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SIGOPS Annual Report 2012
SIGOPS Annual Report 2012 Fiscal Year July 2012-June 2013 Submitted by Jeanna Matthews, SIGOPS Chair Overview SIGOPS is a vibrant community of people with interests in “operatinG systems” in the broadest sense, includinG topics such as distributed computing, storaGe systems, security, concurrency, middleware, mobility, virtualization, networkinG, cloud computinG, datacenter software, and Internet services. We sponsor a number of top conferences, provide travel Grants to students, present yearly awards, disseminate information to members electronically, and collaborate with other SIGs on important programs for computing professionals. Officers It was the second year for officers: Jeanna Matthews (Clarkson University) as Chair, GeorGe Candea (EPFL) as Vice Chair, Dilma da Silva (Qualcomm) as Treasurer and Muli Ben-Yehuda (Technion) as Information Director. As has been typical, elected officers agreed to continue for a second and final two- year term beginning July 2013. Shan Lu (University of Wisconsin) will replace Muli Ben-Yehuda as Information Director as of AuGust 2013. Awards We have an excitinG new award to announce – the SIGOPS Dennis M. Ritchie Doctoral Dissertation Award. SIGOPS has lonG been lackinG a doctoral dissertation award, such as those offered by SIGCOMM, Eurosys, SIGPLAN, and SIGMOD. This new award fills this Gap and also honors the contributions to computer science that Dennis Ritchie made durinG his life. With this award, ACM SIGOPS will encouraGe the creativity that Ritchie embodied and provide a reminder of Ritchie's leGacy and what a difference a person can make in the field of software systems research. The award is funded by AT&T Research and Alcatel-Lucent Bell Labs, companies that both have a strong connection to AT&T Bell Laboratories where Dennis Ritchie did his seminal work. -
I. Personal Information (1/11/2021) I.A. UID, Last Name, First Name, Middle Name, Contact Information UID: 101001302 Last
I. Personal Information (1/11/2021) I.A. UID, Last Name, First Name, Middle Name, Contact Information UID: 101001302 Last Name: Shneiderman First Name: Ben Mailing Address: Brendan Iribe Building, Dept. of Computer Science, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742 Email: [email protected] Personal URL: http://www.cs.umd.edu/~ben HCIL URL: http://www.cs.umd.edu/hcil Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ben_Shneiderman Google Scholar: https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=h4i4fh8AAAAJ&hl=en ORCID: orcid.org/0000-0002-8298-1097 I.B. Academic Appointments at UMD 2017- Emeritus Distinguished University Professor 2013- Distinguished University Professor 2013- Affiliate Professor, Glenn L. Martin Professor of Engineering 2005- Affiliate Professor, College of Information Studies 2005- Affiliate Professor, College of Engineering 1991- 2005 Member, Institute for Systems Research 1989- Professor, Department of Computer Science 1987- Member, Institute for Advanced Computer Studies 1980- 1989 Associate Professor, Department of Computer Science 1976- 1980 Assistant Professor, Department of Information Systems Management I.C. Administrative Appointments at UMD 1983- 2000 Founding Director, Human-Computer Interaction Lab, Institute for Advanced Computer Studies I.D. Other Employment 1973- 1976 Indiana University Assistant Professor, Department of Computer Science 1972- 1973 State University of NY Instructor, Department of Computer Science at Stony Brook 1968- 1972 State University of NY Instructor, Department of Data Processing at Farmingdale -
Shanlu › About › Cv › CV Shanlu.Pdf Shan Lu
