document Oriented Communication Model for Medical Applications.
Christian Gayda, Germany
2:00-5:30 WORKSHOPS
Multimedia Mail
Upper Layer Protocols in Ultra High Speed
Networks
Mail Network Management
Dialup OSI Stack
Resource Discouvery
Security
Group Communications
Application development environments
Mail Network Backbones
Common Global Addressing
7:00 BANQUET DINNER WITH GUEST SPEAKER : PROF. DAVID J. FARBER
FRIDAY, May 29th
9:00-10:30 SESSION IX - ELECTRONIC MAIL 2
Inmarsat-C Interworking with X.400.
P.J. Fransen, H.
Maatman,G.H. Kruithof, The Netherlands
Design of an integreated X.400 filestore.
L. Duchien, Valerie
Gay, Eric Horlait France
MYME: A Pilot Development for the Distributed Management of
Heterogeneous E-Mail Systems.
G. Altomare, P. Pennelli,A.
Pepe, D. Rotondi Valenzano Italy
11:00-12:30 SESSION X - FINAL SESSION
A Model of Security in Open Telecooperation, Rudiger Grimm,
Germany
A Dynamic Tester for use with OSI Networks, Nasser Modiri, USA
The Future of OSI: A Modest Prediction. Marshall T. Rose, USA
2:00-3:30 WORKSHOP REPORTS
4:00-5:00 BUSINESS MEETING
Conference Co-Chairs Program Co-Chairs
Organizing Committee Chair
-------------------- -----------------
--------------------------
Einar Stefferud (US) Gerald Neufeld (CA)
Neil Koorland (CA)
Christian Huitema (FR)
Bernhard Plattner (CH)
Program Committee
Jun Adachi (JP) Erik Huizer
(NL) Peter Schicker (CH)
Raj Ananthanpillai (US) Neil Koorland (CA)
Einar Stefferud (US)
Gregor Bochmann
(CA) Hannes Lubich (CH)
Mike Schwartz (US)
David Chappell
(US) James McHugh (US)
Marshall Rose (US)
Frank Ferrante
(US) Manuel Medina (ES)
Douglas Terry (US)
James M. Galvin
(US) Barbara Nelson (US)
Pedro Veiga (PT)
Ruediger Grimm (DE)
Juan Saras (ES)
Brian Wideen (CA)
Christian Huitema (FR)
TUTORIAL PROGRAMME
------------------
A comprehensive tutorial program will be held on the two days
preceding the
conference.
+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| Practical
Perspective on OSI Networking
|
|
Marshall T. Rose
|
|
|
|
OSI Security Techniques
and Standards
|
|
Warwick Ford
|
|
|
| OSF's
Distributed Computing Environment (DCE): Concepts and Protocols
|
|
David Chappell
|
|
|
|Secure Communication Using X.500 Services for
X.400 and Privacy Enhanced Mail|
|
James
M. Galvin
|
|
|
|
X.400 / X.500 - Where are we Today ?
|
|
Erik
Skovgaard
|
|
|
|
ASN.1
|
|
Bancroft Scott
|
+-----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
TUTORIAL 1 PRACTICAL PERSPECTIVE ON OSI NETWORKING
($390.00 CDN)
Instructor : Marshall T. Rose, Dover Beach Consulting Inc.
Date : Monday 25 May 9:00 - 5:00 and
Tuesday 26 May 9:00 - 5:00 (2 days)
Who Should Attend
A basic familiarity with networking and OSI is assumed: this
course is NOT
an introduction to, or a tutorial on, OSI.
Detailed knowledge of the protocols
is not required, but
experience with implementing networking protocols is
very
helpful. Experience with the "C" programming language is also
useful.
Overview
This two day course provides a practical perspective on the
issues involved
in developing and deploying OSI networks:
it is concerned with "filling in
the gaps" between "what
the standards say" and "how a system
implements OSI". The
talk does not focus on architecture, nor on vendor
offerings or
specific implementations, rather it deals with system issues such
as explaining how much knowledge the transport layer must have,
or why
certain OSI protocol combinations do not interwork.
Instructor
Marshall T. Rose is Principal at Dover Beach Consulting, Inc., a
California-
based computer-communications consultancy. He
spends half of his time
working with clients, and the other half
involved in self-supported, openly-
available projects.
Rose lives with internetworking technologies, such as
TCP/IP, OSI, network management, and directory services, as a
theorist,
implementor, and agent provocateur.
