Difference between revisions of "GPCE 2009"

From Openresearch
Jump to: navigation, search
(rollback)
(mRYHNJIbEsESZgKztU)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Event
+
I commend all of these birght minds in taking the initiative to inform Washington of their ideas, work, and beliefs. I hope it doesn't shadow Congress' ability to understand it, and assimilate the message. I sometimes wonder whether anyone in Congress can understand anything anymore.We as a country have taken a back seat to the space programs worldwide with the retirement of the Shuttle Fleet.  Whereas plans were in place long ago to replace them with newer vehicles and programs, there is unfortunately no such animal anymore. We as a nation have taken second and third place in this area as we now are paying some 30 million dollars per seat to ride on the Russian built Soyuz platform to gain access to and from the ISS. And only to the ISS.  Nowhere else.  No exploration, no traveling to other planets, asteroids, or sectors in space for research and education.I pulled a list off the listserver at NASA on a document sometime ago on the the various spinoff technologies since NASA was known as NACA in the early early years. To date the document is hugely impressive. And large. While I didn't count them, I sat for at least two hours reading it.  And still wasn't done.  I am not sure if those in positions in Congress really know what they are doing, what they are accomplishing or creating as a result of their actions.  I do know it is not the right course or action.  We are now right back at the front of the late fifties, prior to JFK and his direction. It is sad.While commercialization of the Space Program seems to be the current buzz, one cannot keep from thinking about one critical componentSuccess.   Commercially, companies have to be successful at conclusion of their research, development, and be able to profitably market it.  Resources and funding while present now, may not be able to withstand the uncertainties of lasting in the financial arena. Granted you have the grants, and submissions of angel funding, but all these areas eventually will dry up.  Because where NASA had the edge was we as a country funded this research without the overhead pressure to profit from it.  We designed, built, and developed alongside technology to allow it to be applied to a problem for a project.  That technology resulted in spinoff, that was THEN commercially refined, and marketed.  But the groundwork was not done on a profit overhead.  I am worried that these companies will go like gangbusters out of the gate. But as time progresses, if the return on investment is not where it should be, projects have a tendency to die, or be abandoned because it no longer is profitable to continue. I realize government is the so called pork barrel container of funds. I realize that there is a large area of these types in government that can be eliminated and probably should.  But I don't think NASA is one of them. I do think that Commercial Spaceflight is feasible, but should as these birght minds in the letter above suggest, be concurrent to NASA.  Side by side, working together.  In this manner I believe it is a win-win for everyone in the country as well as our important next generation.I am 52 years old.  My generation has failed in this country.  We tried to fix it, we tried to dig it out of the proverbial ditch.  But we failed.  Now it is up to this new generation to try their hands out at fixing and repairing it.  It is their turn.  I sincerely hope they can pull it off where we failed at doing it.  But if we deny them the primal resources to begin with, are we not basically creating and setting them all up for failure?  I think we are.Therefore, Congress needs to wake up.  They need to get their heads straight.  And most importantly fund NASA like it should be funded.  It should continue for our new generation to have the tools and the drive to fix and repair their world.  And Congress needs to do it before it is too late.
|Acronym=GPCE 2009
 
|Title=8th International Conference on Generative Programming and Component Engineering
 
|Series=GPCE
 
|Type=Conference
 
|Field=Software engineering
 
|Start date=2009/10/04
 
|End date=2009/10/05
 
|Homepage=www.gpce.org
 
|City=Denver
 
|State=Colorado
 
|Country=USA
 
|Submission deadline=2009/05/18
 
|Abstract deadline=2009/05/11
 
|Paper deadline=2009/05/18
 
|Workshop deadline=2009/03/15
 
|Tutorial deadline=2009/04/19
 
|Notification=2009/06/30
 
}}
 
<pre>
 
 
 
  Call for Papers
 
 
 
Eighth International Conference on
 
    Generative Programming and Component Engineering (GPCE 2009)
 
 
 
October 4-5, 2009
 
  Denver, Colorado
 
    (co-located with MODELS 2009 and SLE 2009)
 
 
 
http://www.gpce.org
 
 
 
 
 
Important Dates
 
---------------
 
 
 
* Submission of abstracts: May 11, 2009
 
* Submission: May 18, 2009
 
* Notification: June 30, 2009
 
 
 
Workshops and tutorials (submission via MODELS 2009)
 
* Workshop Proposals: March 15, 2009
 
* Tutorial Proposals: April 19, 2009
 
 
 
 
 
Scope
 
-----
 
 
 
Generative and component approaches are revolutionizing software
 
development similar to how automation and components revolutionized
 
manufacturing. Generative Programming (developing programs that
 
synthesize other programs), Component Engineering (raising the level
 
of modularization and analysis in application design), and
 
Domain-Specific Languages (DSLs) (elevating program specifications to
 
compact domain-specific notations that are easier to write, maintain,
 
and analyze) are key technologies for automating program development.
 
