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Paper submission |
Monday November 14, 2011 (11:59PM US EST) |
Author notification |
Friday December 9, 2011 |
Conference |
Saturday January 28,
2012 |
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Programming language researchers have the principles, tools, algorithms and
abstractions to solve all kinds of problems, in all areas of computer science.
However, identifying and evaluating new problems, particularly those that lie
outside the typical core PL problems we all know and love, can be a
significant challenge. Hence, the goal of this workshop is to identify and
discuss problems that do not often show up in our top conferences, but where
programming language researchers can make a substantial impact. The hope is
that by holding such a forum and associating it directly with a top conference
like POPL, we can slowly start to increase the diversity of problems that are
studied by PL researchers and that by doing so we will increase the impact
that our community has on the world.
While many workshops associated with POPL have become more like
mini-conferences themselves, this is not the goal for Off the Beaten Track.
The workshop will be informal and structured to encourage discussion. It will
also be centered around problems and problem areas as opposed to fully-formed
solutions.
A good submission is one that outlines a new problem or an interesting,
underrepresented problem domain. Good submissions may also remind the PL
community of problems that were once in vogue but have not recently been seen
in top PL conferences. Good submissions do not need to propose
complete or even partial solutions, though there
should be some reason to believe that programming languages researchers have
the tools necessary to search for solutions in the area at hand.
Submissions that seem likely to stimulate discussion about the direction of
programming language research are encouraged. Possible topics include any of
the following.
- Biology, chemistry, or other natural sciences
- Art, music, graphics and animation
- Networking, cloud computing, systems
programming
- Linguistics
Economics, law, politics or other social
sciences
Web programming, social computing
Algorithms and complexity
Mathematics, statistics
Machine learning or artificial
intelligence
Education
Unusual compilers; underrepresented programming languages
Surprise us
We certainly hope to see submissions on
topics not mentioned above. The goal of the workshop is to be inclusive, not
exclusive. Submissions are evaluated on the basis of creativity, novelty,
clarity, possible impact and potential for stimulating discussion.
The one-day workshop will be structured to include the following
activities:
- Short submitted talks, ~5 minutes long, interleaved with 5-15 minutes
of discussion
- Longer submitted talks, ~15-30 minutes long, interleaved with
discussion
- Longer Invited talks
- A panel, organized as a coherent collection of short presentations by
panelists interleaved with discussion
The exact structure and length of talks will be decided by the
program chair in consultation with the program committee.
UPDATE: See the
preliminary program.
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Submissions come in two forms. In both cases, authors should not assume
that reviewers will be experts in the particular area of the submission -- they
will most likely not be. All submissions should be accessible to a wide
range of programming language researchers.
Submissions for 5-minute talks :
Authors will submit a 1-page PDF document, in at least 10pt font, printable on
US Letter paper. Authors are free to include links to multi-media content such
as youtube videos or online demos. Reviewers may or may not view linked
documents (it is up to authors to convince them to do so in their 1-page
submission). 5-minute talks will be followed by 5-15 minutes of
discussion.
Submissions for longer talks: Authors
will submit at most a 2-page PDF document, in at least 10pt font, printable on
US Letter paper. Put the words "Full Presentation"
in the title of your submission if you would like a longer talk. By
default, we will assume a short, 5-minute presentation if the title does not
contain these words and is 1 PDF page or less. Authors are free to include links to multi-media content such
as youtube videos or online demos. Reviewers may or may not view linked
documents (it is up to authors to convince them to do so in their 1-page
submission). Longer talks may be up to 1/2 an hour in length. The length will
depend on the submissions received and how the program committee decides to
assemble the program. Longer talks will be followed by 5-15
minutes of discussion.
Submission will be handled through EasyChair.
Click here
to submit a paper.
Reviewing of submissions will be very light. Authors should not expect a
detailed analysis of their submission by the program committee. Accepted
submissions will be posted as is on this on this web site. By submitting
a document, you agree that if it is accepted, it may be posted and you agree
that one of the co-authors will attend the workshop and give a talk there.
There will be no revision process and no formal publication.
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Program Chair:
David Walker (Princeton
University)
Program Committee:
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