Shan Lu University of Chicago, Dept. of Computer Science Phone: +1-773-702-3184 5730 S. Ellis Ave., Rm 343 E-mail: [email protected] Chicago, IL 60637 USA Homepage: http://people.cs.uchicago.edu/~shanlu RESEARCH INTERESTS Tool support for improving the correctness and efficiency of large scale software systems EMPLOYMENT 2019 – present Professor, Dept. of Computer Science, University of Chicago 2014 – 2019 Associate Professor, Dept. of Computer Sciences, University of Chicago 2009 – 2014 Assistant Professor, Dept. of Computer Sciences, University of Wisconsin – Madison EDUCATION 2008 University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL Ph.D. in Computer Science Thesis: Understanding, Detecting, and Exposing Concurrency Bugs (Advisor: Prof. Yuanyuan Zhou) 2003 University of Science & Technology of China, Hefei, China B.S. in Computer Science HONORS AND AWARDS 2019 ACM Distinguished Member Among 62 members world-wide recognized for outstanding contributions to the computing field 2015 Google Faculty Research Award 2014 Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellow Among 126 “early-career scholars (who) represent the most promising scientific researchers working today” 2013 Distinguished Alumni Educator Award Among 3 awardees selected by Department of Computer Science, University of Illinois 2010 NSF Career Award 2021 Honorable Mention Award @ CHI for paper [C71] (CHI 2021) 2019 Best Paper Award @ SOSP for paper [C62] (SOSP 2019) 2019 ACM SIGSOFT Distinguished Paper Award @ ICSE for paper [C58] (ICSE 2019) 2017 Google Scholar Classic Paper Award for -
Academic Program Review
Academic Program Review April 16-18, 2012 Department of Computer Science and Engineering Room 301 Harvey R. Bright Building Texas A&M University College Station, Texas 1 Contents I Introduction ............................................................................................................................... 4 I.1 Charge to Review Committee ............................................................................................. 4 I.2 Schedule of Review/Itinerary ............................................................................................. 5 I.3 Administrative Structure .................................................................................................... 6 II Brief History ............................................................................................................................... 7 II.1 Founding of Department .................................................................................................... 7 II.2 Founding and Development of Related Centers ................................................................ 7 II.3 Review and Changes in Past Seven Years ........................................................................ 15 II.4 Date of Last Program Review ........................................................................................... 16 III Vision and Goals ................................................................................................................... 16 III.1 Strategic Plan ................................................................................................................... -
Pivot Tracing: Dynamic Causal Monitoring for Distributed Systems Pdfauthor=Jonathan Mace, Ryan Roelke, Rodrigo Fonseca
PivoT Tracing:Dynamic Causal MoniToring for DisTribuTed SysTems JonaThan Mace Ryan Roelke Rodrigo Fonseca Brown UniversiTy AbsTracT MoniToring and TroubleshooTing disTribuTed sysTems is noToriously diõcult; poTenTial prob- lems are complex, varied, and unpredicTable. _e moniToring and diagnosis Tools commonly used Today – logs, counTers, and meTrics – have Two imporTanT limiTaTions: whaT gets recorded is deûned a priori, and The informaTion is recorded in a componenT- or machine-cenTric way, making iT exTremely hard To correlaTe events ThaT cross These boundaries. _is paper presents PivoT Tracing, a moniToring framework for disTribuTed sysTems ThaT addresses boTh limiTaTions by combining dynamic insTrumenTaTion wiTh a novel relaTional operaTor: The happened-before join. PivoT Tracing gives users, aT runTime, The abiliTy To deûne arbiTrary meTrics aT one poinT of The sysTem, while being able To selecT, ûlTer, and group by events mean- ingful aT oTher parts of The sysTem, even when crossing componenT or machine boundaries. We have implemenTed a proToType of PivoT Tracing for Java-based sysTems and evaluaTe iT on a heTerogeneous Hadoop clusTer comprising HDFS, HBase, MapReduce, and YARN. We show ThaT PivoT Tracing can eòecTively idenTify a diverse range of rooT causes such as soware bugs, misconûguraTion, and limping hardware. We show ThaT PivoT Tracing is dynamic, exTensible, and enables cross-Tier analysis beTween inTer-operaTing applicaTions, wiTh low execuTion overhead. Ë. InTroducTion MoniToring and TroubleshooTing disTribuTed sysTems -
