ASPLOS ’21 Call for Papers
The 26th International Conference on
Architectural Support for Programming Languages and Operating Systems
Main Conference | April 19-23, 2021 |
Workshops and Tutorials | April 12-16, 2021 |
Final paper deadline | February 15, 2021 |
Notification | November 19, 2020 |
Author response | November 6 (1am PST) - 10 (9pm PST), 2020 |
Full paper submission | August 21, 2020 |
Paper registration | August 14, 2020 |
ASPLOS is the premier forum for multidisciplinary systems research spanning computer architecture and hardware, programming languages and compilers, operating systems and networking. The 26th ASPLOS will be held online.
Like its predecessors, ASPLOS 2021 invites papers on ground-breaking research at the intersection of the ASPLOS disciplines: architecture, programming languages, operating systems, and related areas. Non-traditional topics are especially encouraged. The importance of cross-cutting research continues to grow as we grapple with the end of Dennard scaling, the explosion of big data, scales ranging from ultra-low power wearable devices to exascale parallel and cloud computers, the need for sustainability, and increasingly human-centered applications. ASPLOS embraces systems research that directly target new problems in innovative ways. The research may target diverse goals, such as performance, energy and thermal efficiency, resiliency, security, sustainability, applicability to future technologies, applications, and environments. The review process will be sensitive to the challenges of multidisciplinary work in emerging areas.
Areas of interest include, but are not limited to:
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- Existing and emerging platforms at all scales (embedded to cloud)
- Internet services, cloud computing, and datacenters
- Multicore architectures and systems
- Heterogeneous architectures and accelerators
- Systems for enabling parallelism at extreme scale
- Programming models, languages, and compilation for all platforms
- Managing, storing, and computing on big data
- Virtualization and virtualized systems
- Memory and storage technologies and architectures
- Power, energy, and thermal management
- Security, reliability, and availability
- Verification and testing, and their impact on design
- Support for approximations and approximate computing
- Non-traditional computing systems, including emerging devices
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