
Aims and scope:
The Text Book of Cloud Computing involves exchange the latest fundamental advances in the state of the art and practice of Cloud computing, identify emerging research topics, and define the future of Edge computing. The Book of Cloud Computing covers topics related the localized resource sharing and connections with the cloud.
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About the Book
About the Book
The Text Book of Cloud Computing publish the latest and outstanding original content in all the areas of Edge Computing & Fog computing and introduction of other computing techniques. It covers a broad range of topics including but not limited to,
1. Cloud Computing Architectures and Cloud Solution Design Patterns
2. Infrastructure, Platform, Application, Business, Social, and Mobile Clouds
3. Storage, Data, and Analytics Clouds
4. Self-service Cloud Portal, Dashboard, and Analytics
5. Security, Privacy, and Compliance Management for Public, Private, and Hybrid Clouds
6. Cloud Quality Management and Service Level Agreement (SLA)
7. Cloud Configuration, Performance, and Capacity Management
8. Cloud Workload Profiling and Deployment Control
9. Cloud Software Patch and License Management
10. Cloud Migration
11. Cloud Composition, Federation, Bridging, and Bursting
12. Cloud Resource Virtualization and Composition
13. Cloud Provisioning Orchestration
14. High Performance Cloud Computing
15. Cloud Programming Models and Paradigms
16. Autonomic Business Process and Workflow Management in Clouds
17. Cloud DevOps
18. Green Cloud Computing
19. Innovative Cloud Applications and Experiences
20. Economic, Business and ROI Models for Cloud Computing
21. Cloud Computing Consulting
Copyright policy
Each manuscript must be accompanied by a statement that it has been neither published nor submitted for publication, in whole or in part, either in a serial, professional journal or as a part in a book which is formally published and made available to the public. For the mutual benefit and protection of authors and publishers, it is necessary that authors provide formal written consent to publish and transfer of copyright form before publication of the work.
Proofs
Proofs will be sent to the corresponding author and should be returned with one week of receipt. Corrections should be restricted to typesetting errors; any other corrections may be charged to the authors. Authors are advised to check their proofs very carefully before return since the inclusion of late corrections maybe be chargeable (30% of the publication cost). Corrected proofs are to be returned to the publishers with copyright form, registration form, and Payment proof.
Author Benefits
The benefit of publishing in International Journal includes,
- Doi, Crossref. and UNR is allotted for books.
- Rapid review process.
- Open Access books.
- Qualified and sincere Editorial team members.
- Publication immediately after acceptance.
- Quality & fast editorial- review processing.
- Full text available free online to all main universities worldwide.
- Ensures promotion to the widest possible audience.
Submission
Submission Preparation Checklist
As part of the submission process, authors are required to check off their submission's compliance with all of the following items, and submissions may be returned to authors that do not adhere to these guidelines.
- The submission has not been previously published, nor is it before another books for consideration (or an explanation has been provided in Comments to the Editor).
- The submission file is in Microsoft Word document (.doc) file format.
- Where available, URLs for the references have been provided.
- The text is single-spaced; uses a 12-point font; employs italics, rather than underlining (except with URL addresses); and all illustrations, figures, and tables are placed within the text at the appropriate points, rather than at the end.
- The text adheres to the stylistic and bibliographic requirements outlined in the Author Guidelines, which is found in About the book chapter.
