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HCW 2010 : HCW 2010: 19th Heterogeneity in Computing Workshop in conjunction with IPDPS 2010 | |||||||||||
Link: http://graal.ens-lyon.fr/~abenoit/hcw2010 | |||||||||||
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Call For Papers | |||||||||||
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HCW 2010: 19th Heterogeneity in Computing Workshop in conjunction with IPDPS 2010 (www.ipdps.org) Atlanta, Georgia, U.S.A., April 19, 2010 Sponsored by the IEEE Computer Society, through the Technical Committee on Parallel Processing (TCPP), and by the U.S. Office of Naval Research (ONR). http://graal.ens-lyon.fr/~abenoit/hcw2010 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Paper submission deadline (5-pages summary): December 14, 2009 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Today, most computing systems have elements of heterogeneity. Heterogeneity springs from the richness of environments where diversity and resource abundance prevail. Recognizing, capturing, and efficiently exploiting this diversity in an integrated and coherent manner are key goals of heterogeneous computing. Heterogeneous computing systems are those with a range of diverse computing resources that can be on a chip, within a computer, or on a local or geographically distributed network. The development of heterogeneous multi-core chips and the pervasive use of networks by all segments of society mean that the number and types of heterogeneous computing resources are growing rapidly. This growth creates the need and opportunity for new research to effectively utilize these resources in innovative and novel ways. For example, cluster computing, grid computing, peer-to-peer computing, and cloud computing all involve elements of heterogeneity. The effective implementation of efficient applications in these environments, however, requires that a host of issues be addressed that simply do not occur in homogeneous systems. Whereas many researchers and practitioners that use computers have a peripheral awareness of heterogeneity in their respective fields, few critically approach their fields from the heterogeneous perspective. This is not particularly surprising, because each field has its own unique challenges and imperatives that propel investigations in search of solutions to pressing problems. Addressing computing problems from the heterogeneous perspective offers at least three advantages: (i) the design and development of more advanced high-performance computing platforms, (ii) insight into new solution approaches, and (iii) exposure to new research opportunities and relationships among distinct research areas. HCW encourages the examination of both hardware and software systems from the perspective of heterogeneity. With the increasing number of components in heterogeneous parallel and distributed systems, failure is becoming a critical factor that impacts application performance. In recent years, there also has been an increasing interest in robust design in parallel and distributed computing systems that must operate in an environment full of uncertainties. These uncertainties could include task execution times varying with data input sets and resources dynamically joining and leaving the system. This year, HCW is specifically encouraging submissions that explore the capabilities of robust and fault-tolerant systems, paradigms, algorithms, and techniques for heterogeneous computing. Areas or research interest include, but are not limited to, heterogeneity aspects of: - Robust resource allocation and scheduling - Fault tolerance - Control and use of multi-cores - Computer architectures - Parallel and distributed computing - Programming paradigms and tools - Resource discovery and management - Task and communication scheduling - Task coordination and workflow - Performance evaluation and management - Cluster computing - Grid computing - Cloud computing - Peer-to-peer computing - Ubiquitous computing - Application case studies IMPORTANT DATES --------------- Paper submission: December 14, 2009. Author notification: January 15, 2010. Camera-ready: February 1, 2010. Workshop: April 19, 2010. Updated HCW 2010 information can be found on the workshop webpage: http://graal.ens-lyon.fr/~abenoit/hcw2010 and also from the workshops link of the IPDPS 2010 web site: http://www.ipdps.org HCW 2010 PEOPLE --------------- GENERAL CHAIR David A. Bader, Georgia Institute of Technology, U.S.A. PROGRAM CHAIR Anne Benoit, Ecole Normale Superieure de Lyon, France VICE PROGRAM CHAIR for "Robust Scheduling and Fault-Tolerant Techniques" Qin Zheng, Institute of High Performance Computing, Singapore STEERING COMMITTEE H. J. Siegel, Colorado State University, Chair John K. Antonio, University of Oklahoma Francine Berman, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Jack Dongarra, University of Tennessee Jerry Potter, Colorado State University Viktor K. Prasanna, University of Southern California Yves Robert, Ecole Normale Superieure de Lyon, France Arnold Rosenberg, Colorado State University Vaidy Sunderam, Emory University PROGRAM COMMITTEE (to be confirmed) Kento Aida, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan Shoukat Ali, Intel, U.S.A. Mark Baker, University of Reading, U.K. Ioana Banicescu, Mississippi State University, U.S.A. Rajkumar Buyya, University of Melbourne and Manjrasoft, Australia Shuvra S. Bhattacharyya, University of Maryland, U.S.A. Wentong Cai, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore Yves Caniou, ENS Lyon, France Eddy Caron, ENS Lyon, France Ralph Castain, Los Alamos National Labs. U.S.A. Rick Goh, Institute of High Performance Computing, Singapore Terence Hung, Institute of High Performance Computing, Singapore Hai Jin, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, China Zbigniew Kalbarczyk, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, U.S.A. Alexey Kalinov, Cadence Design Systems, Russia Tahar Kechadi, University College Dublin, Ireland Jong-Kook Kim, Korea University, South Korea Zhiling Lan, Illinois Institute of Technology, U.S.A. Alexey Lastovetsky, University College Dublin, Ireland Malcolm Low, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore Tony Maciejewski, Colorado State University, U.S.A. John P. Morrison, University College, Cork, Ireland Kai Nan, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China Dana Petcu, Western University of Timisoara, Romania Xiao Qin, Auburn University, U.S.A. Ioan Raicu, Northwestern University, U.S.A. Omer Rana, Cardiff University, U.K. Alistair Rendell, Australian National University, Australia Uwe Schwiegelshohn, University of Dortmund, Germany Stephen L. Scott, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, U.S.A. Martin Swany, University of Delaware, U.S.A. Gary Toth, Office of Naval Research, U.S.A. Denis Trystram, IMAG, France Putchong Uthayopas, Kasetsart University, Thailand Carlos Varela, Rensselaer Institute, U.S.A. Bharadwaj Veeravalli, National University of Singapore, Singapore Cho-Li Wang, Hong Kong University, Hong Kong Cheng-Zhong Xu, Wayne State University, U.S.A. |
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