Saeid Jahandar

Saeid Jahandar, M. Sc.

Department of Computer Science
Chair of Computer Science 7 (Computer Networks and Communication Systems)

Room: Room 06.133
Martensstr. 3
91058 Erlangen

Short Biography

Saeid Jahandar is a research assistant at the Chair of Computer Networks and Communication Systems.
He received his bachelor of science degree (B.Sc.) in Electrical Engineering – Communications at the University of Tabriz in March 2018. After his bachelor’s study, he obtained a master of science degree (M.Sc.) in Telecommunications Engineering at the Istanbul Technical University, focusing on “Multi-access Edge Computing in 5G Networks”.
After graduation, he worked as a graduate research assistant (Diplom Hiwi) in the Broadband and Broadcasting (BB) group at Fraunhofer Institute for Integrated Circuits IIS in Erlangen.
Currently, Saeid is researching QUIC transport protocol for the Internet via satellite as part of his doctorate.

More Information

2023

  • New protocols for faster Internet via satellite

    (Third Party Funds Single)

    Term: 2021-10-01 - 2024-09-30
    Funding source: Bundesministerium für Wirtschaft und Technologie (BMWi)
    In the QUICSAT project, the cooperation between the Friedrich-Alexander University (FAU) Erlangen-Nürnberg and ND SatCom GmbH has the common goal of improving Internet protocols and applications for geostationary satellite connections.

    The potential of new technologies (AQM, ECN, BBR and especially QUIC) will be examined. The ultimate goal is that Internet via satellite should perform as good as terrestrial Internet connections.

    The high latency of geostationary satellites, the current architecture of Internet protocols and the constantly increasing complexity of Internet applications (especially websites) are the reason why the performance of Internet via satellite is sometimes worse than the performance of terrestrial Internet connections, even if the data rates are comparable. Newer Quality of Service (QoS) mechanisms are currently not used in satellite communication. With QUIC there is also the risk that the performance of satellite internet will decrease due to the non-applicability of Performance Enhancing Proxies.

    The project makes a contribution to protocol research, standardization and reference implementations.