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Compute is a yearly international conference sponsored by ACM Bangalore.We are working towards getting the Conference proceedings to be published in the ACM Digital Library.

 
It is now widely recognized that applied research has a key role to play in moving computer science beyond academia into business. The aim of this multi-track conference is to bring together researchers, practitioners, technology market movers and thought leaders, with a view to advance the state of the art and the state of the practice in applied research. We solicit papers primarily in areas of applied research that are of contemporary interest to the broader practitioner community in the current technology adoption cycle. Specifically we would like to invite proposals broadly in areas of the following tracks :

TRACKS
1. Next Generation Information Management
Providing the right level of Information to the right stakeholders in the right context, is key in today's enterprise business scenario. It forms the key expectation of any enterprise computing infrastructure today, be it the need for a real time access to information, or availability of the information from heterogeneous sources ,or making available information to consumer facing systems via multiple channels. We invite original technical contributions, and practical industrial demonstrations in the current frontier areas, including primarily the topics of (but not limited to ):
Search in both enterprise and internet context, information/data management, Business Intelligence, Data Warehousing, structured-unstructured information integration, Semantic Web, text/data mining, and analytics, data services, Enterprise Information Integration, Latest Database Trends, XML databases, XML information management etc.
TRACK CHAIR:
Dr. Umeshwar Dayal, HP Labs, USA


2. Distributed Systems
Distributed systems have evolved with the emergence of the popular trends of grids, clusters, and other like technologies. We invite original contributions, and practical industrial demonstrations in the current frontier areas in distributed computing, including primarily the topics of (but not limited to )
Grid Computing, High Performance Computing, Cluster Computing, Virtualization, etc.
TRACK CHAIR:
Dr. Rajkumar Buyya, University of Melbourne and Manjrasoft Pty Ltd, Australia

3. Other Upcoming Trends
We invite original contributions, and practical industrial demonstrations in the other current frontier areas, including primarily the topics of (but not limited to )
  • Contemporary Internet Trends including Web 2.0 , Social Computing, Service Architectures, Hosted Models, etc.
  • Green Technological Systems (Environmental, Power saving, Energy efficient, and Eco-Friendly systems)

CONFERENCE CHAIR:
Prof. R. K. Shyamasundar,
IBM Research labs, India
Email: Shyam AT tifr.res.in


PROGRAM COMMITTEE (partial list)
Akshay Darbari, SETLabs, Bangalore
Avinash Kak, University of Purdue, USA
Bahubali Shete, Technology Head - DSP and Storage, Tata Elxsi
Basant Rajan, Symantec, India
Charlie Sum, Vice president, Oracle Corp., USA
Chee Shin YEO, University of Melbourne, Australia
Cho-Li Wang , University of Hong Kong, China.
Dinker Charak, Director, Application Engineering & Creative, Jivox
G. Sivakumar, IIT Mumbai
Geeta Manjunath, HP Labs, Bangalore, India
Ghassan Beydoun, Univ of Wollongong, Australia
Gokulmuthu Narayanaswamy, Sonim technologies, Bangalore,India
Howie Huang,George Washington University, USA.
Hui Li ,SAP, Germany
Ignacio Martín Llorente, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Spain
Ivona Brandic, Vienna University of Technology, Austria.
James BROBERG, University of Melbourne, Australia
Janusz R. Getta, Univ of Wollongong, Australia
Kaladhar Voruganti, NetApp, USA
Kishore Kumar M., HP, Bangalore,India
Kumar Padmanabh, SETLabs, Bangalore
Nithya Vijayakumar, CISCO Systems, USA
Prasad Ram, Google India
Prof. Dongyan Xu, Purdue Univ, USA
R. Govindarajan, SERC, IISc
R. Ramanujam, IMSc, India
Raghu Hudli, ObjectOrb, bangalore
Rajesh Gupta, Univ of California, San Diego,USA
Ravi Gorthi, SETLabs, Infosys, Bangalore
Sanjeev Aggarwal, IIT Kanpur
Shubhashis Sengupta, Architect, Oracle Corp, India
Song Fu, New Mexico Tech, USA
Srikumar Venugopal, University of Melbourne, Australia
STEERING COMMITTEE:
Srinivas Padmanabhuni,
SETLabs,Infosys Technologies Ltd, India
Email: srinivas_p AT infosys.com

