| 
     
      
        | Research 
		Triangle Park, NCJuly 24, 2005
 |  
 
      
        | GENERAL CHAIR |  
        | 
    Raymond Bair, Argonne National Lab, 
    USA |  
 
      
        | PROGRAM 
        CHAIR |  
        | Alan 
	Sussman, University of Maryland, USA |  
 
      
        | REGISTRATION FORM |  
        | 
       Register
	here(for CLADE and /or HPDC)
 |  
 
 
      
        | 
    IMPORTANT DATES |  
        | Submission deadline: February 24, 
      2005New submission deadline: March 7, 2005
 Notification of acceptance: 
      April 12, 2005
 Final 
      Manuscript due: May 3, 2005
 Workshop: July 24, 2005
 |  
 
      
        | FURTHER INFORMATION |  
        | Please 
        contact the Program Chair: Alan Sussman <als@cs.umd.edu>
 |  
    
 | 
    The CLADE 2005 workshop will be held 
    in conjunction with the 
    14th International Symposium on High Performance Distributed Computing (HPDC-14), in 
	Research Triangle Park, NC. Advances in networking, high-end computers, large data 
    stores and middleware capabilities are ushering in a new era of large scale, 
    distributed applications, which dynamically marshal resources across a 
    heterogeneous, distributed environment.  Along with these opportunities come 
    new challenges.  The goal of this workshop is to encourage innovation by 
    addressing the complex issues that arise in large-scale applications of 
    distributed computation, and to promote the development of innovative 
    applications that effectively use distributed resources and adapt to a wide 
    range of heterogeneity and dynamics in space and time. This includes 
    development, deployment, management and evaluations of large scale 
    applications in science, engineering, medicine, business, economics, 
    education, and other disciplines, on Grids and other distributed 
    heterogeneous and dynamic computing environments. Issues related to 
    irregularity of applications and algorithms in space and time, variability 
    in programming environments, heterogeneity of software and hardware 
    platforms, dynamics, ad hoc behaviors and unreliability of execution 
    environments, etc., in the context of these applications are of particular 
    interest.   This workshop promotes the exchange of ideas, 
    information, and novel developments among universities, federal 
    laboratories, and industry.  It fosters multidisciplinary collaborative 
    solutions to issues arising in large-scale distributed applications.  Topics 
    of interest to this workshop include (but are not limited to) applications 
    that illustrate advances in the following areas: 
      
      Very large-scale distributed applications
      
       Autonomic 
      applications and runtime systems
      
       Application-specific 
      portals in distributed environments 
      
       Distributed 
      problem-solving environments 
      
       Distributed, 
      collaborative science applications 
      
       Heterogeneous 
      spatial and temporal applications, e.g., with heterogeneous 
      characteristics in time, space and domain 
      Distributed, multidimensional, dynamically adaptive 
      applicationsApplications of new theories and tools for constructing adaptive software 
      systems
      Variable granularity environments
      
      Examples of distributed applications benefiting from 
      advances in 
      
    Resource management, dynamic scheduling or load balancing in heterogeneous 
    environments
      
    Runtime support for intelligent, adaptive systems
    
      
    Programming models for heterogeneous and dynamic computation 
    
      
    Portability, quality of service, or fault-tolerance in cluster and grid 
    computation 
      
    Performance analysis, evaluation and prediction of adaptive systems
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