TUTORIAL 2 OSI SECURITY TECHNIQUES AND
STANDARDS ($265 CDN)
Instructor : Warwick Ford, Bell-Northern Research
Date
: Monday 25 May 9:00 -5:00
Who Should Attend
Engineers, technical managers, and technically-oriented marketing
or
purchasing staff of corporations and government agencies
involved in
buying, developing, or selling computer
communications products. A basic
understanding of Open
Systems Interconnection (OSI) is assumed. No prior
knowledge of security techniques is needed.
Overview
Part I - Security Techniques
This part of the tutorial
provides the necessary technical background
to understand the
contents of the OSI Security Standards. Topics include :
Security Services, Introduction to Cryprographic
Techniques, Key
Management, Architectural Placement Options,
Authentication
Confidentiality and Integrity, Access Control,
Non-repudiation, Security
Management
Part II - Open Systems Security Standards (ISO/IEC and CCITT)
This part of the tutorial describes the international standards
which have
been developed, or are in development, relating
to security in open systems
networking. Topics include :
The OSI Security Architecture, Security
Frameworks, Lower Layers
Security, Generic Upper Layers Security, Security
Management,
Message Handling Systems Security, Directory Systems
Security,
Other Applications Security, Security Techniques Standards,
Standards Timescale Overview
Instructor
Warwick Ford is with Bell-Northern Research Ltd in Ottawa,
Canada. At
BNR he manages a department responsible for OSI
upper layers and security
standards. He is an active
participant in several ISO and CCITT committees
developing
security standards. Prior to joining BNR in 1987, Dr. Ford
worked for 16 years with the Australian Government, in the
Department of
Defence and the CSIRO research organization.
TUTORIAL 3 SECURE COMMUNICATION USING X.500 SERVICES FOR
X.400 AND
PRIVACY ENHANCED MAIL ($265 CDN)
Instructor : James M. Galvin, Trusted Information Systems
Inc.
Date : Tuesday, 26 May 9:00 -
5:00
Who Should Attend
Engineers, technical managers with an understanding of Open
Systems
Interconnection X.400 and X.500 concepts; a basic
knowledge of security
techniques and issues is an asset.
.Many of the security services specified
in the OSI
protocols do or could make use of certificates as defined by the
Directory Authentication Framework. Attendees of this
tutorial will have a
thorough understanding of the technology
and will be able to apply it to
other applications and
environments.
Overview
We will examine the Directory Authentication Framework , its
technology
and its key component, certificates, in detail.
Privacy Enhanced Mail, an
openly available implementation
of the technology, will be used to study its
operational
aspects. Certificates, as used in PEM and defined by the
Directory Authentication Framework, are expected to be the most
widely
deployed mechanism in support of security services.
Topics include :
Directory Authentication
Framework, Privacy Enhanced Mail, Privacy
Enhanced Mail
versus Directory Authentication Framework, Message
Handling
Systems Security Services (X.400), Privacy Enhanced Mail, Privacy
Enhanced Mail versus Message Handling Systems Security,
Operational
Issues
Instructor
James M. Galvin is a Senior COMSEC Scientist at Trusted
Information
Systems, Inc, in Glenwood, Maryland. Dr.
Galvin's responsibilities
emphasize communications security,
especially computer networks,
architectures, policies, and
procedures. He is a principal in the development
of TIS
openly available implementation of Privacy Enhanced Mail. He
is
Executive Director of the Internet Engineering Task Force
Security Area
Advisory Group, and Chair of the OSI Implementor's
Workshop Security
Special Interest Group.
TUTORIAL 4 OSF'S DISTRIBUTED COMPUTING ENVIRONMENT (DCE):
CONCEPTS AND
PROTOCOLS ($265 CDN)
Instructor : David Chappell, Chappell & Associates
Date
: Monday, 25 May 9:00 - 5:00
Who Should Attend
The tutorial is aimed at anyone needing an introduction to DCE.
This includes
those who must implement, support, market, plan
for, or write about DCE or
distributed systems in general. A
general knowledge of networking
fundamentals is assumed, and
some background in a high-level programming
language will be
helpful, but is not required.
Overview
DCE was created by the Open Software Foundation (OSF) as a
vendor-
neutral infrastructure for distributed computing. Among
the vendors
promising support for DCE are IBM, Digital Equipment
Corporation, Hewlett
Packard, and many others. DCE is also
included in Atlas, the Unix
International architecture for
distributed computing. Running over any
transport protocol, DCE
provides solutions for the key problems in creating
distributed
systems. This tutorial provides an introduction to DCE, with a
description of each of its component technologies: a protocol
for remote
procedure call, a distributed file system, a
directory service, and several
more. The goal is to give
participants an understanding of what services DCE
provides and
of how those services are provided.