Kallol Borah,
ACM Bangalore Chapter Core Committee member



KEYNOTE ADDRESS

Title: Sustainable Information Technology Ecosystem



Chandrakant D. Patel
HP Fellow and Director
Sustainable IT Ecosystem Laboratory
HP Laboratories, Palo Alto, California
Abstract
The drivers of the next generation of information technology (IT) services are the teeming millions who will avail IT services to address their fundamental needs and improve their quality of life. We have the opportunity to transform the world by deconstructing conventional value-chains and replacing them with Sustainable IT services. This transformation can be delivered by an IT ecosystem made up of billions of service oriented client devices and thousands of data centers. We envision the IT ecosystem to enable the next generation of cities, City 2.0, where available energy is managed as a key resource and apportioned based on the need. The supply and demand side management resulting from IT based business models, and through measurement, communications and control will enable many societal and business activities to take place while providing a net positive impact on the environment compared to conventional business models. Indeed, we cannot expect to meet the needs of the society by solely relying on extending the physical infrastructure to cope with the economic and population growth. Consider the Indian Railways system which provides a superb gateway for those with Internet access to save a considerable amount of time, and consume much less available energy, by purchasing tickets online. Imagine the scale that can be achieved by enabling the 700 million in India to have the same online access to railway reservations and secure banking transactions. To achieve this scale, the cost of IT services needs to be reduced. We contend that addressing sustainability with a “cradle to cradle” perspective – minimizing available energy needed for extraction, manufacturing, waste mitigation, transportation, operation and reclamation – will result in achieving the total cost of ownership that will bring the millions into the IT ecosystem. In this talk, we present the technical approach in least energy, least material design of the IT ecosystem with a focus on building sustainable data centers that achieve the targeted total cost of ownership.

About the speaker
Chandrakant Patel is an HP Fellow and Director of the Sustainable IT Ecosystem Laboratory. The laboratory is focused on the creation of a sustainable IT ecosystem with the goal of driving the reduction of carbon emissions throughout the global economy. Patel’s supply and demand side approach in creating a sustainable IT ecosystem builds on his pioneering work in the late 1990s on holistically managing available energy as a key resource in data centers. He initiated research in “smart” data centers, emphasizing that the “data center is the computer” and it requires a management system that enables dynamic provisioning of compute, power and cooling resources based on the need. The research resulted in a suite of products and services from HP. Patel has played a key role in establishing HP's leadership in energy-efficient computing by founding the HP Labs' thermal technology research program in the early 1990s, and subsequently the data-center architecture program. He foresaw the thermal-management challenges associated with high power density due to miniaturization in semiconductor technologies, and the need to manage energy as enterprise IT system resources became increasingly connected and shared. Patel joined HP Labs in 1991, initially leading the cooling and packaging research of the Wide Word microprocessor. This research contributed to what later became Intel's Itanium, which represented the next generation of microprocessors. In addition to his work at HP, Patel has taught computer-aided design as an adjunct faculty member at Chabot College in Hayward, California, undergraduate and graduate-level thermal management courses at University of California, Berkeley Extension, Santa Clara University and San Jose State University. He has authored over 100 papers and has been granted more than 95 U.S. patents. He is a Senior Member of IEEE. Patel has been honored as a distinguished alumnus by the City College of San Francisco, and by the Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering department at San Jose State University. In 2005, he received the Joel S. Birnbaum Prize – awarded for contributions to HP or HP Labs that demonstrate extraordinary vision, perseverance, innovation and creativity – for "visualizing and leading the creation of end-to-end solutions for managing the energy requirements for computation, thereby positioning HP as a leader in physical design of datacenters." Patel has also been profiled by ABC-KGO television in its Emmy Award winning series “Profiles of Excellence” for contributions to science, technology and education.


Important dates:
Paper Submissions were Due: October 1, 2008(Note: Submissions are closed now)
Notification of Acceptance: November 24, 2008(Please note the change)
Camera Ready Versions Due: December 5, 2008
Conference: January 9-10, 2009
People

Prof RK Shyamasundar

of IBM Research Labs, New Delhi, is the program chair for Compute 2009.
People

Dr. Chandrakant Patel

of HP Labs, USA, will keynote at Compute 2009 on Sustainable IT ecosystems.

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