Quantum Computing Workshop Report
The Computing Community Consortium (CCC) has recently released a workshop report from the May 2018 workshop Next Steps in Quantum Computing: Computer Science’s Role.
Tag Archive: CCC Blog
Items from the Computing Community Consortium (CCC) Blog.
The Computing Community Consortium (CCC) has recently released a workshop report from the May 2018 workshop Next Steps in Quantum Computing: Computer Science’s Role.
The goal of this Dear Colleague Letter, which specifically mentions the Computing Community Consortium (CCC) AI Roadmap, is to encourage the submission of EAGERs on understanding the social challenges arising from AI technology and enable scientific contribute to overcoming them.
CCC will hold a workshop from January 3rd to 5th, 2019 in Hawaii to create a vision for thermodynamic computing, a statement of research needs, and a summary of the current state of understanding of this new area. Workshop attendance will be by invitation only and travel expenses will be available for select participants. We seek short white papers to help create the agenda for the workshop and select attendees.
We created a new repository of the CCC’s work categorized by sub-areas.
Sunday, July 1st, was the start of a new CCC term. We welcomed four new council members and Mark D. Hill from the University of Wisconsin-Madison as Chair and Liz Bradley from the University of Colorado-Boulder as Vice Chair.
There are a number of surprising security benefits of end-to-end formal proofs. The greatest payoff may be in nudges toward simpler system design.
CCC announces four new council members who will start July 1st.
ACM recently announced that computer scientists John Hennessy and David Patterson have shared the 2017 ACM Turing Award.
Great Innovative Idea is from Tamraparni Dasu, Yaron Kanza, and Divesh Srivastava, of AT&T Labs-Research. They were one of the Blue Sky Award winners at the ACM SIGSPATIAL 2017 conference.
CCC’s new call for proposals for workshops that will catalyze and enable innovative research at the frontiers of computing.
Two major hardware security design flaws—dubbed Meltdown and Spectre—were broadly revealed to the public in early January 2018.
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