Titles and brief abstracts are due tomorrow.

It would be great to have at least one Kepler overview that highlights work available in either in the Kepler release or the Kepler devel tree.

_Christopher

On 6/5/13 11:56 AM, Christopher Brooks wrote:
The Ptolemy Miniconference will be held at Berkeley on November 7, 2013.
Abstracts are due on July 31, 2013.

The main conference page is http://ptolemy.org/ptconf

Registration is now open (http://ptolemy.eecs.berkeley.edu/conferences/13/registration.htm)

The call for abstracts is at http://ptolemy.eecs.berkeley.edu/conferences/13/call.htm

The conference description is:

The Tenth Biennial Ptolemy Miniconference will be held on Thursday, November 7, 2013 in Berkeley, California.

Please see the Call for Abstracts <http://ptolemy.eecs.berkeley.edu/conferences/13/call.htm>, which are *due by July 31, 2013*.

The Ptolemy project <http://ptolemy.eecs.berkeley.edu> studies modeling, simulation, and design of concurrent, real-time, embedded systems. The focus is on assembly of concurrent components.

The Ptolemy Miniconference is an opportunity for research collaborators and Ptolemy users and extenders from industry, academia, and government to get together, present their work to the Ptolemy community, and hear about related research and results. It is typically held every two years.

In addition, the will act as an annual meeting for the Center for Hybrid and Embedded Software Systems <http://chess.eecs.berkeley.edu/>.

At miniconferences in the past <http://ptolemy.eecs.berkeley.edu/conferences/> we have had presentations and posters from organizations worldwide, plus members of the Ptolemy project describing current research at Berkeley.

Topics of interest for past years have included:

  * Applications of Ptolemy II or Kepler
  * Model-based design techniques
  * Concurrency models
  * Applications of concurrency to multicore and distributed computing
  * Code generation for embedded systems
  * Model engineering methods
  * Models of computation
  * Workflow infrastructure
  * Model transformation
  * Model verification
  * Semantics of models
  * Performance evaluations
  * Comparisons of model-based design tools
  * Integration of multiple design tools
  * Static analysis of models
  * Provenance tracking techniques
  * Data visualization and data management
  * Visual syntaxes for models


_Christopher

--
Christopher Brooks, PMP                       University of California
Academic Program Manager & Software Engineer  US Mail: 337 Cory Hall
CHESS/iCyPhy/Ptolemy/TerraSwarm               Berkeley, CA 94720-1774
c...@eecs.berkeley.edu, 707.332.0670           (Office: 545Q Cory)


--
Christopher Brooks, PMP                       University of California
Academic Program Manager & Software Engineer  US Mail: 337 Cory Hall
CHESS/iCyPhy/Ptolemy/TerraSwarm               Berkeley, CA 94720-1774
c...@eecs.berkeley.edu, 707.332.0670           (Office: 545Q Cory)

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