[Apologies if you receive multiple copies of this email.] Call for Papers - Extended Deadline (July 22nd): Fifth Partitioned Global Address Space Conference (PGAS 2011) 16-18 October 2011 Galveston Island, Texas, USA
http://pgas11.rice.edu === Important (Extended) Dates: === Abstract Submission Deadline July 15, 2011 Paper submission deadline: July 22, 2011 Author notification: Aug 29, 2011 Final manuscript due: Sep 26, 2011 Partitioned Global Address Space (PGAS) programming models offer HPC programmers a shared address space model which simplifies programming while exposing data/thread locality to enhance performance. This facilitates the development of programming models that can deliver both productivity and performance. The PGAS conference is a forum to present and discuss ideas and research developments in the area of PGAS models, languages, compilers, runtimes, applications and tools. Papers, posters and demos are solicited in related areas, including but not limited to: -- Applications: New innovative applications that are uniquely enabled by the PGAS model, existing applications that can take advantage of the PGAS model, effective application development practices for PGAS codes, and comparative performance of applications over various programming models. -- Models and Language Development: Extensions to the PGAS basic model. New PGAS languages. New models and language extensions to address new architectures, such as multicore, heterogeneous, and reconfigurable processors. -- Tools: Integrated Development Environments, performance analysis tools, and debuggers. -- Compilers and Implementations: Compiler optimizations for PGAS languages, low level libraries, memory consistency models, hardware support for PGAS languages, performance studies and insights, productivity studies, and language interoperability. The Partitioned Global Address Space (PGAS) Programming Models Conference is the premier forum dedicated to the presentation and discussion of research work in this field. Papers should report on original research, and should include enough background material to make them accessible to the entire PGAS research community. Papers describing experiences should indicate how they illustrate general principles; papers about parallel programming foundations should indicate how they relate to practice. All submissions must be made electronically through the submission link. Abstracts must include contact information, the full list of authors and their affiliations, and a summary description (100-300 word abstract) of the anticipated content of the paper. Full papers papers should follow the ACM SIGPLAN style and be no more than 10 pages in length. Papers must be submitted in PDF format and must be viewable by Adobe Acrobat Reader. PGAS 2011 will follow PACT 2011 (October 10-14) in Galveston Island, Texas. Galveston Island is a 45-minute drive from Houston Hobby airport, and offers a number of indoor and outdoor attractions. The conference hotel for PGAS 2011 is the Tremont House, located near the Strand in the historic part of the city. General Chairs Barbara Chapman, U. Houston Vivek Sarkar, Rice U. Program Chair John Mellor-Crummey, Rice U. Program Committee Pavan Balaji, ANL Megan Cason, DOD ERDC Daniel Chavarria, PNNL Brad Chamberlain, Cray Guojing Cong, IBM Research Alan D. George, U. Florida David P. Grove, IBM Research Paul H. Hargrove, LBNL Costin Iancu, LBNL Laxmikant V. Kale, UIUC Jeffrey Kuehn, ORNL Craig Rassmussen, LANL P. Sadayappan, OSU Mitsuhisa Sato, U. Tsukuba Steven Seidel, Michigan Tech Sayantan Sur, OSU Vinod Tipparaju, ORNL Abhinav Vishnu, PNNL Brian Wibecan, HP Hans P. Zima, JPL Publicity Chair Yonghong Yan, U. Houston Steering Committee William Carlson, IDA Tarek El-Ghazawi, GWU Lauren Smith, DoD Kathy Yelick, UC Berkeley -- Yonghong Yan Research Assistant Professor Department of Computer Science, University of Houston Phone: 713-743-3075 Fax: 713-743-3335 Office: PGH 204 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ All of the data generated in your IT infrastructure is seriously valuable. Why? It contains a definitive record of application performance, security threats, fraudulent activity, and more. Splunk takes this data and makes sense of it. IT sense. And common sense. http://p.sf.net/sfu/splunk-d2d-c2 _______________________________________________ X10-users mailing list X10-users@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/x10-users