Computing Community Consortium Blog

The goal of the Computing Community Consortium (CCC) is to catalyze the computing research community to debate longer range, more audacious research challenges; to build consensus around research visions; to evolve the most promising visions toward clearly defined initiatives; and to work with the funding organizations to move challenges and visions toward funding initiatives. The purpose of this blog is to provide a more immediate, online mechanism for dissemination of visioning concepts and community discussion/debate about them.


Archive for February, 2012

 

NSF Issues Advanced Computing Infrastructure Plan

February 23rd, 2012 / in policy, research horizons, resources / by Erwin Gianchandani

The National Science Foundation (NSF) has released a vision and strategic plan for Advanced Computing Infrastructure (ACI) seeking “to position and support the entire spectrum of NSF-funded communities at the cutting edge of advanced computing technologies, hardware, and software.” The report “also aims to promote a more complementary, comprehensive, and balanced portfolio of advanced computing infrastructure and programs for research and education to support multidisciplinary computational and data-enabled science and engineering that in turn support the entire scientific, engineering, and education community.” ACI is a key component of the Foundation’s Cyberinfrastructure for 21st Century Science and Engineering (CIF21) framework. Here’s the vision articulated in the report: NSF will be a leader in creating and deploying a comprehensive portfolio […]

In This Week’s Nature, “Alan Turing at 100”

February 23rd, 2012 / in resources / by Erwin Gianchandani

Today’s issue of Nature is dedicated to Alan Turing — and the Turing Centenary: Alan Turing, born a century ago this year, is best known for his wartime code-breaking and for inventing the ‘Turing machine’ — the concept at the heart of every computer today. But his legacy extends much further: he founded the field of artificial intelligence, proposed a theory of biological pattern formation and speculated about the limits of computation in physics. In this collection of features and opinion pieces, Nature celebrates the mind that, in a handful of papers over a tragically short lifetime, shaped many of the hottest fields in science today. As the journal’s editorial board writes in […]

2012 STEM Video Game Challenge Launched

February 22nd, 2012 / in resources / by Erwin Gianchandani

For the second year in a row, a number of public and private partners have joined forces to co-sponsor the National STEM Video Game Challenge, which seeks to advance science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) learning through game development and design among youth and educators. This year’s Challenge has been launched in partnership with the Department of Education’s Digital Promise initiative, which is unlocking “the promise of breakthrough technologies to transform teaching and learning.” There are four categories of entry for the Challenge (following the link):

Big Data at the AAAS Annual Meeting

February 21st, 2012 / in big science, CCC, conference reports, research horizons, Research News / by Erwin Gianchandani

Early last Saturday morning, I had the privilege and pleasure of organizing and moderating a symposium at the American Association for the Advancement of Science’s (AAAS) 2012 Annual Meeting in Vancouver. The 90-minute session — titled Data to Knowledge to Action: Computational Science in a Global Knowledge Society — sought to describe how advances in computing research are enabling a “data to knowledge to action” pipeline that is increasingly critical for facilitating a 21st-century global knowledge society. Over 70 people packed into a small room in the Vancouver Convention Center to hear the session’s featured speakers, Eric Horvitz, Peter Stone, and Deborah Estrin (slide shows after the jump).

“The Top 10 Emerging Technologies for 2012”

February 20th, 2012 / in conference reports, policy, research horizons, resources / by Erwin Gianchandani

Last week, the World Economic Forum’s Global Agenda Council on Emerging Technologies released a consensus list — the result of input from “some of the world’s leading minds within the entire [Global Agenda Council] network” — of “the top 10 emerging technologies for 2012.” These are the technologies that have the greatest potential to create new industries and impact new ones by providing solutions to global challenges. Atop the list — which is ordered starting with the technology with the greatest potential — is “informatics for adding value to information”: The quantity of information now available to individuals and organizations is unprecedented in human history, and the rate of information generation […]

NSF/CISE Holding CAREER Proposal Writing Workshops

February 18th, 2012 / in resources / by Erwin Gianchandani

The National Science Foundation’s (NSF) Directorate for Computer and Information Science and Engineering (CISE) has announced that it will hold two workshops later this spring to help young faculty prepare CAREER proposals. The first workshop will be held in Philadelphia on March 30th, and the second will take place in Phoenix on May 18th. According to CISE: The goal of the workshops is to help  future CISE proposal submitters to prepare competitive CAREER proposals. The workshops intend to provide young faculty members skills in CAREER proposal writing, panel review experience, and opportunities to interact with NSF program directors and recent NSF CAREER awardees. More details after the jump: