Global Communications Conference
The Global Communications Conference (GLOBECOM) is an annual international academic conference organised by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers' Communications Society. The first GLOBECOM was organised by the Communications Society's predecessor in 1957, with the full name of "National Symposium on Global Communications".[1] The seventh GLOBECOM, in 1965 was called the "IEEE Communications Convention" and after that the conference was renamed as the International Conference on Communications (ICC) and GLOBECOM was no longer organised.[2][3]
By 1982, the need for a second annual international conference on communications was apparent, and so the IEEE National Telecommunications Conference was re-organised to be international in scope, and renamed to the "Global Communications Conference", resurrecting the GLOBECOM acronym. GLOBECOM has been held annually since.[3]
Recent GLOBECOMs have been attended by about 1,500 people. IEE has more than 400,000 members in 150 countries.[4][5]
Past and Upcoming Conferences
History of the GLOBECOM conference | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Year | City | Country (Region) | Date | ||||
2024 | Cape Town | South Africa | 8-12 December | ||||
2023 | Kuala Lumpur | Malaysia | 4-8 December | ||||
2022 | Rio de Janeiro | Brazil | 4-8 December | ||||
2021 | Madrid | Spain | 7-11 December | ||||
2020 | Taipei | Taiwan | 7-11 December | ||||
2019 | Waikoloa, Hawaii | United States of America | 9-13 December | ||||
2018 | Abu Dhabi | United Arab Emirates | 9-13 December | ||||
2017 | Singapore | Singapore | 4-8 December | ||||
2016 | Washington D.C. | United States of America | 4-8 December | ||||
2015 | San Diego | United States of America | 6-10 December | ||||
2014 | Austin | United States of America | 8-12 December | ||||
2013 | Atlanta | United States of America | 9-13 December | ||||
2012 | Anaheim | United States of America | 3-7 December | ||||
2011 | Houston | United States of America | 5-9 December | ||||
2010 | Miami | United States of America | 6-10 December | ||||
2009 | Honolulu | United States of America | 30 November - 4 December | ||||
2008 | New Orleans | United States of America | 30 November - 4 December | ||||
2007 | Washington, D.C. | United States of America | 26-30 November | ||||
2006 | San Francisco | United States of America | 27 November - 1 December | ||||
2005 | St. Louis | United States of America | 28 November - 2 December | ||||
2004 | Dallas | United States of America | 29 November - 3 December | ||||
2003 | San Francisco | United States of America | 1-5 December | ||||
2002 | Taipei | Taiwan | 17-21 November | ||||
2001 | San Antonio | United States of America | 25-29 November | ||||
2000 | San Francisco | United States of America | 27 November - 1 December | ||||
1999 | Rio de Janeiro | Brazil | 5-9 December | ||||
1998 | Sydney | Australia | 8-12 November | ||||
1997 | Phoenix, Arizona | United States of America | 3-8 November | ||||
1996 | London | United Kingdom | 18-22 November | ||||
1995 | Singapore | Singapore | 14-16 November | ||||
1994 | San Francisco | United States of America | 28 November - 2 December | ||||
1993 | Houston | United States of America | 29 November - 2 December | ||||
1992 | Orlando, Florida | United States of America | 6-9 December | ||||
1991 | Phoenix, Arizona | United States of America | 2-5 November | ||||
1990 | San Diego | United States of America | 2-5 December | ||||
1989 | Dallas | United States of America | 27-30 November | ||||
1988 | Hollywood, Florida | United States of America | 28 November - 1 December | ||||
1987 | Tokyo | Japan | 15-18 November | ||||
1986 | Houston | United States of America | 2-4 December | ||||
1985 | New Orleans | United States of America | 2-5 December | ||||
1984 | Atlanta | United States of America | 26-29 November | ||||
1983 | San Diego | United States of America | 28 November - 1 December | ||||
1982 | Miami | United States of America | 29 November - 2 December |
See also
References
- ^ "IEEE Communications Society History, 1952-1964". IEEE Communications Society. Retrieved 2006-03-25.
- ^ "IEEE Communications Society History, 1964-1972". IEEE Communications Society. Retrieved 2006-03-25.
- ^ a b "History of the IEEE Communications Society". IEEE Communications Society. Archived from the original on March 12, 2005. Retrieved 2006-03-25.
- ^ "GLOBECOM 2004 details". IEEE. Retrieved 2006-03-25.
- ^ "GLOBECOM 2005 details". IEEE. Retrieved 2006-03-25.
- v
- t
- e
- ACM/IEEE Supercomputing Conference
- ARITH Symposium on Computer Arithmetic
- Asia and South Pacific Design Automation Conference
- Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
- Custom Integrated Circuits Conference
- Design Automation and Test in Europe
- Design Automation Conference
- European Test Symposium
- Global Communications Conference
- Hot Chips
- Hot Interconnects
- International Conference on Acoustics, Speech, and Signal Processing
- IEEE Conference on Artificial Intelligence
- International Conference on Communications
- International Conference on Computer Vision
- International Conference on Computer-Aided Design
- International Conference on Software Engineering and Formal Methods
- International Conference on Web Services
- International Electron Devices Meeting
- IEEE MTT-S International Microwave Symposium
- International Solid-State Circuits Conference
- International Symposium on Circuits and Systems
- International Symposium on Information Theory
- International Symposium on Mixed and Augmented Reality
- International Symposium on Personal, Indoor and Mobile Radio Communications
- International Symposium on Physical Design
- Iran Workshop on Communication and Information Theory
- Southwest Symposium on Image Analysis and Interpretation
- Symposia on VLSI Technology and Circuits
- Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science
- Symposium on Logic in Computer Science
- Vehicular Technology Conference
- IEEE Visualization