Any last submissions?

 

The reviewers are the core contributors from last year.

 

From: fonc-boun...@vpri.org [mailto:fonc-boun...@vpri.org] On Behalf Of Max
Orhai
Sent: Thursday, March 29, 2012 2:30 PM
To: Fundamentals of New Computing
Subject: Re: [fonc] Everything You Know (about Parallel Programming) Is
Wrong!: A Wild Screed about the Future

 

 

On Wed, Mar 28, 2012 at 5:46 PM, David Barbour <dmbarb...@gmail.com> wrote:

 

Where we do give up determinism, it should be explicit and carefully
considered, and we should have a lot of control over exactly where it leaks
into our programs.

 

Hear, hear! And another thing: the mathematics of probability is pretty
mature, relative to all this computation stuff that we're just now figuring
out. Probability is highly applicable to (bounded) nondeterminism, but I get
the impression that most CS theorists don't tend to learn much about it, and
I know for sure that it gets extremely short shrift in the applied CS
curriculum at my school.

 

Dave Ungar loves being deliberately provocative, but I really don't
understand why he's so attached to the (obviously unscalable) shared memory
imperative programming model... except, perhaps, he thinks that's the only
model the great unwashed masses of industry coders can handle. If so, I sure
hope he's wrong.

 

But, lets face it, after decades of real-world deployment, Erlang is still
considered an exotic language, and hardly anybody outside the ivory towers
has even heard of Kahn nets, FRP, CALM, etc. These don't get taught in the
undergrad CS curriculum either.

 

Programmers, like everybody else, only get to choose their problems inasmuch
as they are aware of the choices.

 

-- Max

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