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 March, 2014

 

Cloud Robotics at SXSW

March 19th, 2014 / in Uncategorized / by Shar Steed

Earlier this month, the SXSW interactive conference held a session on Cloud Robotics: Instant Scalability and Capability. The panel was highlighted in the Wall Street Journal as one of the moments that stood out at the conference: The implications are vast: Robots could draw on the experiences of other robots to better perform tasks such as customer service or even surgery. Self-driving cars could be connected to a global library of maps and real-time traffic data. There could even be a robot app store for machines to instantly get new capabilities.   Robots could also become better human companions, since they would be constantly learning from the examples of others, […]

Leslie Lamport Receives 2013 ACM Turing Award

March 18th, 2014 / in Uncategorized / by Shar Steed

The CCC congratulates Leslie Lamport from Microsoft Research on receiving the 2013 ACM Turing Award for advances in reliability and consistency of computing systems. From the Microsoft Website: The path to greatness begins with baby steps, and for Lamport, a principal researcher with Microsoft Research, that teenage curiosity has yet to be quenched. Over the ensuing decades, he has become a veritable legend in computing circles. His work in the theory of distributed computing is foundational. His 1978 paper Time, Clocks, and the Ordering of Events in a Distributed System is one of the most cited in the history of computer science. And he has contributed core principles to the field of […]

Billion Dollar Bracket Challenge

March 18th, 2014 / in Uncategorized / by Shar Steed

As you fill out your March Madness brackets, don’t miss out on your opportunity to win a billion dollars. Predicting a perfect bracket will win you $1,000,000,000 from billionaire Warren Buffet and Quicken Loans. Odds are slim to win the grand prize (1 in 4,294,967,296), but Computer Scientists and Mathematicians are working on ways to increase those odds. Computer Science Professor Sheldon Jacobson and his team at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign have been working on BracketOdds since 2011.  BracketOdds is a tool that uses principles from probability theory and operations research to model the likelihood that a set of seeds will reach a particular round of the tournament. Jacobson and his team […]

White House Accepting Applications for Presidential Innovation Fellows

March 14th, 2014 / in Uncategorized / by Shar Steed

The White House is now accepting applications for the third round of Presidential Innovation Fellows. Applications are due April 7, 2014. Click here to apply. The Presidential Innovation Fellows (PIF) program brings the principles, values, and practices of the innovation economy into government through the most effective agents of change we know: our people. This highly-competitive program pairs talented, diverse individuals from the innovation community with top civil servants to tackle many of our Nation’s biggest challenges, and to achieve a profound and lasting social impact. These teams of government experts and private-sector doers are taking a “lean startup” approach and applying methods like user-centered design to achieve results for the […]

NIH Big Data to Knowledge Initiative Releases RFA

March 13th, 2014 / in Uncategorized / by Shar Steed

The NIH Big Data to Knowledge initiative (BD2K, http://bd2k.nih.gov/) has announced the release of an RFA for software and methods development in biomedical Big Data Science: Development of Software and Analysis Methods for Biomedical Big Data in Targeted Areas of High Need (U01) (RFA-HG-14-020).   This opportunity targets four topic areas of high need for researchers working with biomedical Big Data, Data Compression/Reduction Data Provenance Data Visualization Data Wrangling The receipt deadline for applications is June 19, 2014, with an optional letter of intent due May 19, 2014. BD2K is a new major trans-NIH initiative that aims to support advances in data science, other quantitative sciences, policy, and training that are needed for the effective […]

Watch Talk – Increasing Trust in the E-Health Environment: Privacy Mechanisms and Policy Problems

March 12th, 2014 / in Uncategorized / by Shar Steed

On March 20 at noon EST, the National Science Foundation (NSF) will host it’s next Washington Area Trustworthy Computing Hour (WATCH) talk.  Maya Bernstein, from the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) will give a talk titled Increasing Trust in the E-Health Environment: Privacy Mechanisms and Policy Problems. Maya Bernstein has been the Privacy Advocate of HHS for nine years. She is the senior advisor on privacy policy in the Office of the Secretary. Abstract Growing pressure on the health sector to increase quality of care, improve outcomes, and reduce costs is driving industry toward widespread adoption of electronic health records, the sharing of patient information electronically, and storage of information in the cloud. […]