Instructor
David Chappell is principal of Chappell & Associates, a
training and
consulting firm focused on vendor-neutral
networking. He has written and
taught many courses on
distributed computing and related topics and has
served as a
consultant on numerous communications projects. He has
chaired the Upper Layers Special Interest Group of the National
Institute of
Standards and Technology (NIST) OSI Implementors
Workshop from 1988
until 1990.
TUTORIAL 5 X.400 / X.500 - WHERE ARE WE TODAY
? ($265 CDN)
Instructor : Erik Skovgaard, PSC (Pacific) Inc.
Date
: Tuesday 26 May 9:00 - 5:00
Who Should Attend
Although this tutorial is technical in nature, anyone with an
interest in
messaging and directory standards can participate.
The emphasis will be on
the services specified in the
standards. Participants are expected to have a
basic
knowledge of X.400 and X.500 services and architectures.
Overview
This one-day tutorial will provide a brief overview of the CCITT
X.400 and
X.500 recommendations with a particular emphasis on
the enhancements
expected to be approved at the end of 1992.
Several pragmatic issues will
also be discussed.
Instructor
Erik Skovgaard has been active in X.400 and X.500 from the start.
He
participated in generating the first North American OSI
profile at NIST's
X.400 SIG where he was active during the first
four years of activity. He
has been a member of the X.400
API Association and lately also technical
editor for the
standards group. Currently, he teaches and provides consulting
services to vendors and users of X.400, X.500 and EDI products
in both
North America and Europe.
TUTORIAL 6 THE "NEW" ASN.1 ($265 CDN)
Instructor : Bancroft Scott, Open Systems Solutions Inc.
Date : Monday, 25 May 9:00 - 5:00
Who Should Attend
The intended audience of this tutorial are those who have an
interest in
ASN.1, its encoding rules, and where they are going.
This is not an
introductory ASN.1 tutorial, so you will
benefit most if you already have
some knowledge of ASN.1.
The last two hours or so covers the macro
replacement
notation in depth; you will benefit most from this part of the
tutorial if you have a good understanding of the ANY DEFINED BY
and macro
notations.
Overview
This one day tutorial covers the most significant changes that
are occurring
in the area of ASN.1 and its encoding rules.
You will learn what the
changes are the reasons behind
them, their benefit to you, and how to take
advantage of them.
Instructor
Bancroft Scott of Open Systems Solutions, Inc. is the ISO editor
for ASN.1
and the encoding rules of ASN.1, as well as the ANSI
Packed Encoding
Rules Project editor. He has had over 16
years in the software industry,
with the last 9 years
concentrating in data communications.
SOCIAL PROGRAMME
----------------
A number of social events have been planned to give you maximum
opportunity to
meet other delegates. Events include a wine
and cheese reception party for
delegates and accompanying
persons the evening before the conference, a
traditional West
Coast Salmon Barbeque at the UBC Museum of
Anthropology and an
optional evening Harbour Cruise of Vancouver with
dinner.
In addition, accompanying persons may sign up for conference
social events as well as 1/2 day tours of Vancouver.
Evening Harbour Dinner Cruise, Wednesday May 27 Cost - $75.00 CDN
incl tax
One of the best ways to see Vancouver is from the water.
Vancouver's
beautiful harbour bustles with activity.
A deluxe motor coach will take you
to the marina to embark
on a scenic cruise. See Vancouver Harbour, English
Bay and
False Creek, featuring the city's fabulous skyscape, the North
Shore Mountains, Stanley Park, miles of beaches and the
fjord-like splendor
of Indian Arm, while enjoying West Coast
cuisine. A cash bar will be
available for alcoholic
beverages. Cruise is from 7:00 - 10:30 pm.
Tours for Accompanying Persons
Wednesday, May 27
CITY OF VANCOUVER TOUR (3 hrs) $CDN 32.00 including taxes.
Multi-lingual commentated tour of beautiful Vancouver. Get
oriented to the
city. See Stanley Park and the Vancouver
Aquarium, downtown Vancouver,
and Queen Elizabeth Park's quarry
garden and Bloedel Conservatory.
Thursday, May 28
GRANVILLE ISLAND TOUR (3 1/2 hrs) $CDN 20.00 including taxes
A vibrant city market place, Granville Island with it's farmers
market and
crafts stores is a local and tourist favorite spot
for shopping,
eating, strolling and people-watching. Tour the
Granville Island Brewery and
sample some beer.
Friday, May 29
NORTH-SHORE/GROUSE MOUNTAIN TOUR (3 hrs) $CDN 35.00
including taxes.
An exciting skyride taking you from sea level
to 3700 feet at the top of
Grouse Mountain for a spectacular
view of the harbour, city, and Gulf
Islands. Then a short
journey to the Capilano Suspension Bridge.
GENERAL INFORMATION
-------------------
Accommodation
Reasonably priced accommodation for conference delegates is
available on
campus at UBC's Walter Gage Residence. Within
easy walking distance
from the conference venues, dining and
recreation facilities, the
accommodations are modern
self-contained suites. The single suite includes
a
bedsitting room with single bed and private washroom. The
double suite
includes a bedroom with double bed, living room and
private washroom.
The deluxe suite consists of a bedroom
with twin beds, living room with
sofa bed, telephone, TV,
private washroom and kitchenette.
For delegates preferring to stay off-campus, the Sheraton Inn
Plaza 500
Hotel is providing conference room rates. The Sheraton
Inn is a 20 minute
drive or bus ride from the UBC campus. All
other Vancouver hotels are located at
least 20 minute drive or
bus ride from the conference location.
Fees Include
The conference fee includes all coffee breaks, lunches, wine and
cheese
reception, and salmon barbecue at the UBC Museum of
Anthropology. Also
included are a conference programme,
the pre-print version of papers while
at the conference and a
published edition of the papers to follow after the
conference,
Space is limited so register early.
Tutorial fees include
all coffee breaks, lunches, and handout materials.
Cancellations and Substitutions
Substitutions for conference or tutorials may be made at any
time. There is
a $50 CDN cancellation fee for conference
attendance and each tutorial,
provided 20 days written notice is
given.
Cancellation of Tours, or accommodation at Walter
Gage Residence
received in writing up to 48 hours prior to
check-in date will receive a refund
minus $15 CDN cancellation
fee.
Hotel and travel cancellations are according to
hotel and airline policies.
Arrival and Departure Times
The conference officially starts with a wine and Cheese Reception
from 5:00
- 7:00 pm on Tuesday, May 26th and finishes at 5:00 on
Friday, May 29th.
Conference presentations begin at 9:00
am each day of the conference.
Your conference confirmation letter will include information
about getting to
UBC, a campus map, and more detailed programme
information.
REGISTRATION
------------
Attached below is the Conference Registration form which includes
a request
for Accommodation.
When completing the registration form, indicate which tutorials,
or
accompanying persons programmes you wish to sign up for.
Also indicate which
conference social programmes you will
be attending to assist us with catering
plans.
==================== ULPAA '92 REGISTRATION FORM
=====================
TITLE : ________ FIRST NAME :
_________________________________________
LAST NAME :
____________________________________________________________
COMPANY/INSTITUTION :
___________________________________________________
STREET/P.O. BOX :
________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________
CITY : __________________________ STATE/PROVINCE :
______________________
COUNTRY : ______________________________ POSTAL/ZIP CODE :
_____________
PHONE : _____________________________ FAX :
_____________________________
DIETARY RESTRICTIONS :
__________________________________________________
CONFERENCE and TUTORIAL EVENTS
Please indicate Price
ULPAA '92 Conference Registration (Before April 24)
______ $325
ULPAA '92 Conference Registration (After April 24)
______ $360
Tutorial 1 Practical Perspectives on OSI Networking (2
days)______ $390
Tutorial 2 OSI Security Techniques & Standards
______ $265
Tutorial 3 Secure Communications Using X 500
______ $265
Tutorial 4 OSF's DCE: Concepts & Protocols
______ $265
Tutorial 5 X.400 / X.500 - Where are we Today ?
______ $265
Tutorial 6 ASN.1
______ $265
Wine and Cheese Reception - Tuesday, May 26
______ free
Evening Harbour Cruise & Dinner - Wednesday, May 27
______ $75
Salmon BBQ Dinner - Thursday, May 28
______
free
DELEGATE REGISTRATION SUBTOTAL
______
ACCOMPANYING PERSONS PROGRAMME EVENTS
Number
Price
Tour 1 City of Vancouver - Wednesday, May 27
_______ $32
Tour 2 Granville Island Tour - Thursday, May 28
_______ $20
Tour 3 North Shore - Grouse Mountain - Friday, May 29
_______ $35
Salmon BBQ Dinner - Thursday, May 28
_______
$35
Evening Harbour Cruise & Dinner - Wednesday, May 27
_______ $75
ACCOMPANYING PERSONS SUBTOTAL
_______
TOTAL
AMOUNT ENCLOSED FOR EVENTS
_________
MAKE OUT A CHEQUE, BANK DRAFT OR MONEY ORDER FOR THE TOTAL AMOUNT
IN
CANADIAN DOLLARS to ULPAA '92 and mail it with this form to :
ULPAA '92 IFIP CONFERENCE
SECRETARIAT
5961 Student
Union Blvd
Vancouver, B C
CANADA
V6T 2C9
NOTE: Accommodation must be requested and paid for separately
below.
Terms and Conditions
All fees are in Canadian funds including all applicable taxes.
Please make your cheque, bank draft, or money order payable to
ULPAA '92
Credit card payments cannot be accepted for
registration fees.
Queries regarding conference registration
should be addressed to the
ULPAA '92 IFIP Conference
Secretariat. Tel .: (604) 822 - 1050
FAX :
(604) 822 - 1069
-- REQUEST FOR ACCOMMODATION - WALTER GAGE COMPLEX - UNIVERSITY
OF BC------
Rate/Night
Single room
(single bed) ..........................................$47.00
Suite (double
bed)................................................ $63.00
Deluxe suite (twin beds; living
room.............................. $80.00
with TV, telephone,
sofa-bed; kitchenette)
(All rates quoted in Canadian Funds and
subject to applicable taxes).
If requesting a Suite, please complete the following:
NUMBER OF ADULTS _____________ NUMBER OF CHILDREN _____________
A one-night deposit is required ($47.00, $63.00, or $80.00 CDN)
I authorize a one night room deposit for $ __________________
by: (circle one) VISA MASTERCARD
or enclosed BANK DRAFT
(payable to UBC
Conference Centre)
CARD NO.: ____________________________________ EXPIRY DATE :
____________
CARDHOLDER NAME:
_______________________________________________________
CARDHOLDER SIGNATURE :
_________________________________________________
For office
use only : HAL #G20519A
Terms and Conditions for Accommodation
Payment in full due in Canadian funds at check-in by cash,
traveller's
cheques, VISA, or MasterCard (no personal cheques).
Cancellations received in writing up to 48 hours prior to
check-in date
will receive a refund minus $15.00 cancellation
fee.
Queries regarding accommodation should be addressed to the
UBC Conference
Centre, Reservations Office. Tel:
(604)822-1010. Fax: (604)822-1001.
=========================================================================
ALTERNATE ACCOMMODATION
-----------------------
SHERATON INN PLAZA 500 (20 minute drive from UBC campus)
500
West 12th
Vancouver, B.C.
TOLL FREE NUMBER: 1-800-325-3535 (USA and Canada only)
TEL
: (604) 873-1811
CONFERENCE RATE: $88.00 Per Night single or double occupancy
RESERVATION ID : IFIPS92 Conference
The hotels below do not have IFIP Conference Rates. They
are provided
to give you a sample of hotels and prices available
in the Vancouver area.
All of them are located about 20-30
minutes from the UBC Campus.
RAMADA VANCOUVER CENTER
(604) 872-8661
898 West Broadway
Vancouver, B.C
$95.00 PER NIGHT
RATING: AAA-3
Diamonds
HOLIDAY INN-CENTRE
(604) 879-0511
711 West Broadway
Vancouver, B.C.
$125.00 PER NIGHT
RATING: AAA-3
Diamonds
DELTA PLACE
(604) 687-1122
645 Howe Street
Vancouver,
B.C.
$205.00 PER NIGHT
RATING: Five Stars
WESTIN BAYSHORE
(604) 682-3377
1601 West Georgia Street
Vancouver, B.C.
$190.00 PER NIGHT
RATING: AAA-4
Diamonds
PAN PACIFIC HOTEL
(604) 662-8111
300 999 Canada Place
Vancouver, B.C.
$250.00 PER NIGHT
RATING: AAA-5
Diamonds
--
Jim Robinson
robin...@mdivax1.mdd.comm.mot.com
{ubc-cs!van-bc,uunet}!mdivax1!robinson