- If submitting to a peer-reviewed section of the book chapter, the instructions in Ensuring a Blind Review have been followed
Author Guidelines
IMPORTANT | |
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Title page:
Chapter Title (16 Bold)
First Writer1, Second Writer2, Willy C 3, * (12 Font Size)
1,2Department, affiliation, Country (10 Font Size, Italic),
3Mechanical Engineering, Oxford University, USA (10 Font Size, Italic)
Abstract: (10Font size, Bold) Objective: the abstract body be supposed to review the content of the chapter. Aim to remain the abstract below 220 text words. Do not make references, abbreviated words, and equations in the abstract. The journal will be published from the same sized copy submitted by you. Method: the title be supposed to appear on a separate page which be supposed to then follow by the writer's name and the institution name and address by indicating suitable superscripts. Title page be supposed to contain the title of the chapter in bold face, title case (16 font size, uppercase), the names of the writers in normal face (12 font size, lower case, bold) followed by the afilation address in normal face lower case (font size 10). An asterisk (*) should be placed after the corresponding writer's name as superscript whose e-mail id, fax, telephone number can be given at the bottom left corner of the title. Results:corresponding writer has the responsibility to make sure that all co writers are responsive and consent the contents of the chapter. Conclusion: this will enable us to keep uniformity in the final printed copies of the journal. Please keep in mind that the manuscript you arrange will be photographed and printed as it is received. Keywords writer(s) should give about 5 key words which can identify the most important subjects covered by the chapter. They should be placed at the end of the abstract. (10 font size, italic)
Keywords: (10 Font Size, Bold): Keyword1; keyword2; about five key words in alphabetical order; separated by semioclon(10Font Size, Italic)
Citation: First writer, Second writer & third writer, ( 2015). Chapter title. A text book of Xxxxxxxxxx, X(X), XXX-XXX. doi:10.4273/PENCIS.7.4.10
*Correspondence: Dr. Willy Chou, Department of Recreation and Health-Care Management and Institute of Recreation Industry Management, Chia Nan University of Pharmacy, Tainan, Taiwan. Tel: 886-6-2812811, email: ufan0101@ms22.hinet.net
Received: XX August 20XX Revised: XX September 20XX, Accepted: XX October 20XX
Open access policy: This open-access article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (creativecommons.org), which permits reuse, distribution and reproduction of the article, provided that the original work is properly cited and the reuse is restricted to noncommercial purposes. For commercial reuse, contact reprints@pencis.com
Introduction (10 Font size, bold)
The introduction of the chapter is supposed to explain the nature of the problem, previous work, purpose, and the contribution of the chapter. The contents of each section may be provided to understand easily about the chapter. The reference should be provided in square bracket, e.g., [2] for all references (10 Font size)
Headings (10 Font size, bold)
Subtitle (10 Font size Bold, Italic)
Headings (10 Font size Font size, Italic)
The headings and sub-headings, first with "1. Introduction", appear in proper case letters and be supposed to be set in bold and aligned flush left. All headings from the Introduction to Acknowledgements are numbered sequentially using 1, 2, 3, etc. Subheadings is numbered 1.1, 1.2, etc. If a subsection should be further divided, the numbers 1.1.1, 1.1.2, etc. The font size for heading is 10 points capital letter and bold face and subsections with 10 points and bold. Do not underline any of the headings, or add dashes, colons, etc. (10 Font size)
Indentations and Equations
The first paragraph under each heading or subheading be supposed to be flush left, and subsequent paragraphs be supposed to have a No-space indentation. A colon is inserted before an equation is accessible, but there is no punctuation subsequent the equation. All equations are numbered and referred to in the text exclusively by a number enclosed in a in a circle bracket (i.e., (2)). Ensure that any miscellaneous numbering system you use in your chapter cannot be confused with a reference [5] or an equation (2) designation. (10 Font size)
Figures and Tables
To ensure a high quality product, diagrams and lettering should be either computer drafted or drawn using India ink. Figure captions appear below the figure, are flush left, and are in lower case letters. When referring to a figure in the body of the text, the abbreviation "Fig." is used. Figures are supposed to be numbered in the order they appear in the text. Table captions appear centered above the table in upper and lower case letters. When referring to a table in the text, no abbreviation is used and "Table" is capitalized. (10 Font size)
Conclusion
A conclusion section should be included and be supposed to indicate clearly the advantages, limitations, and possible applications of the chapter. Although a conclusion may review the main points of the chapter, do not replicate the abstract as the conclusion. A conclusion might elaborate on the importance of the work or suggest applications and extensions. (10 Font size)
Acknowledgements (10 font size, bold)
An acknowledgement section may be presented after the conclusion, if desired. (10 Font size)
References (10 font size, bold) (must be APA format)
This heading is not assigned a number. A reference list should be 10 Font sizes, included using the following information as a guide. Only cited text references are included. Each reference is referred to in the text by a number with this in a square bracket (i.e., [4]). References should be numbered and ordered according to where they are first mentioned in the chapter, not alphabetical arrangement.
- Regupathi, R., Rajalakshmi, M., & Dhivya, E. (2014). Experimental Study on Behavior of Reinforced Concrete Beams with Precast SIFCON Laminates. PENCIS International Journal of Engineering, 1(2), 132-139.
- Book, A. P. P. (1964). The theory of space, time and gravitation.
- Zines, L., Davies, P. M., & Ricketson, S. Chapters in Books. Recent Developments in the Judicial Interpretation of the Australian, 180, 250.
- Abercrombie, N., Hill, S., & Turner, B. S. (1980). The dominant ideology thesis. London: Allen & Unwin.
- York Manuscripts Conference, & York Centre for Medieval Studies. (1989). Latin and vernacular: studies in late-medieval texts and manuscripts;[proceedings of the 1987 York Manuscripts Conference]. A. J. Minnis (Ed.). Brewer.
- Stim, R. (2014). Patent, Copyright & Trademark: An Intellectual Property Desk Reference. Nolo.
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