 
 
The International Conference on Generative Programming and Component
 
Engineering provides a venue for researchers and practitioners
 
interested in techniques for enhancing the productivity, quality, and
 
time-to-market in software development that stems from deploying
 
components and automating program generation. In addition to exploring
 
cutting-edge techniques for developing generative and component-based
 
software, our goal is to foster further cross-fertilization between
 
the software engineering research community and the programming
 
languages community.
 
 
 
 
 
Submissions
 
-----------
 
 
 
Research papers:
 
 
 
10 pages in SIGPLAN proceedings style (sigplanconf.cls) reporting
 
original research results that contribute to scientific knowledge in
 
the areas listed below (the PC chair can advise on appropriateness).
 
 
 
Tool demonstrations:
 
 
 
Tool demonstrations should present available tools that implement novel
 
generative and component-based software engineering techniques. Any of the
 
GPCE'09 topics of interest are appropriate areas for research demonstrations
 
but purely commercial tool demonstrations will not be accepted. Submissions
 
should contain a tool description of 4 pages in SIGPLAN proceedings style
 
(sigplanconf.cls) that will be published in the proceedings, and a  
 
demonstration outline of up to 2 pages text plus 2 pages screen shots that
 
will be used by the PC to evaluate the submission.
 
 
 
Tutorials and Workshops:
 
 
 
Tutorials and workshops of interest to the GPCE audience can be
 
submitted to MODELS 2009. Please contact the corresponding MODELS
 
chairs for submission details. Accepted MODELS tutorials and workshops
 
that are primarily aimed at the GPCE audience will preferably be
 
scheduled for Tuesday, October 6, 2009.
 
 
 
MODELS 2009 Tutorial Chair:
 
* Thomas Weigert (Missouri University of Science and Technology, USA)
 
 
 
MODELS 2009 Workshop Chair:
 
* James Bieman (Colorado State University, USA)
 
 
 
 
 
Topics
 
------
 
 
 
GPCE seeks contributions in software engineering and in programming
 
languages related (but not limited) to:
 
 
 
* Generative programming
 
   o Reuse, meta-programming, partial evaluation, multi-stage and
 
    multi-level languages, step-wise refinement, generic programming
 
   o Semantics, type systems, symbolic computation, linking and
 
    explicit substitution, in-lining and macros, templates,
 
    program transformation
 
  o Runtime code generation, compilation, active libraries,
 
    synthesis from specifications, development methods,
 
    generation of non-code artifacts, formal methods, reflection
 
* Generative techniques for
 
  o Product-line architectures
 
  o Distributed, real-time and embedded systems
 
  o Model-driven development and architecture
 
  o Resource bounded/safety critical systems.
 
* Component-based software engineering
 
  o Reuse, distributed platforms and middleware, distributed
 
    systems, evolution, patterns, development methods,
 
    deployment and configuration techniques, formal methods
 
* Integration of generative and component-based approaches
 
* Domain engineering and domain analysis
 
  o Domain-specific languages including visual and UML-based DSLs
 
* Separation of concerns
 
  o Aspect-oriented and feature-oriented programming,
 
  o Intentional programming and multi-dimensional separation of
 
    concerns
 
* Industrial applications of the above
 
 
 
Submissions must adhere to SIGPLAN's republication policy. Please
 
contact the program chair if you have any questions about how this
 
policy applies to your paper (chair09@gpce.org).
 
 
 
 
 
Organization
 
------------
 
 
 
General Chair:  Jeremy Siek (University of Colorado at Boulder, USA)
 
Program Chair:  Bernd Fischer (University of Southampton, UK)
 
Publicity Chair: Giorgios Economopoulos (University of Southampton, UK)
 
 
 
Program Committee:
 
* Sven Apel (University of Passau, Germany)
 
* Ira D. Baxter (Semantic Designs, USA)
 
* Martin Bravenboer (University of Massachusetts Amherst, USA)
 
* Tomas Bures (Charles University in Prague, Czech Republic)
 
* Charles Consel (INRIA / LaBRI, France)
 
* Ivica Crnkovic (Malardalen University, Sweden)
 
* Krzysztof Czarnecki (University of Waterloo, Canada)
 
* Ewen Denney (RIACS / NASA Ames, USA)
 
* Martin Erwig (Oregon State University, USA)
 
* Ronald Garcia (Rice University, USA)
 
* Kevin Hammond (University of St Andrews, UK)
 
* Magne Haveraaen (University of Bergen, Norway)
 
* Shan Shan Huang (Georgia Institute of Technology, USA)
 
