The following preamble is from Computing Community Consortium (CCC) Chair Mark D. Hill from the University of Wisconsin Madison. Over the last century, computer systems have been implemented with many technologies that evolve and are occasionally replaced by successors, e.g., discrete transistors with integrated circuits and ferrite core memory with DRAM. Heretofore, these technology transitions have been within—not between—the categories of computing, communication, memory, and storage. Below Steve Swanson reports on a new Intel technology that combines the categories of volatile memory and non-volatile storage in his recent ACM SIGARCH Blog. While we may just use “3DXPoint” conventionally–as separate memory or storage—it has the potential to merge memory and storage for systems […]
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 the ‘CCC’ category
ACM SIGARCH BLOG: Early Measurements of Intel’s 3DXPoint Persistent Memory DIMMs
April 16th, 2019 / in Announcements, CCC, computer history, research horizons, Research News / by Helen WrightBlue Sky Ideas Conference Track at AAAI-19
March 12th, 2019 / in Announcements, Blue Sky, CCC, Research News / by Helen WrightThe Computing Community Consortium (CCC) recently sponsored a Blue Sky Ideas Conference Track at the 33rd Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence (AAAI) Conference on Artificial Intelligence (AAAI-19), January 27- February 1, 2019, in Honolulu, Hawaii. The purpose of this conference was to promote research in artificial intelligence (AI) and scientific exchange among AI researchers, practitioners, scientists, and engineers in affiliated disciplines. The goal of this track was to present ideas and visions that can stimulate the research community to pursue new directions, such as new problems, new application domains, or new methodologies. First place: Pat Langley (Institute for the Study of Learning and Expertise) Explainable, Normative, and Justified Agency Second Place: Francesca Rossi (IBM Research & University of Padova) and Nicholas Mattei […]
NSF Workshop Report on Side and Covert Channels in Computing Systems
March 11th, 2019 / in Announcements, CCC, NSF / by Helen WrightThis is a blog post by CCC Chair Mark D. Hill of the University of Wisconsin-Madison. As readers on the CCC blog know, the Meltdown and Spectre microprocessor design flaws revealed in early 2018 made clear that many, if not most, computer systems can leak sensitive information via implementation timing “channel.” Fortuitously and concurrent with this revelation, the US National Science Foundation had commissioned a March 2018 workshop on “Side and Covert Channels in Computing Systems” led by Guru Prasadh Venkataramani of George Washington University and Patrick Schaumont of Virginia Tech. The report has just been issued. It provides too many research recommendations to summarize here, but let me whet […]
Great Innovative Idea: Capturing Meaning: Toward an Abstract Wikipedia
February 27th, 2019 / in CCC, Great Innovative Idea / by Helen WrightThe following Great Innovative Idea is from Denny Vrandečić of Google. Denny was one of the Blue Sky Award winners at ISWC 2018 for his paper Capturing Meaning: Toward an Abstract Wikipedia. The Idea Currently, Wikipedia is available in almost 300 languages – but the content of all these languages is independently written and maintained. This leads to some language editions having great and up-to-date content on a broad variety of content, and other language editions with struggling having any information about the most core topics an encyclopedia should cover. Also, often knowledge about local ideas are often not available in larger language editions. This is generating and maintaining the imbalance between the different language communities on the […]
Computing Community Consortium at AAAS 2019
February 14th, 2019 / in AAAS, CCC, Research News / by Helen WrightThe Computing Community Consortium (CCC) is proud to be a part of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) 2019 Annual Meeting this weekend, February 14-17, 2019 in Washington, DC. CCC Executive Council member and Former CCC Chair Beth Mynatt will be speaking during a session called P7: A New Paradigm for Health Care in the 21st Century on February 15, 2019 from 3:30-5:00PM in Washington 3 of the Marriott Wardman Park. Speakers and Talk Titles: Amit Sheth, Wright State University kHealth: Semantic Multisensory Mobile Approach to Personalized Asthma Care Beth Mynatt, Georgia Institute of Technology Personalized, Participatory and Pervasive Care for Breast Cancer Patients Vijay Chandru, Stand Life Sciences Affordable Excellence in Genomics […]
White House Order Prioritizes U.S. Artificial Intelligence (AI) Research
February 11th, 2019 / in AI, Announcements, CCC, CRA, pipeline, research horizons, Research News / by Helen WrightContributions to this post were provided by the Computing Research Association’s Director for Government Affairs, Peter Harsha, and Computing Community Consortium’s Director, Ann Drobnis. Today President Trump signed an executive order on Maintaining American Leadership in Artificial Intelligence calling on Federal agencies to prioritize investments in research and dedicating Federal resources to boost U.S. artificial intelligence (AI). In an accompanying fact sheet, the White House explained the goal of the order: Americans have profited tremendously from being the early developers and international leaders in AI. However, as the pace of AI innovation increases around the world, we cannot sit idly by and presume that our leadership is guaranteed. We must […]







