======================================================================== ==== Workshop on Practical Aspects of High-level Parallel Programming (PAPP 2004) http://f.loulergue.free.fr/PAPP2004
part of The International Conference on Computational Science http://www.cyfronet.krakow.pl/iccs2004/ June 7-9, 2004, Kraków, Poland Aims and scope Many applications of computing require performance levels attainable only on parallel architectures. Such systems are now readily available as their price/performance ratio continues to improve. The rapid development of affordable hardware for parallel computing makes the need to develop high-quality parallel software increasingly urgent. Sequential programming has long benefited from high-level programming techniques and tools that have made today's immense range of software economically viable. Two decades of research into high-level parallel programming (algorithmic skeletons, parallel extensions of functional languages, such as Haskell and ML, or parallel logic and constraint programming, parallel execution of declarative programs such SQL queries, etc.) has produced methods and tools that improve the price/performance ratio of parallel software, and broaden the range of target applications. Several emerging domains, such as Grid Computing, are currently raising new issues. GRIDs offer tremendous computing power. Nevertheless, this power is far from being effectively exploited. In addition to technical problems related to portability and access, Grid computing needs new programming paradigms. The PAPP workshop focuses on practical aspects of high-level parallel programming: design, implementation and optimization of high-level programming languages and tools (performance predictors working on high-level parallel/grid source code, visualisations of abstract behaviour, automatic hotspot detectors, high-level GRID resource managers, compilers, automatic generators, etc.), applications in all fields of high-performance computing, benchmarks and experiments. Research on high-level grid programming is particularly relevant. Topics We welcome submission of original, unpublished papers in English on topics including: - high-level programming models and tools for GRID computing - high-level parallel language design, implementation and optimisation - functional, logic, constraint programming for parallel, distributed and Grid systems - algorithmic skeletons and high level parallel libraries - generative (e.g. template-based) programming with algorithmic skeletons and high level parallel libraries - applications in all fields of high-performance computing (using high-level tools) - benchmarks, experiments using such languages and tools Paper submission and publication Prospective authors are invited to submit full papers in English presenting original research. Submitted papers must be unpublished and not submitted for publication elsewhere. Papers will go through a rigorous reviewing process. Each paper will be reviewed by at least two referees. The accepted papers will be published in the Springer-Verlag LNCS series, as part of the ICCS proceedings. Papers (PDF file) should be sent to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with subject "[PAPP Workshop] Submission" no later than Monday 8 December 2003. We invite you to submit a full paper of 6 to 10 pages (A4), describing new and original results. The submitted paper must be formatted according to the rule of Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS). Submission implies the willingness of at least one of the authors to register and present the paper. An early email with your intention to submit a paper would be greatly appreciated (especially if you have doubts about the relevance of your paper). Important Dates December 8, 2003 (FIRM DEADLINE) Full paper due January 9, 2004 Notification Februray 10, 2004 Camera-ready paper due Programme committee Rob Bisseling (Univ. of Utrecht, The Netherlands) Matthieu Exbrayat (Univ. of Orléans, France) Clemens Grelck (Univ. of Lübeck, Germany) Kevin Hammond (Univ. of St. Andrews, UK) Zhenjiang Hu (Univ. of Tokyo, Japan) Frédéric Loulergue (Univ. Paris Val de Marne, France) Quentin Miller (Miller Research Ltd., UK) Susanna Pelagatti (Univ. of Pisa, Italy) Alexander Tiskin (Univ. of Warwick, UK) Chair and Organizer Dr. Frédéric LOULERGUE Laboratory of Algorithms, Complexity and Logic (LACL) University of Paris Val de Marne 61, avenue du Général de Gaulle F-94010 CRÉTEIL - FRANCE [EMAIL PROTECTED] ======================================================================== ==== _______________________________________________ Haskell mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.haskell.org/mailman/listinfo/haskell