------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Next Generation Programming Paradigms and Systems (NGPS 2019) Track of the 34th ACM/SIGAPP Symposium On Applied Computing Limassol, Cyprus ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- IMPORTANT DATES *Sept 24, 2018 (extended)* Submission of regular papers and SRC research abstracts *Nov 24, 2018 (extended)* Notification of paper acceptance/rejection *Nov 24, 2018 (extended)* Notification of SRC acceptance/rejection *Dec 10, 2018 (extended)* Camera-ready copies of accepted papers/SRC Dec 10, 2018 Author registration due date April 8-12, 2019 ACM SAC Conference AIMS AND TOPICS The complexity of modern software systems is continuously growing together with the communication capabilities and computational power of pervasive technology, embodied by a wide range of interacting heterogeneous smart devices. This new scenario is posing serious challenges to software development, which hardly keeps pace with this technological evolution. Sophisticated frameworks exposed through application programming interfaces, or directly integrated with mainstream programming languages provide partial solutions to support big data streaming and complex analytic; dynamic, autonomous, and collective coordination and adaptation capabilities; emergent behavior in cooperating systems; Internet of Things (IoT) systems development and maintenance; and employment of cloud platforms and parallel architectures, in particular heterogeneous ones. This calls for new abstractions, features, middlewares and tools able to reduce the time, effort, and cost of designing and developing the next generation software systems, improving performance, and ensuring reliability and security. To this aim, NGPS is seeking to advance the state-of-the-art and the state-of-the-practice of computational models and paradigms, formal techniques and software methods for easing software development and verification, and improving efficiency of complex modern systems. The specific topics of interest for the NGPS track include, but are not limited to, the following: - Integration of computational paradigms - Runtime verification and monitoring - Platforms for the Cloud - IoT systems - Secure and dependable software - Formal models and verification - Testing and debugging - System evaluation - Design, implementation and optimization of high-level programming languages - Middleware platforms - Scenarios, case studies and experience reports on innovative applications - High-level parallel programming - Distributed systems and concurrency - Development tools - Coordination models, specification, and technologies - Multi-agent systems, mobile agents, intelligent agents, and agent-based simulations - Models, frameworks and tools for Collective Adaptive Systems - Internet, Web, and pervasive computing systems - Self-organizing, self-adaptive, context-aware and nature-inspired systems - Security, trust and privacy management SUBMISSIONS Prospective papers should be submitted to the track in pdf format using the START submission system for regular and SRC papers available through the SAC 2019 home page. Submission of the same paper to multiple tracks is not allowed; all papers should represent original and previously unpublished works that are currently not under review in any conference or journal. Both basic and applied research papers are welcome. SAC 2019 will use double-blind reviewing; to facilitate this, author name(s) and institution(s) must be omitted, and references to authors’ own related work should be in the third person. The format of the paper must adhere to the sig-alternate style. Full papers are limited to 8 pages, in camera-ready format, included in the registration fee. Authors have the option to include up to two (2) extra pages at additional fee of US$80 per page. Papers accepted as posters are limited to 3 pages, in camera-ready format, included in the registration fee. Authors have the option to include only one (1) extra page at additional fee of US$80. SRC abstracts are limited to 4 pages, in camera-ready format, included in the registration fee. No extra pages are allowed. Accepted papers will be published by ACM in the annual conference proceedings. Accepted posters will be published as extended abstracts in the same proceedings. Papers that fall short the above requirements are subjected to rejection. All papers must be submitted by September 10, 2018. For more information please visit the SAC 2019 home page. Paper registration is required, allowing the inclusion of the paper/poster in the conference proceedings. An author or a proxy attending SAC MUST present the paper: This is a requirement for the paper/poster to be included in the ACM/IEEE digital library. No-show of scheduled papers and posters will result in excluding them from the ACM/IEEE digital library. TRACK CO-CHAIRS Davide Ancona, DIBRIS, University of Genova, IT Frederic Loulergue, SICCS, Northern Arizona University, USA Danilo Pianini, DISI, University of Bologna, IT Mirko Viroli, DISI, University of Bologna, IT PROGRAM COMMITTEE Mohamad Al Hajj Hassan, Huawei, DE Victor Allombert, Orléans University, FR Lorenzo Bettini, DISIA, University of Florence, IT Carl Friedrich Bolz-Tereick, DE João Costa Seco, New University of Lisbon, PT Hélène Coullon, IMT Atlantique, Inria, FR Ferruccio Damiani, DI, University of Torino, IT Simon Dobson, CS, University of St Andrews, UK Kento Emoto, IPL-Lab, Kyushu Institute of Technology, JP Erik Ernst, Google Inc., USA Lukas Esterle, ALICE, Aston University, UK Frédéric Gava, LACL, Université Paris-Est Créteil, FR Philipp Haller, KTH Royal Institute of Technology, SE Khaled Hamidouche AMD Research, USA Geoff Hamilton, School of Computing, Dublin City University, IE Robert Hirschfeld, HPI, University of Potsdam, DE Hideya Iwasaki, The University of Electro-Communications, JP Einar Broch Johnsen, UiO, University of Oslo, NO Jaakko Järvi, II, University of Bergen, NO Doug Lea, State University of New York at Oswego, USA Alberto Lluch Lafuente, DTU COMPUTE, Technical University of Denmark, DK Michele Loreti, DI, University of Camerino, IT Hidehiko Masuhara, PRG, Tokyo Institute of Technology, JP Virginia Niculescu, CS, Babes-Bolyai University of Cluj-Napoca, RO Tobias Pape, HPI, University of Potsdam, DE Nick Papoulias, University of La Rochelle, UMR LIENSs, CNRS, FR Susanna Pelegatti, University of Pisa, IT António Ravara, DI FCT, New University of Lisbon, PT Barbara Re, SST, University of Camerino, IT Sophie Robert, LIFO, Orléans University, FR Stefan Rudolph, OC, Augsburg University, DE Maurice ter Beek, FMT-ISTI, CNR, IT Martin Wirsing, SoSy-Lab, LMU Munich, DE You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Smalltalk Research" group. 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