CFP in pdf
The 29th ACM SIGACT-SIGOPS Symposium on Principles of Distributed
Computing (PODC 2010) will be held on July 25-28, 2010 in Zurich,
Switzerland
Important dates:
Regular papers:
Abstract registration: February 10, 2010
Submission: February 17, 2010
Notification: April 15, 2010
Camera-ready: May 17, 2010
Brief announcements:
Deadlines: April 27, 2010
Notification: May 15, 2010
Camera-ready: May 26, 2010
PODC solicits papers on all areas of distributed computing.
Papers from all viewpoints, including theory, practice, and
experimentation, are welcome.
The common goal is to improve understanding of the principles
underlying distributed computing.
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to, the following
subjects:
- distributed algorithms: design, analysis, and complexity
- communication networks: architectures, services, protocols,
applications
- multiprocessor and multi-core architectures and algorithms
- shared and transactional memory, synchronization protocols, concurrent
programming
- fault-tolerance, reliability, availability, self organization
- Internet applications, social networks, recommendation systems
- distributed operating systems, middleware platforms, databases
- game-theoretic approaches to distributed computing
- peer-to-peer systems, overlay networks, distributed data management
- high-performance, cluster, cloud and grid computing
- wireless networks, mobile computing, autonomous agents, location- and
context-aware distributed systems
- security in distributed computing, cryptographic protocols
- sensor, mesh, and ad hoc networks
- specification, semantics, verification, and testing of distributed
systems
Papers are to be submitted electronically, following the guidelines available
on the conference web page.
Note that abstracts of regular papers must be submitted one week before the
full papers;
note also that the deadlines are firm.
A submission for a regular presentation must report on original
research. Papers submitted for regular presentations must contain results that have
not previously appeared, and have not been concurrently submitted to a journal
or conference with published proceedings. Any
partial overlap with any such published or concurrently submitted
paper must be clearly indicated.
Papers for regular presentation include (1) a cover
page, stating the title of the paper, the authors' affiliation,
and indication of whether the paper should be considered for the
best student paper award, and if so the name(s) of the student(s)
recommended for the award; (2) no more than 12 single-column pages
on letter-size paper using at least 11-point font;
(3) an extra page used for references only. Additional details
may be included in a clearly marked appendix, which will be
read at the discretion of the program committee.
A submission for a brief announcement must be no longer than 3
single-column pages on letter-size paper using at least 11-point font. Such submissions
may describe work in progress or work presented elsewhere. A submission
that is not selected for regular presentation may be invited for a brief
announcement.
Publication.
Regular papers and brief announcements will be included in the conference proceedings.
Regular papers receive up to 10 letter-size pages, brief announcements receive up to
2 letter-size pages.
Awards.
Every regular paper is eligible for the best paper award and the
best presentation award. Regular papers co-authored by full-time
students may also be eligible for the best student paper award--for
a paper to be considered, the nominated authors should be full time
students at the time of submission and they should be principally
responsible for the paper's contributions. The program committee
may decline to make these awards or may split them.
Special issues.
For the first time this year, PODC will have two special issues:
one in JACM and one in DC. The PC will invite the submissions of
extended versions of the top accepted papers to one or the other
of these special issues, based on quality and scope of each paper.