International Conference on Communications
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The International Conference on Communications (ICC) is an annual international academic conference organised by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers' Communications Society. The conference grew out of the Global Communications Conference (GLOBECOM) when, in 1965, the seventh GLOBECOM was sponsored by the Communications Society's predecessor as the "IEEE Communications Convention". The following year it adopted its current name and GLOBECOM was disbanded (it has since been revived).[1] The conference was always held in the United States until 1984 when it was held in Amsterdam;[1] it has since been held in several other countries.[2]
Some major telecommunications discoveries have been announced at ICC, such as the invention of turbo codes.[3] In fact, this ground breaking paper had been submitted to ICC the previous year, but was rejected by the referees who thought the results too good to be true.[4]
Recent ICCs have been attended by 1200 – 1400 people.[5][6]
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ a b IEEE Communications Society — History. IEEE Communications Society. Retrieved on 2006-03-22.
- ^ ICC. IEEE Communications Society. Retrieved on 2006-03-22.
- ^ Berrou, C.; Glavieux, A.; Thitimajshima, P. (May 1993). "Near Shannon limit error-correcting coding: turbo codes". Proc. IEEE International Conference on Communications 2: 1064–1070. DOI:10.1109/ICC.1993.397441.
- ^ Alister Burr (August 2001). "Turbo-codes: the ultimate error control codes? (Section 2, pg. 156)". IEE Electronics & Communication Engineering Journal 13 (4): 155–165. ISSN 0954-0695.
- ^ ICC 2004 details. IEEE. Retrieved on 2006-03-22.
- ^ ICC 2005 details. IEEE. Retrieved on 2006-03-22.