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.


Posts Tagged ‘CCC Symposium

 

Unleashing Enterprise AI: Key Insights from IBM’s Lisa Amini at CCC’s Computing Futures Symposium

July 18th, 2025 / in AI, CCC, Symposia / by Catherine Gill

See the Full Recording of Lisa Amini’s keynote at the CCC’s 2025 Computing Futures Symposium.  In May of 2025, the Computing Community Consortium’s Computing Futures Symposium hosted an insightful keynote speech by Lisa Amini, Director of Data & AI Platforms Research, and an IBM Distinguished Engineer. With a background spanning over 25 years at IBM in areas such as Data & AI, stream processing, and distributed systems, Amini offered a comprehensive look at the rapid advancements in agentic and generative AI, and their growing impact on the enterprise. Her address highlighted a critical shift in AI research and development, global innovation trends, and the transformative potential of AI within businesses. […]

The “Secret Sauce” of Silicon Valley: NVIDIA Chief Scientist Bill Dally on Government’s Role in Tech Breakthroughs

June 26th, 2025 / in CCC, Industry, Keynote, Symposia / by Catherine Gill

  At the CCC’s Computing Futures Symposium in May, we had the privilege of hearing from Bill Dally, Chief Scientist and Senior Vice President of Research at NVIDIA, who delivered a compelling keynote address on the powerful synergy between government, academia, and industry. Dally captivated the audience with his personal journey through the technological revolutions that have shaped our world, driven by this collaborative model. Dally’s central message was clear and resounding: government research, combined with private sector ingenuity, has had a significant impact on America. This investment yields two critical outcomes: it cultivates a deep pool of talent essential to U.S. industry, and it generates the breakthrough technologies that […]

Securing our Digital Future: CCC Computing Futures Symposium Panel Recap

June 18th, 2025 / in CCC, Security / by Catherine Gill

CCC’s recent Computing Futures Symposium featured a wealth of thought-provoking panels, including an in-depth discussion on the state of cybersecurity. This panel brought together leading experts, including Yan Shoshitaishvili (Arizona State University), Claire Vishik (Stealth Startup), Rachel Greenstadt (New York University), and Jeremy Epstein (Georgia Tech Research Institute), who discussed their journeys into the field, their current endeavors, and their visions for the future. The conversation, moderated by Drew Lohn (Center for Security and Emerging Technology (CSET), highlighted both persistent challenges and promising opportunities in the ever-evolving landscape of digital security. Cybersecurity Education and the Workforce Pipeline One of the most pressing topics addressed was the state of cybersecurity education […]

From Science Fiction to Science Fact: Beth Mynatt Traces the Multi-Trillion Dollar Impact of Computing Innovation in the US

June 11th, 2025 / in CCC, conferences / by Catherine Gill

  Beth Mynatt, Dean of the Khoury College of Computer Sciences at Northeastern University, recently delivered a compelling keynote at the CCC Computing Futures Symposium that underscored the often-overlooked yet profound impact of federally funded computer science research. She began with thought-provoking “what if” scenarios, inviting us to imagine a world without key computational advancements rooted in decades of federal investments. What if the internet hadn’t emerged from US-backed research? If computational innovations hadn’t driven a significant reduction in cancer mortality, saving millions of lives and trillions in economic impact? Or if IT-driven innovations hadn’t revolutionized agriculture and today’s crop yields were 50 percent lower across the world? These hypotheticals […]

Computing’s Transformative Role in the Future of Healthcare

June 5th, 2025 / in AI, Healthcare / by Haley Griffin

Computing innovations have the power to save lives, and there are few applications where the promise of computing is more clear than in the healthcare domain. At the recent CCC Computing Futures Symposium, panelists Susan K. Gregurick, (National Institutes of Health (NIH)), Andy Kilianski (Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health (ARPA-H)), Mona Singh (Princeton University), and Tammy Toscos (Parkview Health), in a discussion moderated by Sharon Gillett (Microsoft), discussed how computing, including AI, can revolutionize patient care – from precision medicine and oncology to overcoming critical barriers in health data sharing.   Unleashing the Power of Health Data and Computing   Gregurick highlighted the sheer scale of health data now […]

The Future of Robotics and Autonomy: CCC Computing Futures Symposium Panel Recap

June 4th, 2025 / in AI, CCC, robotics / by Catherine Gill

  A recent CCC Computing Futures Symposium panel, featuring luminaries in the field — Robin Murphy (Texas A&M University), Melanie Moses (University of New Mexico), Chad Jenkins (University of Michigan), and Holly Yanco (University of Massachusetts – Lowell) — offered a captivating glimpse into the evolving landscape of robotics and autonomy. Moderated by Weisong Shi (University of Delaware), the discussion highlighted pivotal advancements in sensing, computation, and intelligence, exploring their profound implications for society, research, and education. Charting the Present and Future of Robotics  The panelists began by painting a vivid picture of the current state and future potential of robotics. Murphy, a pioneer in rescue robots, challenged conventional notions […]