Due April 08, 2011
OOPSLA Research Papers
OOPSLA 2011 solicits research papers that present new research, report novel technical results, advance the state of the art, or discuss experience or experimentation. The scope of OOPSLA includes all aspects of programming languages and software engineering, broadly construed.
Papers may address any aspect of software development, including requirements, modeling, prototyping, design, implementation, generation, analysis, verification, testing, evaluation, project cancellation, maintenance, reuse, regeneration, replacement, and retirement of software systems. Papers on tools (such as new programming languages, dynamic or static program analyses, compilers, and garbage collectors) or techniques (such as new programming methodologies, type systems, design processes, code organization approaches, and management techniques) designed to reduce the time, effort, and/or cost of software systems are particularly welcome.
Onward! Papers
See http://onward-conference.org/2011/papers-call.html
Wavefront
The Wavefront program is about the systems that innovative software developers are creating and deploying today. The program will include papers reporting on the innovative production software and papers reporting on advanced development results. In both cases papers will be chosen for their potential for immediate impact on state-of-the art software development projects.
The nature of computing is rapidly changing. Whether you label it ubiquitous, ambient, pervasive, social, mobile, web, cloud, or post-PC computing, it touches all aspects of human life. Wavefront papers are about the real systems, programming languages, and applications that are at the heart of this transition. Possible topics include but are not limited to:
- Cloud computing platforms
- Evolving the universal browser/web client platform
- Security and privacy issues
- JavaScript language evolution
- New browser/web client platform architectures
- Tools and techniques for modern application development
- Frameworks and toolkits
- Persona management and synchronization
- High performance JavaScript implementations
- Power efficient computing techniques
- Location aware computing experiences
- New user interface techniques, scaling from the pocket to the wall
- User management of digital assets
- Data storage and ubiquitous access.
- Robust, non-stop, and scalable services
- Social computing applications and techniques
All accepted papers will be presented at the Splash conference, published in the Splash Wavefront conference proceedings and will become permanent entries in the ACM Digital Library.
Educators' and Trainers' Symposium
The Educators' and Trainers' Symposium provides a forum for academic and industry professionals with a vested interest in software development education and training to share their ideas for translating methods, practices, and theory into courses and curricula. The focus of this year's symposium is to set the course for software development education and training for the coming decade.
Workshops
Workshops are all about networking, sharing, exchanging, discussing, and maturing new exciting ideas, to enable you to start new collaborations and incubate new communities - whether you are seeking research partners, projects, potential funders, or practitioners to new and emergent ideas!
SPLASH workshops are a great way to grow your knowledge and expand your professional network. They are highly interactive events that provide a creative and collaborative environment where attendees from various industry and research organizations around the world meet to discuss, and solve challenging problems related to a variety of new emerging technologies and research areas.




