Secure and responsible digital and communications
Backed by a strong ecosystem linked to a long history of development of telecommunications and associated technologies in Brittany and Rennes in particular, INSA Rennes today addresses theoretical, hardware, software aspects but also the uses of digital technologies applied to very broad fields (space, construction, telecommunications, image and text processing, electronics, education). It particularly addresses issues related to the security of goods and data and the development of sustainable and frugal solutions.
The INSA Rennes research teams make a strong contribution to this with regard to the themes they address:
- Maritime, land, air and space vehicle architecture: engines, hybridization, performance, safety and reliability
- Key materials and technologies for next-generation digital and internet
- Digital humanities, Heritage, Cultural and creative industries
- Cybersecurity
- Industry 4.0, Connected Urban Systems and Digital Twins
- Modeling, numerical methods, Simulation and Optimization
- Cyber-physical systems, Human-Machine Systems and social interactions
- Artificial Intelligence, Big Data Processing and Applications
Our researchers are active in scientific research
Video streaming: How to reduce its environmental impact Pierre-Loup Cabarat, Research Engineer, Wassim Hamidouche, Senior Lecturer, and Daniel Ménard, Professor at INSA Rennes and Deputy Director of the IETR - Head of the IETR's INSA site and in charge of the transversal research axis on Embedded Systems studied by the VAADER research team of the IETR, are working on reducing energy consumption of video streaming. > Read more |
Gildas Avoine, cybersecurity Professor, and Diane Leblanc-Albarel, cybersecurity PhD, publish an article in The Conversation
(IRISA - UMR CNRS 6074 - CentraleSupélec, CNRS, ENS Rennes, Inria, INSA Rennes, Institut Mines-Télécom Atlantique, Université de Bretagne-Sud et Université de Rennes)
As cyberattacks increase, each of us can potentially face them. Of course, we all have our tricks for the passwords we use on our computers and laptops: hidden under a keyboard, written on a piece of paper or taken from the birthday of the little one.
But how can you ensure that your password is truly uncrackable?
Video presentation of the QOSC Platform (Quantification Oriented Complex Systems) from the IETR laboratory, located at INSA Rennes
Learn more on the IETR platforms and technical platforms