Dear TC6 members,
I had a request for a loan of 3000 CHF for PWC 2002 in Singapore
(October 2002).
The request was made by the organizer ( Guy Omidyar) and it has the
support of the WG 6.8 chairman and myself.
I would like to ask TC6 for approval. No answer from your side will mean
approval to simplify the exchange of mails.
Please answer until October 31st.
Best regards
Augusto
Dear TC6 members,
I attach the updated list of items to be included in future TC6 reports.
A template will be created in the TC6 web site to make your life easier
when writing the report.
Best regards
Augusto
We are inviting full papers describing original contributions
for a special issue of Computer Communications on
network support for GRID computing.
Details of this special issue can be found at
http://www.comp.lancs.ac.uk/computing/users/laurent/GRID_CfP.html
We apologize if you receive multiple copies of this call.
Please feel free to distribute a copy of this call to
those who might be interested.
David Hutchison
Laurent Mathy
Olivier Bonaventure
Guest editors
of possible interest:
================================
Subject: [UAI] letter of resignation from Machine Learning journal
Date: Mon, 08 Oct 2001 16:28:26 -0700
From: Michael Jordan <jordan(a)EECS.Berkeley.EDU>
To: uai(a)cs.orst.edu
Dear colleagues in machine learning,
The forty people whose names appear below have resigned from the
Editorial Board of the Machine Learning Journal (MLJ). We would
like to make our resignations public, to explain the rationale for
our action, and to indicate some of the implications that we see for
members of the machine learning community worldwide.
The machine learning community has come of age during a period
of enormous change in the way that research publications are
circulated. Fifteen years ago research papers did not circulate
easily, and as with other research communities we were fortunate
that a viable commercial publishing model was in place so that
the fledgling MLJ could begin to circulate. The needs of the
community, principally those of seeing our published papers circulate
as widely and rapidly as possible, and the business model of
commercial publishers were in harmony.
Times have changed. Articles now circulate easily via the Internet,
but unfortunately MLJ publications are under restricted access.
Universities and research centers can pay a yearly fee of $1050 US to
obtain unrestricted access to MLJ articles (and individuals can pay
$120 US). While these fees provide access for institutions and
individuals who can afford them, we feel that they also have the
effect of limiting contact between the current machine learning
community and the potentially much larger community of researchers
worldwide whose participation in our field should be the fruit of
the modern Internet.
None of the revenue stream from the journal makes its way back to
authors, and in this context authors should expect a particularly
favorable return on their intellectual contribution---they should
expect a service that maximizes the distribution of their work.
We see little benefit accruing to our community from a mechanism
that ensures revenue for a third party by restricting the communication
channel between authors and readers.
In the spring of 2000, a new journal, the Journal of Machine Learning
Research (JMLR), was created, based on a new vision of the journal
publication process in which the editorial board and authors retain
significant control over the journal's content and distribution.
Articles published in JMLR are available freely, without limits and
without conditions, at the journal's website, http://www.jmlr.org.
The content and format of the website are entirely controlled by the
editorial board, which also serves its traditional function of
ensuring rigorous peer review of journal articles. Finally, the
journal is also published in a hardcopy version by MIT Press.
Authors retain the copyright for the articles that they publish in
JMLR. The following paragraph is taken from the agreement that every
author signs with JMLR (see www.jmlr.org/forms/agreement.pdf):
You [the author] retain copyright to your article, subject only
to the specific rights given to MIT Press and to the Sponsor [the
editorial board] in the following paragraphs. By retaining your
copyright, you are reserving for yourself among other things unlimited
rights of electronic distribution, and the right to license your work
to other publishers, once the article has been published in JMLR
by MIT Press and the Sponsor [the editorial board]. After first
publication, your only obligation is to ensure that appropriate
first publication credit is given to JMLR and MIT Press.
We think that many will agree that this is an agreement that is
reflective of the modern Internet, and is appealing in its recognition
of the rights of authors to distribute their work as widely as possible.
In particular, authors can leave copies of their JMLR articles on their
own homepage.
Over the years the editorial board of MLJ has expanded to encompass
all of the various perspectives on the machine learning field, and
the editorial board's efforts in this regard have contributed greatly
to the sense of intellectual unity and community that many of us feel.
We believe, however, that there is much more to achieve, and that
our further growth and further impact will be enormously enhanced
if via our flagship journal we are able to communicate more freely,
easily, and universally.
Our action is not unprecedented. As documented at the Scholarly
Publishing
and Academic Resources Coalition (SPARC) website,
http://www.arl.org/sparc,
there are many areas in science where researchers are moving to low-cost
publication alternatives. One salient example is the case of the
journal "Logic Programming". In 1999, the editors and editorial
advisors of this journal resigned to join "Theory and Practice of
Logic Programming", a Cambridge University Press journal that encourages
electronic dissemination of papers.
In summary, our resignation from the editorial board of MLJ reflects
our belief that journals should principally serve the needs of the
intellectual community, in particular by providing the immediate and
universal access to journal articles that modern technology supports,
and doing so at a cost that excludes no one. We are excited about JMLR,
which provides this access and does so unconditionally. We feel that
JMLR provides an ideal vehicle to support the near-term and long-term
evolution of the field of machine learning and to serve as the flagship
journal for the field. We invite all of the members of the community
to submit their articles to the journal and to contribute actively to
its growth.
