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- From: woods@robohack.UUCP (Greg A. Woods)
- Subject: Call For Participation: USENIX Symposium on UNIX Applications Development
- Organization: Elegant Communications Inc.
- Followup-To: poster
- Summary: This is the third and final call for participation in the first ever
- USENIX Symposium on UNIX Applications Development
- Message-ID: <1992Nov16.061917.15357@robohack.UUCP>
- Date: Mon, 16 Nov 92 06:19:17 GMT
- Lines: 236
-
-
-
- Call for Participation
-
- USENIX Symposium: UNIX Applications Development
-
- Toronto, Ontario; Canada
- Marriott Hotel
- March 29 - April 1, 1993
-
- Co-sponsored by the USENIX Association and UniForum Canada.
-
- One of the major uses of UNIX today is the support, development, and
- execution of applications ultimately used in achieving end users' business
- goals. The current trends in large end-user organizations of downsizing
- major applications from older mainframes to less expensive, more powerful,
- and simpler, modern, networked, machines lend UNIX a serious position in
- the commercial marketplace. Consequently, more and more computing and
- information systems professionals are encountering UNIX when developing
- and maintaining applications.
-
- The purpose of this symposium is to expose the challenges of building
- and maintaining applications on UNIX platforms, to discuss solutions
- and experiences, and to explore existing practice and techniques.
-
- This symposium will feature papers, invited talks, panel discussions, and
- tutorials on aspects of designing, building, testing, debugging, and
- maintaining applications within and for the UNIX environment. There will
- also be ample opportunity at this symposium to meet your peers and make
- contact with others with similar interests.
-
- This symposium will provide valuable information to designers,
- programmers, and managers who are planning to port existing
- applications into the UNIX environment or move development and
- maintenance teams from proprietary environments to UNIX.
-
-
- IMPORTANT DATES for Refereed Paper Submissions
-
- Extended Abstracts Due: December 4, 1992
-
- Notifications to Authors: December 16, 1992
-
- Final Papers Due: February 12, 1993
-
-
- Other Important Dates
-
- Pre-Registration Materials available Mid-January, 1993
- Tutorial Programme Tue., March 29, 1993
- Technical Sessions Wed., March 30 - Thu., April 1, 1993
- Birds-Of-a-Feather Sessions Tue., March 29 - Thu., April 1, 1993
- USENIX Reception Thu. evening, April 1, 1993
-
- USENIX is co-sponsoring this event with UniForum Canada, a non-profit
- membership organization. UniForum\*(tm is a trademark of UniForum.
-
-
- SUGGESTED TOPICS
-
- Topics may include, but are not limited to:
-
- Graphical User Interfaces \- The X Window System \- User Interface Design
- & Standards. Open Look, Motif, NeWS, and so on. What is a style guide?
- Importance of consistency and ease of use.
-
- Porting Issues \- Issues surrounding the tasks of porting an existing
- application to UNIX, as well as issues of making UNIX applications
- portable to other architectures and other platforms.
-
- Networking \- Client / Server design issues, etc.
-
- Project Management \- Using UNIX tools to support project management.
- CASE \- What, When, Why, Who, How.
-
- O/S Issues \- Overcoming limitations set by hardware and operating systems.
-
- Security \- The impact of security features. Schemes for maintaining
- security within an application.
-
- Transaction Processing \- Implementing distributed transaction processing
- for UNIX applications.
-
- Fourth Generation Languages \- What advantages and disadvantages do 4GL's
- have in a UNIX environment?
-
- Distributed Applications \- How do you make the best use of existing UNIX
- functionality (such as e-mail) to build UNIX applications? What are the
- issues of building and/or using distributed databases?
-
- Object Oriented Programming \- Productivity, languages, techniques, case
- studies, etc.
-
- Object Oriented Databases \- Advantages, etc.
-
- The Corporate Internet \- High Speed for the Elite, or Connectivity for
- the Masses? ISDN, TCP/IP, OSI, UUCP. Governments, privateers, service
- providers, co-operatives, telecoms. Network philosophy \- open road,
- tollbooths, freeloaders or lifeblood.
-
- Delivering/Installing Applications \- What's the best way? How to prevent
- piracy, worms, viruses, etc. How to do updates effectively and securely.
-
- Testing & Certifying Binary Applications \- Who does this? What does this
- achieve? How long does it take? Applications and POSIX.1 Conformance
- Testing.
-
- Standards \- ABI/API/ANDF \- How, What, Where, When, Why? What are they?
- How are these standards used? How do they affect applications? What
- features does each have? What benefits are derived from using each?
- Where should they be used/followed? When will they be real? How do you
- keep up with new standards? Why are they necessary?
-
-
- SUBMISSION DETAILS
-
- Papers may feature real-life experiences, as well as research topics.
