CALL FOR PAPERS
2nd International Symposium on
Distributed Objects & Applications
September 21-23,
2000
Antwerp, Belgium
http://www.cs.rmit.edu.au/doa/2000/
Proceedings to be published by IEEE Press
Consider contributing a practice report or a research paper to this innovative event, and to present, discuss and obtain feedback for your ideas among other practitioners and researchers active in the same area.
There is increasing agreement among IT researchers and practitioners about the importance and potential of distributed object systems and the advances in this area made in recent years. These systems offer many promises for use in various applications, including telecommunications, banking applications and many other domains. DO systems are starting to offer practical, real-life production solutions to technical problems, including interoperability across different software and database platforms. Distributed object systems are built according to different paradigms and architectures, such as OMG's CORBA, Microsoft's COM and other object request broker principles and implementations, and contingent technologies such as SUN's Java-based active objects, to provide a basis for building complex distributed applications.
The future success of DO systems will not only be dependent on how the basic requirements (to develop open, reliable and scalable distributed and heterogeneous applications and platforms) are met but also how the underlying distributed object technology can be integrated with existing complementary technologies and applications, such as WWW, multimedia and databases. The reengineering of legacy systems may substantially benefit from the use of DO, e.g. when turning them into data warehouses. Further standardization of distributed object concepts will very likely unlock many new areas of application still.
TWO DIMENSIONS: Research & Practice
Electronic submission: May 1st, 2000Notification of acceptance: June 15th, 2000Camera-ready copies: July 7th, 2000Symposium: September 21-23, 2000
All submitted papers will be carefully evaluated based on originality, significance, technical soundness, and clarity of expression. Submissions should be clearly labeled "Research", "Practice" or "PC discretion". All papers will be refereed by at least three members of the program committee, and at least two will be experts from industry in the case of practice reports. All submissions must be in English. Research submissions must not exceed 8,000 words. Practice reports must not exceed 5,000 words. Submissions can either be in Postscript or HTML format and should be sent to zahirt@cs.rmit.edu.au. All submissions must be accompanied by a separate email message with the following information on the paper:Please make sure that your PostScript file can be previewed with GhostScript and is printable on a standard PostScript printer. We also accept Microsoft Word submissions. If electronic submission is not possible, please contact
title
author(s)
affiliation(s)
e-mail and address of the contact author
optional list of (key)words to appear in the index classification as research, practice or at discretion of PC formal commitment, if paper is accepted, to register for DOA'2000 and present the paper
to make special
arrangements, at least two weeks before the submission deadline. The final
proceedings will be published by IEEE Press. Failure to commit presentation
at the conference automatically excludes a paper from the proceedings.
Program
committee co-chairs
Zahir
Tari
Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology
Department of Computer Science
GPO Box 2476V
Melbourne, VIC 3001
Australia
zahirt@cs.rmit.edu.au
(phone) ++61-3-9925-3782
(fax) ++61-3-9662-1617
Roberto
Zicari
Johann Wolfgang Goethe-University
Department of Computer Science
Kettenhofweg 135, PO box 11 19 32
D-60325 Frankfurt/Main
Germany
(phone) ++49.69.798.28212
(fax) ++49.69.798.25123
zicari@informatik.uni-frankfurt.de
Pranab
Baruah
The Boeing Company
P.O. Box 3707, M/S: 6H-WT
Seattle, WA 98124-2207
USA
Pranab.Baruah@PSS.Boeing.com
Organising chair
Program
committee
Gustavo
Alonso (ETH, Zurich)
Bill
Appelbe (RMIT, Australia)
Sean
Baker (IONA, Ireland)
Carlos
De Backer (University of Antwerp, Belgium)
Jose
Blakeley (Microsoft, USA)
Gordon
Blair (Lancaster University, UK)
Anthony
Bloesch (Visio Corp., USA)
Omran
Bukhres (Purdue University, USA)
Akmal
B. Chaudhri (Informix Software, UK)
Asuman
Dogac (Middle East Technical University, Turkey)
Chris
Gokey (NASA, USA)
Rachid
Guerraoui (EPFL, Switzerland)
Arno
Jacobsen (Humboldt University, Germany)
Dimitris
Karagiannis (University of Vienna and B.O.C. GmbH, Austria)
Roger
King (University of Colorado, USA)
Sacha
Krakowiak (University of Grenoble, France)
Bernd
Krämer (FernUniversität Hagen, Germany)
Hong
Va Leong (Hong Kong Polytechnic University, China)
Ling
Liu (Oregon Graduate Institute, USA)
Frank
Manola (USA)
Sophie
Monties (EPFL, Switzerland)
Jishnu
Mukerji
(HP New Jersey Labs, USA)
Tom
Northcutt (NASA, USA)
Kunio
Ohno (INS Engineering Corporation, Japan)
Tamer
Ozsu (University of Alberta, Canada)
Mike
P. Papazoglou (Tilburg University, The Netherlands)
Kerry
Raymond (DSTC, Australia)
Arnie
Rosenthal
(Mitre, USA)
Richard
Soley (OMG, USA)
Marc
H. Scholl (Universität Konstanz, Germany)
Jean-Bernard
Stefani (France Telecom, France)
Doug
Schmidt (Washington Univ. at St. Louis, USA)
Makoto
Takizawa (Tokyo Denki University, Japan)
Hakki
Toroslu (Middle East Technical University, Turkey)
Yu-Chee
Tseng (National Central University, Taiwan)
Wilfried
Verachtert (MediaGenix, Belgium)
Andreas
Vogel (In Prise, USA)
Guijun
Wang (Boeing, USA)
Andrew
Watson (OMG, USA)
Albert Zamoya (University of Western Australia, Australia)