A ACM Transactions on Trans. 1553 TITLE ABBR ISSN ACM Computing Surveys ACM Comput. Surv. 0360‐0300 ACM Journal
ACM - zoznam titulov (2016 - 2019) CONTENT TYPE TITLE ABBR ISSN Journals ACM Computing Surveys ACM Comput. Surv. 0360‐0300 Journals ACM Journal of Computer Documentation ACM J. Comput. Doc. 1527‐6805 Journals ACM Journal on Emerging Technologies in Computing Systems J. Emerg. Technol. Comput. Syst. 1550‐4832 Journals Journal of Data and Information Quality J. Data and Information Quality 1936‐1955 Journals Journal of Experimental Algorithmics J. Exp. Algorithmics 1084‐6654 Journals Journal of the ACM J. ACM 0004‐5411 Journals Journal on Computing and Cultural Heritage J. Comput. Cult. Herit. 1556‐4673 Journals Journal on Educational Resources in Computing J. Educ. Resour. Comput. 1531‐4278 Transactions ACM Letters on Programming Languages and Systems ACM Lett. Program. Lang. Syst. 1057‐4514 Transactions ACM Transactions on Accessible Computing ACM Trans. Access. Comput. 1936‐7228 Transactions ACM Transactions on Algorithms ACM Trans. Algorithms 1549‐6325 Transactions ACM Transactions on Applied Perception ACM Trans. Appl. Percept. 1544‐3558 Transactions ACM Transactions on Architecture and Code Optimization ACM Trans. Archit. Code Optim. 1544‐3566 Transactions ACM Transactions on Asian Language Information Processing 1530‐0226 Transactions ACM Transactions on Asian and Low‐Resource Language Information Proce ACM Trans. Asian Low‐Resour. Lang. Inf. Process. 2375‐4699 Transactions ACM Transactions on Autonomous and Adaptive Systems ACM Trans. Auton. Adapt. Syst. 1556‐4665 Transactions ACM Transactions on Computation Theory ACM Trans. Comput. Theory 1942‐3454 Transactions ACM Transactions on Computational Logic ACM Trans. Comput. Logic 1529‐3785 Transactions ACM Transactions on Computer Systems ACM Trans. Comput. Syst. 0734‐2071 Transactions ACM Transactions on Computer‐Human Interaction ACM Trans. -
An Oral History of Computer Science Cornell University
An Oral History of Computer Science at Cornell University https://ecommons.cornell.edu/handle/1813/40569 Gates Hall, Cornell University Twelve senior faculty members share their personal journeys and their recollections of the early days of computer science at Cornell University and the leadership role in bringing a new field of study into existence. Birman, Ken Hopcroft, John E Cardie, Claire Kozen, Dexter Constable, Robert Nerode, Anil Conway, Richard W. Schneider, Fred B Gries, David Teitelbaum, Tim Hartmanis, Juris Van Loan, Charlie (Click on a name above to scroll to an abstract and a live link to the associated streaming video.) version: 16Jun16 1. KEN BIRMAN Ken Birman, who joined CS in 1981, exemplifies the successful synergy of research and entrepreneurial activities. His research in distributed systems led to his founding ISIS Distributed Systems, Inc., in 1988, which developed software used by the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) and Swiss Exchange, the French Air Traffic Control sys- tem, the AEGIS warship, and others. He started two other companies, Reliable Network Solutions and Web Sci- ences LLC. This entrepreneurship has in turn generated new research ideas and has also led to Ken’s advising various organi- zations on distributed systems and cloud computing, including the French Civil Aviation Organization, the north- eastern electric power grid, NATO, the US Treasury, and the US Air Force. Ken has received several awards for his research, among them the IEEE Tsutomu Kanai Award for his work on trustworthy computing, the Cisco “Technology Visionary” award, and the ACM SIGOPS Hall of Fame Award. He also has written two successful texts. -
ACM JOURNALS S.No. TITLE PUBLICATION RANGE :STARTS PUBLICATION RANGE: LATEST URL 1. ACM Computing Surveys Volume 1 Issue 1
