Call for Papers
AusGrid event has been
broadened to include all aspects of parallel and distributed computing and
hence it will be called as Australasian Symposium on Parallel and Distributed
Computing (PARDISC) from 2010. In both New
Zealand and Australia parallel and distributed
computing has been recognised as strategic technologies for driving their moves
towards knowledge economies. A number of projects and initiatives are underway
in both countries in these areas. There is a natural interest in tools which
support collaboration and access to remote resources given the challenges of
the countries location and sparse populations.
Topics of interest for the
symposium include but not limited to:
- Multicore
- GPUs and other forms
of special purpose processors
- Cluster computing
- Grid computing
- Cloud computing
- Peer-to-peer computing
- Service computing and
workflow management
- Managing large
distributed data sets
- Middleware and tools
- Performance evaluation
and modeling
- Problem-solving
environments
- Parallel programming
models, languages and compilers
- Runtime systems
- Operating systems
- Resource scheduling
and load balancing
- Data mining
- Reliability, security,
privacy and dependability
- Applications and e-Science
The symposium is primarily
targeted at researchers from Australia
and New Zealand,
however in the spirit of parallel and distributed computing, which aims to
enable collaboration of distributed virtual organizations, we encourage papers
and participation from international researchers.
A best paper award
sponsored by Manjrasoft Pty. Ltd, Australia
will be presented to a paper receiving the highest quality rating. In addition,
a special issue in a high quality international journal will be organized for
selected best papers.
Paper
Submission
The proceedings of the symposium will be
published through the Australian Computer Society Conferences in Research and
Practice in Information Technology (CRPIT) series, under the title ACSW
Frontiers 2010. The proceedings are included in the ACM digital library. Papers
will be peer-reviewed by at least 2 referees. Submitted papers should be at
most 10 pages in length and conform to the CRPIT formatting style. Formatting
instructions can be found at http://crpit.com/Authors.html.
Full papers (in PDF form) should be submitted by 17 August 2009.