Sincerely yours,
Chris Atkeson
Peter Bartlett
Andrew Barto
Jonathan Baxter
Yoshua Bengio
Kristin Bennett
Chris Bishop
Justin Boyan
Carla Brodley
Claire Cardie
William Cohen
Peter Dayan
Tom Dietterich
Jerome Friedman
Nir Friedman
Zoubin Ghahramani
David Heckerman
Geoffrey Hinton
Haym Hirsh
Tommi Jaakkola
Michael Jordan
Leslie Kaelbling
Daphne Koller
John Lafferty
Sridhar Mahadevan
Marina Meila
Andrew McCallum
Tom Mitchell
Stuart Russell
Lawrence Saul
Bernhard Schoelkopf
John Shawe-Taylor
Yoram Singer
Satinder Singh
Padhraic Smyth
Richard Sutton
Sebastian Thrun
Manfred Warmuth
Chris Williams
Robert Williamson
CALL FOR PAPERS
ACM SIGCOMM 2002 Conference
August 19-23, 2002, Pittsburgh, Pa
The SIGCOMM 2002 conference seeks papers describing significant research
contributions to the field of computer and data communication networks.
Authors are invited to submit full papers concerned with the theory, practice,
and evaluation of networks. We are especially interested in innovative and
thought-provoking ideas across a wide range of topics related to networking.
Areas of interest include:
o Network protocols
o Algorithms, protocols, and systems for routing, switching, and signaling
o Network resource management and sharing, quality of service, operating system
support for networking
o Wireless, mobile, and pervasive networking, networking with specialized
devices and sensors
o Experimental and measurement results from operational networks and protocols
o Network management, traffic engineering, and real-world experience
o Network fault-tolerance and reliability, debugging, and troubleshooting
o Peer-to-peer networking architectures, overlay-based network services and
applications, novel distributed applications and middleware
o Systems and protocols for video, audio, telephony, and games
o Web protocols and systems, content distribution networks
o Network security, vulnerabilities, and defenses
o Programmable network architectures and infrastructure
o Lessons about network scalability, insights and models of the structure and
behavior of communication networks
NEW THIS YEAR: SIGCOMM 2002 solicits submissions of "position papers"
articulating high-level architectural visions, describing challenging future
directions, or critiquing current design wisdom. Accepted position papers will
be presented at the conference and appear in the proceedings. In addition,
SIGCOMM 2002 is open to proposals for panel discussions on timely and
controversial topics. Panel proposals should include the topic and motivation
for the panel, the names of the panel chair and panelists, and an outline of
the format of the panel discussion.
Tutorials
SIGCOMM 2002 will feature two days of full-day and half-day tutorials covering
single topics in detail, at both the introductory or advanced level. Proposals
should be sent to the Tutorials Chair and must include an extended abstract
(2-4 pages) containing a description of the topic and intended audience, a
biography of the speaker(s), and an indication of length. Individuals
interested in submitting tutorial proposals are encouraged to contact the
Tutorials Chair before the deadline to discuss the proposed content.
Student Paper Award
Papers submitted by students may be considered for a student paper award. To be
eligible, a student or group of students must be primary contributors to the
paper. Such papers should be indicated as such on the paper submission web
page.
SIGCOMM Award
SIGCOMM 2002 will begin with a keynote by the 2002 winner of the ACM SIGCOMM
Award for lifetime contributions to the field of computer communication.
Procedures for nominating candidates for the SIGCOMM Award can be obtained from
Craig Partridge (craig(a)bbn.com).
As in previous years, SIGCOMM 2002 will have a poster session and student
travel grant program. Visit the conference web site for details.
Submission details are available at:
www.acm.org/sigcomm/sigcomm2002/
Dates to Remember*
Submission of abstract to register paper:
25 January 2002 by 23:59 EST
Submission of full paper:
1 February 1 2002 by 23:59 EST
Submission of tutorial proposal:
15 February 2002
Submission of position paper:
1 March 2002
Submission of panel proposal:
1 March 2002
Notification of acceptance:
22 April 2002
Camera ready papers:
7 June 2002
*All deadlines are FIRM; unlike previous years, no extensions will be granted.
For more information:
General Co-Chairs
Peter Steenkiste, Carnegie Mellon University
prs(a)cs.cmu.edu
Matt Mathis, Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center
mathis(a)psc.edu
Program Co-Chairs
Vern Paxson, ACIRI/ICSI
vern(a)aciri.org
Hari Balakrishnan, MIT
hari(a)lcs.mit.edu
Tutorials Chair
Srinivasan Seshan, Carnegie Mellon University
srini(a)cmu.edu
Publicity Chair
Vivian Benton, Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center
benton(a)psc.edu
Local Arrangements Chair
Janet Brown, Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center
brown(a)psc.edu
'''
(o o)
---------------------o00--(-)--00o------------------------
"No one can make you feel inferior without your own
consent."
Eleanor Roosevelt
----------------------------------------------------------
benton(a)psc.edu