ACM JOURNALS S.No. TITLE PUBLICATION RANGE :STARTS PUBLICATION RANGE: LATEST URL 1. ACM Computing Surveys Volume 1 Issue 1 (March 1969) Volume 49 Issue 3 (October 2016) http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=J204 Volume 24 Issue 1 (Feb. 1, 2. ACM Journal of Computer Documentation Volume 26 Issue 4 (November 2002) http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=J24 2000) ACM Journal on Emerging Technologies in 3. Volume 1 Issue 1 (April 2005) Volume 13 Issue 2 (October 2016) http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=J967 Computing Systems 4. Journal of Data and Information Quality Volume 1 Issue 1 (June 2009) Volume 8 Issue 1 (October 2016) http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=J1191 Journal on Educational Resources in Volume 1 Issue 1es (March 5. Volume 16 Issue 2 (March 2016) http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=J814 Computing 2001) 6. Journal of Experimental Algorithmics Volume 1 (1996) Volume 21 (2016) http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=J430 7. Journal of the ACM Volume 1 Issue 1 (Jan. 1954) Volume 63 Issue 4 (October 2016) http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=J401 8. Journal on Computing and Cultural Heritage Volume 1 Issue 1 (June 2008) Volume 9 Issue 3 (October 2016) http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=J1157 ACM Letters on Programming Languages Volume 2 Issue 1-4 9. Volume 1 Issue 1 (March 1992) http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=J513 and Systems (March–Dec. 1993) 10. ACM Transactions on Accessible Computing Volume 1 Issue 1 (May 2008) Volume 9 Issue 1 (October 2016) http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=J1156 11. -
Robert Grossman Curriculum Vita
Robert Grossman Curriculum Vita Summary Robert Grossman is a faculty member at the University of Chicago, where he is the Director of Informatics at the Institute for Genomics and Systems Biology, a Senior Fellow at the Computation Institute, and a Professor of Medicine in the Section of Genetic Medicine. His research group focuses on bioinformatics, data mining, cloud computing, data intensive computing, and related areas. He is also the Chief Research Informatics Officer of the Biological Sciences Division. From 1998 to 2010, he was the Director of the National Center for Data Mining at the University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC). From 1984 to 1988 he was a faculty member at the University of California at Berkeley. He received a Ph.D. from Princeton in 1985 and a B.A. from Harvard in 1980. He is also the Founder and a Partner of Open Data Group. Open Data provides management consulting and outsourced analytic services for businesses and organizations. At Open Data, he has led the development of analytic systems that are used by millions of people daily all over the world. He has published over 150 papers in refereed journals and proceedings and edited seven books on data intensive computing, bioinformatics, cloud computing, data mining, high performance computing and networking, and Internet technologies. Prior to founding the Open Data Group, he founded Magnify, Inc. in 1996. Magnify provides data mining solutions to the insurance industry. Grossman was Magnify’s CEO until 2001 and its Chairman until it was sold to ChoicePoint in 2005. ChoicePoint was acquired by LexisNexis in 2008. -
Semperos: a Distributed Capability System
SemperOS: A Distributed Capability System Matthias Hille† Nils Asmussen† ∗ Pramod Bhatotia‡ Hermann Härtig† ∗ †Technische Universität Dresden ‡The University of Edinburgh ∗ Barkhausen Institut Abstract systems have received renewed attention recently to provide Capabilities provide an efficient and secure mechanism for an efficient and secure mechanism for resource management fine-grained resource management and protection. However, in modern hardware architectures [5, 24, 30, 36, 44, 64, 67]. as the modern hardware architectures continue to evolve Today the main improvements in compute capacity with large numbers of non-coherent and heterogeneous cores, are achieved by either adding more cores or integrating we focus on the following research question: can capability accelerators into the system. However, the increasing core systems scale to modern hardware architectures? counts exacerbate the hardware complexity required for global In this work, we present a scalable capability system to drive cache coherence. While on-chip cache coherence is likely to future systems with many non-coherent heterogeneous cores. remain a feature of future hardware architectures [45], we see