Sign up to receive email announcements and updates about conferences and future events
Document Actions
General Information
Last modified
2008-10-22 17:54
The 2009 International Conference on Embedded Systems and Applications (ESA'09) is an international conference held simultaneously
(ie, same location and dates: July 13-16, 2009, Las Vegas, USA) with a number of other
joint conferences as part of WORLDCOMP'09 (The 2009 World
Congress in Computer Science, Computer Engineering, and
Applied Computing). WORLDCOMP'09 is the largest annual
gathering of researchers in computer science, computer
engineering and applied computing. Many of the joint conferences in WORLDCOMP are the premier
conferences for presentation of advances in their respective
fields (for the complete list of joint conferences Click Here).
The motivation is to assemble a spectrum of affiliated
research conferences into a coordinated research meeting
held in a common place at a common time. The main goal
is to provide a forum for exchange of ideas in a number
of research areas that interact. The model used to form
these annual conferences facilitates communication among
researchers in different fields of computer science,
computer engineering and applied computing. Both inward
research (core areas of computer science and engineering)
and outward research (multi-disciplinary, Inter-disciplinary,
and applications) will be covered during the conferences.
The last set of conferences had
research contributions from 82 countries and had attracted over 2,000 participants. It is anticipated to have over 2,500 participants for
the 2009 event.
The event will be composed of research presentations, keynote lectures, invited presentations, tutorials, panel discussions, and
poster presentations.
You are invited to submit a draft paper of about 5-7 pages and/or a proposal to
organize a Technical Session/workshop (see the Submission information).
All accepted papers will be published in the respective
conference proceedings. The names of technical session/workshop
organizers/chairs will appear on the cover of the
proceedings/books as Associate Editors.
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to,
the following:
Real-time systems:
All real-time related aspects such as software, distributed
real-time systems, real-time kernels, real-time OS, task
scheduling, multitasking design, ...
Embedded hardware support:
System-on-a-chip, DSPs, hardware specification, synthesis,
modeling, simulation and analysis at all levels for
low power, power-aware, testable, reliable, verifiable
systems, performance modeling, validation, security issues,
real-time behavior, safety critical systems, ...
Embedded software:
Compilers, assemblers and cross assemblers, programming,
memory management, object-oriented aspects, virtual machines,
scheduling, concurrent software for SoCs,
distributed/resource aware OS, OS and middleware support, ...
Hardware/software co-design:
Methodologies, test and debug strategies, real-time systems,
specification and modeling, design representation, synthesis,
partitioning, estimation, design space exploration beyond
traditional hardware/software boundary, and algorithms, ...
Testing techniques:
All aspects of testing, including design-for-test, test
synthesis, built-in self-test, embedded test, for embedded
and system-on-a-chip systems.
Application-specific processors and devices:
Network processors, real-time processor, media and signal
processors, application specific hardware accelerators,
reconfigurable processors, low power embedded processors,
bio/fluidic processors, bluetooth, hand-held devices, flash
memory chips, ...
Industrial practices and benchmark suites:
System design, processor design, software, tools, case
studies, trends, emerging technologies, experience maintaining
benchmark suites, representation, interchange format, tools,
copyrights, maintenance, metrics, ...
Embedded computing education:
Curriculum issues, teaching tools and methods.
Emerging new topics:
New challenges for next generation embedded computing
systems, arising from new technologies (e.g., nanotechnology),
new applications (e.g., pervasive or ubiquitous computing,
embedded internet tools), new principle (e.g., embedded
Engineering), ...
If you can read this text, it means you are not experiencing the Plone design at its best.
Plone makes heavy use of CSS, which means it is accessible to any internet browser,
but the design needs a
standards-compliant browser to look like we intended it.
Just so you know ;)