- Both case-study and technical papers will be accepted. Case studies
- should describe existing systems and include implementation details and
- may also include performance data where practical.
-
- Submissions must be in the form of extended abstracts (1500-2500 words;
- 3-5 pages in length). Shorter abstracts might not give the programme
- committee enough information to judge your work fairly and, in most cases,
- your submission will be rejected. Longer abstracts and full papers simply
- cannot be read by the committee in the time available. Feel free to
- append a full paper to an extended abstract; this is sometimes useful
- during evaluation. The extended abstract should represent your paper in
- \fIshort form\fR. The committee wants to see that you have a real
- project, that you are familiar with the work in your area, and that you
- can clearly explain yourself.
-
- Submissions may be in any form, but e-mail copies of text intended to
- be formatted by troff is highly prefered!
-
- Please note that presentations are usually scheduled to last 25 minutes.
- Your presentation should provide an overview of your paper and entice your
- audience to read it in the proceedings and hopefully follow up on your
- solution, or take your advice into consideration.
-
- Papers will be judged on technical merit, relevance to the theme, and
- suitability for presentation. Papers are welcome from software (and
- hardware) vendors who wish to share their innovative solutions an
- techniques, but be fore-warned that product marketing will not be
- tolerated.
-
- Persons interested in participating in panel discussions should
- contact <woods@usenix.org>.
-
-
- TUTORIAL PROGRAMME
-
- Tutorial Coordinator: Dan Klein <dvk@usenix.org> Tel: 412-421-2332
-
- Explore topics essential to successful use and development of UNIX and
- UNIX-like operating systems, X windows, networking and interoperability,
- advanced programming languages, and related areas of interest. The USENIX
- Association's well-respected tutorial programme offers you introductory
- and advanced, intensive yet practical tutorials. Courses are presented by
- skilled teachers who are hands-on experts in their topic areas.
-
- In an effort to continue to provide the best possible tutorial slate,
- USENIX is soliciting proposals for new tutorials. If you are interested
- in presenting a tutorial, contact the Tutorial Coordinator (see above).
-
-
- INVITED TALKS
-
- Interim Invited Talks and Panel Co-ordinator: Greg A. Woods <woods@usenix.org>
-
- As part of the technical sessions, a series of invited talks provides
- introductory and advanced information about a variety of interesting
- topics, such as using standard UNIX tools and employing specialized
- applications. We welcome suggestions for topics as well as request
- proposals for particular Talks. In your proposal, state the main focus,
- include a brief outline, and be sure to emphasize why your topic is of
- general interest to our community.
-
-
- BIRDS-OF-A-FEATHER SESSIONS
-
- BOF Scheduling: USENIX Conference Office (conference@usenix.org>
-
- Birds-of-a-Feather sessions (BoFs) bring together devotees of many varied
- disciplines for discussions, announcements, mingling, and strategy sharing
- during evenings at the symposium. Schedule a BoF in advance or on-site.
-
-
- WORK-IN-PROGRESS REPORTS
-
- WIPS Coordinator: Greg A. Woods <woods@usenix.org>
-
- These reports provide researchers with 10 minutes to speak on current work
- and receive valuable feedback. Present your interim results, novel
- approaches, or newly-completed work. Schedule your report in advance or
- on-site.
-
-
- FOR MORE INFORMATION
-
- Materials containing all details of the technical and tutorial programme,
- conference registration, hotel and airline discount and reservation
- information will be mailed in January of 1993. If you wish to receive the
- pre-registration materials, please contact:
-
- USENIX Conference Office
- 22672 Lambert St., Suite 613
- El Toro, California
- 92630 U.S.A.
- conference@usenix.org
- +1 714 588-8649
- +1 714 588-9706 [FAX]
-
- Greg A. Woods
- Programme Chair
- #3 \- 46 Three Valleys Drive
- Don Mills, Ontario
- M3A 3B5 CANADA
- woods@usenix.org
- +1 416 443-1734
- +1 416 595-5425 [FAX]
-
-
- Programme Committee:
-
- Rob Kolstad, Berkeley Software Design <kolstad@bsdi.com>
- Evan Leibovitch, Sound Software <evan@telly.on.ca>
- Peter Renzland, Ontario Government <peter@renzland.org>
- Dan Tomlinson, Compusoft <compus!dan@uunet.uu.net>
- Greg A. Woods, Elegant Communications <woods@usenix.org>
- Elizabeth Zwicky, SRI International <zwicky@erg.sri.com>
- --
- Greg A. Woods
-
- woods@robohack.UUCP, woods@Elegant.COM VE3TCP UniForum Canada & ECI
- +1 416 443-1734 [home] +1 416 362-9772 [work] Toronto, Ontario; CANADA
-