More specifically, we have designed a distributed capability characteristics of distributed systems added to the hardware system based on a HW/SW co-designed capability system. by giving up on global cache coherence across a whole We analyzed the pitfalls of distributed capability operations machine [6, 28]. Additionally, various kinds of accelerators running concurrently and built the protocols in accordance are added like the Xeon Phi Processor, the Matrix-2000 accel- with the insights. We have incorporated these distributed erator, GPUs, FPGAs, or ASICs, which are used in numerous capability management protocols in a new microkernel-based application fields [4,21,32,34,43,60]. -
Membership Information
ACM 1515 Broadway New York, NY 10036-5701 USA The CHI 2002 Conference is sponsored by ACM’s Special Int e r est Group on Computer-Human Int e r a c t i o n (A CM SIGCHI). ACM, the Association for Computing Machinery, is a major force in advancing the skills and knowledge of Information Technology (IT) profession- als and students throughout the world. ACM serves as an umbrella organization offering its 78,000 members a variety of forums in order to fulfill its members’ needs, the delivery of cutting-edge technical informa- tion, the transfer of ideas from theory to practice, and opportunities for information exchange. Providing high quality products and services, world-class journals and magazines; dynamic special interest groups; numerous “main event” conferences; tutorials; workshops; local special interest groups and chapters; and electronic forums, ACM is the resource for lifelong learning in the rapidly changing IT field. The scope of SIGCHI consists of the study of the human-computer interaction process and includes research, design, development, and evaluation efforts for interactive computer systems. The focus of SIGCHI is on how people communicate and interact with a broadly-defined range of computer systems. SIGCHI serves as a forum for the exchange of ideas among com- puter scientists, human factors scientists, psychologists, social scientists, system designers, and end users. Over 4,500 professionals work together toward common goals and objectives. Membership Information Sponsored by ACM’s Special Interest Group on Computer-Human -
ACM International Conference on Interactive Experiences for Television and Online
ACM International Conference on Interactive Experiences for Television and Online Video (ACM TVX 2014) Pablo Cesar: Centrum Wiskunde & Informatica (CWI) Marianna Obrist: University of Sussex Elizabeth F. Churchill: eBay Tom Bartindale: Newcastle University ACM TVX2014: http://tvx2014.com ACM TVX2015: http://tvx2015.com/ Twitter impressions: https://twitter.com/hashtag/acmtvx ACM TVX SC: http://www.acmtvx.org ACM TVX Community: http://www.sigchi.org/communities/tvx The 1st ACM International Conference on Interactive Experiences for Television and Online Video (ACM TVX 2014) took place in Newcastle Upon Tyne, UK, from 25-27 June 2014. ACM TVX is the leading international conference for presentation and discussion of research into online video and TV interaction and user experience. The conference is the evolution of the European Conference on Interactive TV (EuroITV), which over the last ten years has provided a common discussion space and gathered a community around, seminal and visionary works on for instance ‘Secondary Screens’ and ‘Social TV’; concepts that have radically reshaped the TV and media landscape. After a fruitful decade, the Steering Committee decided to develop a stronger and stable link with an established research society, ACM. The goal was to become the key (and only) international scientific event for online video and TV research, complementing the very successful commercial events and fairs (e.g., IBC, NAB…) Conference Space where paper presentations took place as well as keynote talks. In the picture the opening keynote by Dick Bulterman. (Photo by Rene Kaiser: https://www.flickr.com/photos/49520289@N04/14556938122/in/set-72157645061959438) ACM TVX brings together international researchers and practitioners from a wide range of disciplines, from human-computer interaction, multimedia engineering and design to media studies, media psychology and sociology.