|
Scope
Original contributions to the theory, design, analysis, implementation, or application of
distributed systems and networks are solicited.
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
- Distributed algorithms and their complexity.
- Concurrent programming, synchronization, shared and transactional memory.
- Multiprocessors and multi-cores, architectures and algorithms.
- Fault tolerance, reliability, availability.
- Game-theoretic approaches to distributed computing.
- Self-stabilizing, self-organizing, and autonomic systems.
- Communication networks: protocols, architectures, services, applications.
- Sensor, mobile, mesh, and ad-hoc networks.
- Security in distributed computing, cryptographic protocols.
- Tools and methodologies for specification, semantics, verification, and testing.
- Distributed computing issues in the Internet and the world-wide web.
- Distributed operating systems, middleware platforms, and database systems.
- Peer-to-peer systems, overlay networks, distributed data management.
Program
The program will include keynote lectures, regular presentations, and brief announcements of 5 to 10 minutes.
Satellite workshops and a tutorial on cloud computing will be held on the days before and after DISC (September 22 and 26).
Regular presentations of 25 minutes will be accompanied by papers of up to
15 pages in the proceedings. This form is intended for contributions reporting on original research,
submitted exclusively to this conference.
Brief announcements of 5 to 10 minutes will be accompanied by two page abstracts
in the proceedings. This format is a forum for brief communications, which may
be published in other conferences.
Invited speakers
- Lorenzo Alvisi, UT Austin
- Nir Shavit, Tel Aviv University
- Willy Zwaenepoel, EPFL
Submission
Papers are to be submitted electronically, following the guidelines available on the
conference web page. Authors unable to submit electronically
should contact the program chair to receive instructions.
Every submission should be in English, in .ps or .pdf format, and begin with
a cover page (not a cover letter) including:
- The title,
- the names of all authors and their affiliations,
- contact author's postal address, email address, and telephone number,
- a brief, one paragraph abstract of the paper,
- information whether the paper is a regular submission, or a brief announcement submission, and
- information whether the submission should be considered for the best student paper award.
A submission for a regular presentation must report on original research,
which has not previously appeared, and has not been concurrently submitted
to a journal or conference with published proceedings. Any partial overlap
with a published or concurrently submitted paper must be clearly indicated.
A regular submission should be no longer than 4500 words and not exceed 10
single-column pages using at least 11 point font on letter paper (excluding
cover page and references). Additional details may be included in a clearly
marked appendix that will be read at the discretion of the program committee.
A brief announcement submission should not exceed 3 pages in the same format.
Submissions deviating from these guidelines will be rejected without
consideration of their merits. Papers outside of the conference scope will
be rejected without review.
If requested by the authors on the cover page, a regular submission that is
not selected for a regular presentation can also be considered for the brief
announcement format. Such a request will not affect consideration of the paper
for a regular presentation
Publication
The symposium proceedings will be published by Springer in its LNCS series. Extended and
revised versions of selected papers will be considered for a special issue of the Distributed Computing journal.
Awards
Prizes will be given to the best paper and the best student paper.
A paper is eligible for the best student paper award if at least
one of its authors is a full-time student at the time of submission.
This must be indicated in the cover page. The program committee may
decline to offer the awards or may split each one of them.
|