* Jaakko Jarvi (Texas A&M University, USA)
 
* Sam Kamin (University of Illinois, USA)
 
* Kung-Kiu Lau (University of Manchester, UK)
 
* Julia Lawall (University of Copenhagen, Denmark)
 
* Christian Lengauer (University of Passau, Germany)
 
* Andrew Lumsdaine (Indiana University, USA)
 
* Klaus Ostermann (University of Aarhus, Denmark)
 
* Zoltan Porkolab (Eotvos Lorand University, Hungary)
 
* Bran V. Selic (Malina Software, Canada)
 
* Doug Smith (Kestrel Institute, USA)
 
* Tetsuo Tamai (University of Tokyo, Japan)
 
* Juha-Pekka Tolvanen (MetaCase, Finland)
 
* Eelco Visser (Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands)
 
* Markus Voelter (itemis AG, Germany)
 
* Eric Van Wyk (University of Minnesota, USA)
 
* Steffen Zschaler (Lancaster University, UK)
 
</pre>
 

Revision as of 14:33, 5 March 2012

I commend all of these birght minds in taking the initiative to inform Washington of their ideas, work, and beliefs. I hope it doesn't shadow Congress' ability to understand it, and assimilate the message. I sometimes wonder whether anyone in Congress can understand anything anymore.We as a country have taken a back seat to the space programs worldwide with the retirement of the Shuttle Fleet. Whereas plans were in place long ago to replace them with newer vehicles and programs, there is unfortunately no such animal anymore. We as a nation have taken second and third place in this area as we now are paying some 30 million dollars per seat to ride on the Russian built Soyuz platform to gain access to and from the ISS. And only to the ISS. Nowhere else. No exploration, no traveling to other planets, asteroids, or sectors in space for research and education.I pulled a list off the listserver at NASA on a document sometime ago on the the various spinoff technologies since NASA was known as NACA in the early early years. To date the document is hugely impressive. And large. While I didn't count them, I sat for at least two hours reading it. And still wasn't done. I am not sure if those in positions in Congress really know what they are doing, what they are accomplishing or creating as a result of their actions. I do know it is not the right course or action. We are now right back at the front of the late fifties, prior to JFK and his direction. It is sad.While commercialization of the Space Program seems to be the current buzz, one cannot keep from thinking about one critical component. Success. Commercially, companies have to be successful at conclusion of their research, development, and be able to profitably market it. Resources and funding while present now, may not be able to withstand the uncertainties of lasting in the financial arena. Granted you have the grants, and submissions of angel funding, but all these areas eventually will dry up. Because where NASA had the edge was we as a country funded this research without the overhead pressure to profit from it. We designed, built, and developed alongside technology to allow it to be applied to a problem for a project. That technology resulted in spinoff, that was THEN commercially refined, and marketed. But the groundwork was not done on a profit overhead. I am worried that these companies will go like gangbusters out of the gate. But as time progresses, if the return on investment is not where it should be, projects have a tendency to die, or be abandoned because it no longer is profitable to continue. I realize government is the so called pork barrel container of funds. I realize that there is a large area of these types in government that can be eliminated and probably should. But I don't think NASA is one of them. I do think that Commercial Spaceflight is feasible, but should as these birght minds in the letter above suggest, be concurrent to NASA. Side by side, working together. In this manner I believe it is a win-win for everyone in the country as well as our important next generation.I am 52 years old. My generation has failed in this country. We tried to fix it, we tried to dig it out of the proverbial ditch. But we failed. Now it is up to this new generation to try their hands out at fixing and repairing it. It is their turn. I sincerely hope they can pull it off where we failed at doing it. But if we deny them the primal resources to begin with, are we not basically creating and setting them all up for failure? I think we are.Therefore, Congress needs to wake up. They need to get their heads straight. And most importantly fund NASA like it should be funded. It should continue for our new generation to have the tools and the drive to fix and repair their world. And Congress needs to do it before it is too late.

Facts about "GPCE 2009"
Abstract deadlineMay 11, 2009 +
AcronymGPCE 2009 +
End dateOctober 5, 2009 +
Event in seriesGPCE +
Event typeConference +
Has coordinates39° 44' 21", -104° 59' 5"Latitude: 39.739236111111
Longitude: -104.98486111111
+
Has location cityDenver +
Has location countryCategory:USA +
Has location stateColorado +
Homepagehttp://www.gpce.org +
IsAEvent +
NotificationJune 30, 2009 +
Paper deadlineMay 18, 2009 +
Start dateOctober 4, 2009 +
Submission deadlineMay 18, 2009 +
Title8th International Conference on Generative Programming and Component Engineering +
Tutorial deadlineApril 19, 2009 +
Workshop deadlineMarch 15, 2009 +