Thank you Mr. Koelbel, I meant tutorial, and indeed the OpenMP events I
attended in Baltimore were tutorials, not workshops. Does the person who
proposes the tutorial have to be the one who is willing to present it?
I'm certainly not qualified.
Norm Clerman
Chuck Koelbel wrote:
> At 11:02 AM -0500 2/18/04, Norman Clerman wrote:
>
>> Hello everyone,
>>
>> In the mail today I received a call for participation at Super
>> Computing 2004 (SC2004)* *in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania from November 6
>> through Nov 12. There were many Fortran programmers present at the
>> OpenMP workshops at SC2002 in Baltimore a year and a half ago. Why
>> doesn't one of the Fortran 2K experts who contribute to this mail list
>> organize a workshop on Fortran 2K for Pittsburgh? The site for this
>> conference is www.sc-conference.org/sc2004.
>>
>> Norm Clerman
>
>
> Having been on the committee for SC2003 (in Phoenix last year), a few
> comments:
>
> * F2000 should be of interest to the SC conference. Go ahead and
> propose something. (But don't take offense if it's turned down,
> there are always a lot more proposals than space permits.)
>
> * There are few workshops, and the ones that are there tend to be
> more general (e.g. combined software/hardware/algorithms design
> for next-generation computers). Probably not a good match
> to F2000 matters.
>
> * A F2000 tutorial might have more traction. Tutorials tend to
> be more focused topics. However, there is an extra charge to
> attend them.
>
> * Another option is Birds-of-a-Feather, which is a less formal
> (usually) session, open to all SC attendees. Only drawback is
> that they're short - 1 hr. only.
>
>
> Chuck Koelbel
>
> --
> ------------------------------------------------------------
> Charles Koelbel Rice University, Mail Stop 132
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> 713-348-5868 Houston, TX 77005
> ------------------------------------------------------------
>
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