Registration
Registration link: https://whova.com/portal/registration/aicas_ 201904/
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Early Bird Registration Until March 22nd, 2019 |
Late/On-Site Registration | ||||||
Main Conference |
Workshops/Tutorials | VEE | Main Conference |
Workshops/Tutorials | VEE | |||
Full-Day | Half-Day | Full-Day | Half-Day | |||||
ACM Member | $610 | $190 | $110 | $190 | $730 | $220 | $145 | $220 |
Non Member
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$710 | $240 | $170 | $240 | $830 | $270 | $210 | $270 |
Student | $390 | $110 | $80 | $110 | $510 | $130 | $100 | $130 |
To receive discounted rates, registrations must be submitted and paid in full on March 22nd, 2019.
Please note the following policies:
- Workshops and Tutorials require registering for either the ASPLOS main conference or VEE.
- VEE does not require ASPLOS main registration. However, if you are attending VEE and plan to attend Workshops and Tutorials on Saturday, you must register for an additional full day or half day.
- We hold an “open-door” policy: If you register for an event (workshop/tutorial/VEE), you may attend other events that happen at the same time as the registered event does.
- For each of the ASPLOS main conference papers, at least one of the authors must register the main conference with the non-student rates.
Registration Cancellation Policy
Cancellations on or prior to March. 1st, 2019, will be accepted but will incur a US $50 administrative fee. The refund will only include the conference registration fee minus $50. You will not receive a refund of the Stripe processing fee or Whova’s registration fee.
Cancellations received after March. 1st, 2019 and on or before March. 15th, 2019 will be refunded at a rate of 50% minus a US $50 administration fee. You will not receive a refund of the Stripe processing fee or Whova’s registration fee.
No cancellations will be accepted after March 15th, 2019.
Visa
For visa support letters, email ACM at supportletters@acm.org. Please allow up to 10 business days to receive it. All requests are handled in the order they are received. The information below should be included with the request.
– Name (as it appears on attendee’s passport) and mailing address.
– The name of the conference attendees are registering for.
– Attendee’s registration confirmation number.
– Authors should include their paper title. Speakers should provide the title of their talk.
– Include a fax number or email address of where letter can be sent
Student Travel GrantsTo apply for a travel grant:
Additional notes for the process:
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Daycare
Conference Venue & Hotel
ASPLOS 2019 will be held in a beautiful hotel sitting in the heart of downtown Providence:
11 Dorrance Street, Providence, RI, USA 02903
Group rates ($174/night for standard King or Queen rooms) apply to stays between 4/12 and 4/16. Reservations must be made on or before Friday, March 22, 2019 to guarantee this rate. Hotel rooms may be booked online at ASPLOS Hotel Reservations or by calling 401-340-2974 to get the guaranteed group rate. Please request the rate for Association for Computing Machinery ASPLOS 2019 to receive the group rate.
Directions to Conference Venue
Directions to the Hotel
Taking airplanes
There are two airports nearby: Providence T.F. Green Airport (PVD) and Boston Logan (BOS). Providence’s airport is about a 15 minute drive to downtown. Boston’s airport is about 1 hour north or Providence. To get to the hotel from these airports:
Trains
Train service is available from Boston to downtown Providence via Amtrak or MBTA commuter rail service. From Boston Logan, you will need to take the Silverline bus from the airport to South Station to transfer to the train. Amtrak from New York to Providence takes about 3.5 hours.
The Providence train station is about 5 blocks away from the venue.
Bus Service
Bus service from Boston Logan direct to downtown Providence is available through PeterPan Bus .
Excursion
The conference is planning an excursion on Tuesday evening to the RISD museum. The plan is to walk to the museum from the conference hotel (approximately 5 blocks away) where you will be able to tour parts of the museum at your leisure. Established in Providence in 1877 as part of a vibrant, creative community, the RISD museum stewards works of art representing diverse cultures from ancient times to the present. The Museum’s collection of more than 100,000 objects includes painting, sculpture, decorative arts, costume, furniture, and other works of art and design from all over the world, from ancient times to the latest in contemporary art.
Note: Please enter museum from the South Main Street entrance.
Directions to RISD Museum:
About Providence
Providence is the capital of the Rhode Island and is one of the oldest cities in the United States. It was founded in 1636 by Roger Williams, a Reformed Baptist theologian and religious exile from the Massachusetts Bay Colony. He named the area in honor of “God’s merciful Providence,” saying divine inspiration had led him there to create a bastion of religious freedom and tolerance. Providence quickly became a refuge for persecuted religious dissenters.
The city of Providence is geographically very compact, which makes it easy to get to many places by foot. The historic part of downtown has many streetscapes that look as they did 80 years ago. Providence also shares Rhode Island’s affinity for coffee, with the most coffee and doughnut shops per capita of any city in the country (check out Knead Donuts or PVD Donuts if you have a chance). Providence is also reputed to have the highest number of restaurants per capita of major U.S. cities.
Some places of interest walking distance from the Biltmore hotel include: Waterplace Park and Riverwalk, Roger Williams National Memorial, and Prospect Terrace Park. Prospect Terrace Park features expansive views of the downtown area, as well as a 15-foot tall granite statue of Roger Williams gazing over the city. As one of the first cities in America, Providence contains many historic buildings, while the East Side neighborhood in particular includes the largest contiguous area of buildings listed on the National Register of Historic Places in the U.S., with many pre-revolutionary houses.
The East Side is also home to the First Baptist Church in America, which was founded by Williams in 1638, as well as the Old State House which served as the state’s capitol from 1762 to 1904. The dome of the State House is the fourth-largest self-supporting marble dome in the world and the second-largest marble dome after St. Peter’s Basilica in Rome.The Westminster Arcade is the oldest enclosed shopping center in the U.S. The Rhode Island School of Design Museum contains the 20th-largest collection in the United States. The Providence Athenæum is the fourth oldest library in the United States.