MIDDLEWARE 2012 - ACM/IFIP/USENIX 13th International Conference on Middleware
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Website middleware2012.cs.mcgill.ca |
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Category Middleware
Deadline: May 25, 2012 | Date: December 03, 2012-December 07, 2012
Venue/Country: Montreal, Canada
Updated: 2012-02-09 14:56:11 (GMT+9)
Call For Papers - CFP
13th ACM/IFIP/USENIX International Middleware Conference3-7 December 2012CALL FOR PAPERSThe annual ACM/IFIP/USENIX Middleware conference is a premier forum for the discussion of innovations and recent advances in the design, implementation, experimentation, deployment, and usage of middleware systems. Middleware is the software that resides between applications and the underlying architecture. The goal of middleware is to facilitate the development of applications by providing higher-level abstractions for better programmability, performance, scalability, security, and a variety of essential features. It is a rapidly evolving and growing field.Following the success of past conferences in this series, the 13th International Middleware Conference will be the premier event for middleware research, technology and experimentation in 2012. The scope of the conference is the design, implementation, deployment, and evaluation of system platforms and architectures for current and future computing, storage, and communication environments. Highlights of the conference will include a high quality technical program, invited speakers, an industrial track, poster and demo presentations, a doctoral symposium, and workshops.Original submissions of research papers on a diversity of topics are sought, particularly those identifying new research directions. The topics of the conference include, but are not limited to:MIDDLEWARE PLATFORMS:Middleware for emerging cloud computing, datacenters, and server farmsMiddleware for traditional clusters and grid computingMiddleware for mobile devices, ubiquitous, and mobile computingMiddleware for sensor networks and embedded systemsMiddleware for Internet applications and social networksMiddleware for Web services, Web service composition, and SOAMiddleware for data-intensive computingEvent-based, publish/subscribe, and message-oriented middlewareMiddleware support for multimedia and tele-immersionReconfigurable, adaptable, and reflective middleware approachesMiddleware solutions for distributed databasesPeer-to-peer middleware solutionsMiddleware for social computing, social software, and crowdsourcingSYSTEMS ISSUES FOR MIDDLEWARE:Reliability and fault-toleranceScalability and performanceEnergy- and power-aware techniquesVirtualization, auto-scaling, provisioning, and schedulingSecurity, Privacy, and Information assuranceStorage and file systemsParallelized execution and techniquesDynamic configuration and self- or autonomic- management of middlewareReal-time solutions and quality of serviceCase studies on the evaluation and deployment of middleware: challenges, techniques, and lessons learnedDESIGN PRINCIPLES AND TOOLS:Programming frameworks, parallel programming, and design methodologies for middlewareEmpirical and deployment studies for middleware solutionsDebugging, diagnosis and distributed debugging of middlewareProbabilistic techniques and approaches for middlewareMethodologies and tools for middleware design, implementation, verification, and evaluationFormal methods, verification, and software engineering for middlewareSecurity and privacyOld Wine: Revisiting classical middleware paradigms, e.g., object models, aspect orientation, etc.Industry PapersThe conference strongly encourages submission of industry-focused papers and use case studies; full papers should be submitted to the main program, where they will be reviewed using appropriate criteria (e.g., emphasizing experience and system evolution), and accepted papers will be published in the main conference proceedings.Additionally, short industry-focused papers (6 pages, ACM style) may be submitted to a special industrial track whose Call for Papers will be issued separately, later. Accepted short papers will be presented at the conference and published in the ACM Digital Library.Big-Ideas PapersWe particularly encourage “big ideas papers”; that is papers that have the potential for opening up new research directions. For such papers, the potential to motivate new research is more important than full experimental evaluation, though some preliminary evidence of the effectiveness of the approach or idea is important. Authors should indicate in the introduction that their paper is a vision of a big idea, rather than more mature work. Such papers should clearly indicate why the idea is revolutionary and not evolutionary; what the major questions still to be answered are; and possible avenues of attack for the community to pursue towards the development of the idea. Experimentation and Deployment PapersWe also particularly encourage the submission of papers describing complete systems, platforms, and comprehensive experimental evaluations of alternative designs and solutions to well-known problems. The emphasis during the evaluation of these papers will be less on the novelty and more on the demonstrated usefulness and potential impact of the contributions, the extensive experimentation involved, the comprehensiveness of the approach, and the quality and weight of the lessons learned (including negative results).Open Availability of Datasets and CodeMiddleware 2012 authors are encouraged to make their system/library implementations and data sets publicly available for the community’s wide benefit as open-source software and their experimental data available as open datasets. The conference web site will provide storage space in which this information will be made available to the Middleware research community. This is particularly encouraged for “experimentation and deployment papers”.Submission GuidelinesThe Middleware 2012 proceedings will be published in the Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS). Papers should not exceed 20 pages in length, including the abstract, all figures, tables, and references. Papers should include a short abstract and up to six keywords. Submitted papers should adhere to the formatting instructions of the Springer LNCS Style.AwardsAt its discretion, the Program Committee may decide to award a Best Student Paper Award and a Best Paper Award to outstanding research contributions. If the primary author of a paper is a student, please identify this in the submission process.QuestionsFor any questions about the relevance of a topic for a submission, please contact the Program Chairs at middleware2012-pcchairs
lists.andrew.cmu.edu.Important DatesThe cut-off time will be 23:59 in the last timezone in the globe (UTC - 12).May 18, 2012 ? Abstract Submission (HARD DEADLINE)May 25, 2012 ? Paper Submission (HARD DEADLINE)August 10, 2012 ? Notification of Acceptance31 August, 2012 ? Camera-ready paper dueThere will be a separate call for industry papers, workshops, tutorials, and the Doctoral Symposium. Please check the website for dates.
Keywords: Accepted papers list. Acceptance Rate. EI Compendex. Engineering Index. ISTP index. ISI index. Impact Factor.
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