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 ‘research horizons’ category

 

The Computing Community Consortium: An Update

July 23rd, 2009 / in policy, research horizons / by Ed Lazowska

A GENI Engineering Conference presentation by CCC Chair Ed Lazowska describing major activities since the last GEC in October 2008, including: Transition Team white papers (see them here) Library of Congress symposium (transparencies and videos here) Computing Innovation Fellows project (blog post here) NetSE Research Agenda (blog post here) See the presentation here (pdf).

Network Science & Engineering Research Agenda

July 22nd, 2009 / in research horizons, resources, workshop reports / by Ed Lazowska

At this week’s GENI Engineering Conference in Seattle, Ellen Zegura rolled out the Network Science & Engineering (NetSE) Research Agenda, an extensive effort of CCC’s NetSE Council, which Ellen chaired. Over the past forty years, computer networks, and especially the Internet, have gone from research curiosity to fundamental infrastructure. However, this is no time to rest on the successes of the past. To meet society’s future requirements and expectations the Internet will need to be better: more secure, more accessible, more predictable and more reliable. In 2008, the Computing Community Consortium charged the NetSE Council with developing a comprehensive research agenda that would support the development of a better Internet. […]

“Computing Research that Changed the World” – VIDEOS!

June 7th, 2009 / in computer history, policy, research horizons, resources / by Ed Lazowska

On March 25th, the Computing Community Consortium organized a spectacular daylong symposium at the Library of Congress:  “Computing Research that Changed the World:  Reflections and Perspectives.” Videos of the presentations (as well as slides) are now available on the symposium website.  See http://www.cra.org/ccc/locsymposium_slides.php for the complete agenda with individual links, or see our YouTube channel, http://www.youtube.com/computingresearch. Talks at the Symposium included: Introductory Session Ed Lazowska (University of Washington), “Changing the World” Session 1: The Internet and the World Wide Web Alfred Spector (Google), “Why We’re Able to Google” Eric Brewer (UC Berkeley), “The Magic of the ‘Cloud’: Supercomputers for Everybody, Everywhere” Luis von Ahn (Carnegie Mellon University), “Human Computation” Session […]

Library of Congress symposium slides are up!

April 1st, 2009 / in policy, research horizons, resources, workshop reports / by Ed Lazowska

Slides from all speakers at the remarkable March 25th Library of Congress symposium “Computing Research that Changed the World:  Reflections and Perspectives” are now available: http://www.cra.org/ccc/locsymposium_slides.php Videos of all talks will be available soon. Previous posts describing the symposium are available here and here. Many thanks to our speakers for preparing and delivering such wonderful talks, and for making their materials available to the community at large.

More on “Computing Research that Changed the World”

March 29th, 2009 / in policy, research horizons, resources, workshop reports / by Ed Lazowska

Susan Graham provided a great overview in a post a few days ago of the Computing Community Consortium’s March 25th day-long Library of Congress symposium, “Computing Research that Changed the World:  Reflections and Perspectives.”  I thought I’d provide a few additional details — as well as a reminder that all materials (slides, videos, a summary booklet, etc.) will be available on the CCC website in the very near future. Inspiration for the program came from a large number of responses from the computing research community to two November CCC blog posts — this was your symposium! Each of the talks was superb.  Honestly, in 35 years in the field, I’ve […]

The Mystic Arts of Emergency Informatics

March 20th, 2009 / in research horizons / by Peter Lee

Rescue Robots at the Cologne Germany Building Collapse I finished The Mystic Arts of Erasing All Signs of Death by Charlie Huston just before the City Archives collapsed in Cologne, Germany, on March 3. I soon found myself at my 11th disaster, but unlike Webb, the protagonist who must come to grips with the events that led him to a janitorial job cleaning up trauma sites, I was clear on why I was there standing in the rain. I was there in the hope that we could make a difference with technology — that we could enable the fire rescue teams to save a life, prevent a responder’s death, or […]