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EuroSys 2016 : European Conference on Computer SystemsConference Series : European Conference on Computer Systems | |||||||||||||||
Link: http://eurosys16.doc.ic.ac.uk/ | |||||||||||||||
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Call For Papers | |||||||||||||||
Welcome
The EuroSys conference series brings together professionals from academia and industry. It has a strong focus on systems research and development: operating systems, data base systems, real-time systems and middleware for networked, distributed, parallel, or embedded computing systems. EuroSys has become a premier forum for discussing various issues of systems software research and development, including implications related to hardware and applications. EuroSys’16 will follow the pattern established by the previous EuroSys conferences, by seeking papers on all aspects of computer systems. EuroSys’16 will also include a number of workshops to allow junior and senior members of the systems community to explore leading-edge topics and ideas before they are presented at a conference. Call for papers The European Conference on Computer Systems (EuroSys) is a premier international forum for presenting computer systems research, broadly construed. EuroSys 2016 seeks papers on all areas of computer systems research, including, but not limited to: Big data analytics frameworks Cloud computing and data center systems Database systems Dependable systems Distributed systems File and storage systems Language support and runtime systems Mobile and pervasive systems Networked systems Operating systems Parallelism, concurrency, and multicore systems Real-time, embedded, and cyber-physical systems Secure systems, privacy and anonymity preserving systems Tracing, analysis, and transformation of systems Virtualization systems Papers will be judged on novelty, significance, correctness, and clarity. We encourage papers that bridge research in different communities. We also welcome experience papers that clearly articulate lessons learned, papers that refute prior published results, and negative results. Papers will be provisionally accepted and final acceptance is subject to shepherding by a member of the program committee. Reviewing will be double-blind, meaning the authors' identities will be hidden from the reviewers. There will not be a response/rebuttal phase. EuroSys applies the ACM's policies for plagiarism, submission confidentiality, reviewer anonymity, and prior and concurrent paper submission. Full submission details will be published online at the conference web site. In addition to paper presentations, EuroSys 2016 will have a poster session. Submissions for posters will open closer to the conference deadline. Accepted papers will automatically qualify for the poster session, and authors will be strongly encouraged to participate. Authors who are unsure whether or not their submissions might meet these guidelines, or with specific questions about the guidelines, are welcome to contact the program committee co-chairs. Submission information Submissions should be 12 pages including everything except the references. Additional pages can be used for references if required. Papers must be formatted using a 10pt font, single spacing (minimum 11pt spacing between lines), two columns with 0.33 inches between columns, and a text box of 7 by 9 inches. Please ensure that the pages are numbered. Reviewing will be double-blind, and so papers must not identify the authors. In place of the authors' names, please indicate the paper ID number assigned when registering the paper, along with the total number of pages in the submission. When referring to your own previous work, you should use the third person. In the cases where that is not possible (such as an accompanying TR), you should blind the reference and send an anonymized version of that document to the PC chairs at submission time. Papers that violate the submission guidelines will be rejected regardless of their merit. Accepted papers will be allowed 14 pages in the proceedings, plus references. Important dates Abstract Submission October 16, 2015 Full paper Submission October 23, 2015 Notification to authors January 29, 2016 Asset release and artifact evaluation The members of the EuroSys community generally value a paper more highly if it is accompanied by assets that were not previously available. These assets may include data from the paper's experiments, input traces or datasets, source code, tools developed as part of the submitted work, or execution traces of the evaluated system. We encourage authors to provide any supplementary material that will support the claims made in the paper, enable future comparative studies, and allow other researchers to build upon the work described in the paper. This asset release is voluntary and will not influence the program committee's decisions. In cases where this may violate the anonymity of the submission, this material should only be released after the paper is accepted. In addition, based on the discussion at the EuroSys 2015 business meeting, we are investigating the possibility of a new artifact evaluation program, similar to the artifact evaluation done at recent PLDI and POPL conferences. This program will be voluntary and conducted after the paper review process; as a result, it will not influence the program committee deliberations. Further details will be announced later. Program Committee Lorenzo Alvisi, UT Austin Mahesh Balakrishnan, Yale University Steve Blackburn, ANU Björn Brandenburg, Max Planck Institute for Software Systems (MPI-SWS) Nathan Bronson, Facebook Edouard Bugnion, EPFL Marco Canini, Université catholique de Louvain Haibo Chen, Shanghai Jiao Tong University Landon Cox, Duke University Jon Crowcroft, Cambridge University Kevin Elphinstone, NICTA/UNSW Anja Feldmann, TU Berlin Rodrigo Fonseca, Brown University Roxana Geambasu, Columbia University Phillip Gibbons, Carnegie Mellon University Cristiano Giuffrida, VU Amsterdam Ashvin Goel, University of Toronto Joseph Gonzalez, UC Berkeley Andreas Haeberlen, University of Pennsylvania Torsten Hoefler, ETH Zurich Y. Charlie Hu, Purdue University Flavio Junqueira, Microsoft Research Evangelia Kalyvianaki, City University London Kimberly Keeton, HP Labs (co-chair) Idit Keidar, Technion Donald Kossman, ETH Zurich and Microsoft Research Lucja Kot, Cornell University Christos Kozyrakis, Stanford Robert Morris, MIT CSAIL Derek Murray, Google Madan Musuvathi, Microsoft Research Dushyanth Narayanan, Microsoft Research Raluca Popa, UC Berkeley Don Porter, Stony Brook University Nuno Preguica, Nova University of Lisbon Oriana Riva, Microsoft Research Rodrigo Rodrigues, INESC-ID and IST (Univ. Lisbon) (co-chair) Franziska Roesner, University of Washington Chris Rossbach, VMware Research Group Indrajit Roy, HP Labs Alejandro Russo, Chalmers Bianca Schroeder, University of Toronto Malte Schwarzkopf, MIT CSAIL Marco Serafini, Qatar Computing Research Institute Robert Soulé, Università della Svizzera italiana Michael Swift, University of Wisconsin Gaël Thomas, Telecom SudParis |
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