syslog
3Nov/130

Liveblog from Programming Languages and Operating Systems 2013

Posted by Anil Madhavapeddy

The PLOS crowd!I'm here in the Nemacolin Woodlands at SOSP 2013 with a huge gaggle of the SRG (both old and new), in a room packed to capacity for the PLOS 2013 workshop!  I'm co-chairing it with Tim Harris, so I'll be liveblogging talks when I'm not coordinating sessions.  The keynote is from Russ Cox from Google, and you can find all the papers on the ACM digital library.

2Oct/130

Liveblogging the first Human Data Interaction workshop

Posted by Anil Madhavapeddy

I'm at the Open Data institute, with Richard Mortier, Jon Crowcroft, Amir Chaudhry and Hamed Haddadi , live-blogging a daylong workshop about our emerging Human-Data Interaction research initiative.  The room is packed with notable researchers from all over the UK, so this promises to be an exciting day!

24Sep/130

Liveblogging OCaml Workshop 2013

Posted by Anil Madhavapeddy

photoI'm here bright and early at the OCaml 2013 workshop at ICFP with Heidi Howard, Leo White, Jeremy Yallop and David Sheets!  There's a packed session today with lots of us presenting, so we'll swap over editing this post as the day progresses.  I also need to pop out to attend a panel on the future of Haskell so I'll be missing the bindings session, sadly!

22Sep/130

Liveblogging CUFP 2013

Posted by Anil Madhavapeddy

I'm here at the Commercial Users of Functional Programming workshop at ICFP 2013) with Heidi Howard, David Sheets and Leo White.

marius1

Marius Eriksen and Michael Sperber are co-chairing this year. Functional programming is a hot topic these days, and this year's program reflects the maturing nature of the program. Record number of submissions, and we could easily have made this a multi-day program.  Videos will be available online after the event.

Keynote is from Dave Thomas on what we can learn from the "language wars of the past".  His talk will cover the business, social and technical ends of building Smalltalk and his "objaholic" experiences with pushing language technology into businesses, where they never had any intention of changing in this regard.  This worked over the years because it made a material difference to these businesses.  Dave still uses the K programming a lot at work.

18Apr/110

Functional Programming Gone Wild (in the SRG)

Posted by Anil Madhavapeddy

There have been a bunch of projects related to functional programming going on in the SRG recently, and many of them relevant beyond "just" the programming language crowd.