[cfe-dev] Call for Talks, Tutorials, BoFs, Panels, Student Research Competition, and More!
Kristof Beyls via cfe-dev
cfe-dev at lists.llvm.org
Mon Aug 7 05:50:42 PDT 2017
Just a friendly reminder that you have until the end of this week to get in
your proposals!
Kristof
2017-07-12 7:58 GMT+02:00 Tanya Lattner via cfe-dev <cfe-dev at lists.llvm.org>
:
> Call for Talks, Tutorials, BoFs, Panels, Student Research Competition, and
> More!
>
> All developers and users of LLVM and related sub-projects are invited to
> present at the 2017 LLVM Developers’ Meeting.
>
> We are looking for the following proposals:
>
> 1. Technical Talks (~30 minutes):
>
> - On LLVM Infrastructure,Clang and all related sub-projects
> - On uses of LLVM in academia or industry
> - On new projects using Clang or LLVM
>
> 1. Tutorials (~60 minutes)
>
> - In depth talks on LLVM infrastructure or other core libraries
>
> 1. NEW: Student Research Competition Technical Talks (~20 minutes)
> 2. Lightning Talks (5 minutes, no questions, no discussions)
> 3. Bird of a Feather
> <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Birds_of_a_feather_(computing)> (~30
> minutes)
> 4. Panels (~30-60 minutes)
> 5. Posters (1 hour)
>
>
>
> Submission Requirements:
> The submission deadline is August 11, 2017 at 11:59PM PDT.
>
> Please submit your proposal here:
> https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=llvmdevmtg2017
>
> For each proposal, please submit a title, short abstract (to be used on
> the website), note who the speakers and moderators are, and provide a more
> detailed description of the talk. We highly recommend you consult and
> follow the guide at the end of this CFP when submitting your proposal.
>
> Student Research Competition (SRC):
> We introduced the Student Research Competition at the most recent EuroLLVM
> and are bringing it to the US LLVM Developers’ Meeting as well. The SRC
> offers students doing LLVM related research a non-academic platform to
> announce and advertise their work as well as to discuss it with other
> researchers, developers and users of LLVM. Students are asked to submit a
> proposal for a 20 minute technical talk. There will be a prize for the best
> SRC talk.
>
>
> FAQ
>
> When will I be notified of acceptance?
>
> Our goal is to notify all proposal submitters by September 1, 2017.
>
> What are panels?
>
> Panels may discuss any topic as long as it’s relevant to LLVM or related
> sub-projects. Panels can take many forms, but a common format is to begin
> with an introduction of the panel members, have short presentations from
> each panel member, and follow with an interactive dialogue among the
> panelists and audience members. Panels should consist of 3-5 people
> including a moderator.
>
> Should I register if I have submitted a proposal?
>
> We have 1 complimentary reserved registration for each accepted
> technical talk, BoF, or student research competition talk. Accepted
> tutorials have been reserved 2 complimentary registrations. Panels have up
> to 3 reserved registrations. There are no reserved registration spots for
> posters or lightning talks. So please register any additional speakers or
> if you do not have a reserved registration slot.
>
> What if I registered and my talk got accepted?
>
> We can refund your registration fee and instructions will be sent
> following notification. If you plan to attend even if your proposal is not
> accepted and are worried about the event selling out, we suggest
> registering before notification of acceptance.
>
> What if I registered and my talk DID NOT get accepted?
>
> We can refund your registration fee if you no longer wish to attend if you
> contact the organizer by September 15, 2017.
>
> What will be recorded?
>
> All technical talks, tutorials, SRC talks, panels, and lightning talks
> will be recorded. By submitting your proposal, you are giving us permission
> to record if you present at the meeting. For SRC talks, you have the option
> to delay publication of the slides and video for you talk for up to 12
> months.
>
> Who is on the program committee?
>
> Our program committee chair is Kristof Beyls. The program committee is
> composed of active developers of the LLVM, Clang, and related
> sub-communities. The website will be updated with the list of the program
> committee members.
>
> I have a question, who do I contact?
>
> Please email Tanya Lattner (tanyalattner at llvm.org), Kristof Beyls (
> Kristof.Beyls at gmail.com), or the LLVM Developers’ Meeting mailing list.
> http://lists.llvm.org/mailman/listinfo/llvm-devmeeting
>
>
> Detailed guidance on writing a proposal for the LLVM Developers’ Meeting
>
> Writing a proposal for the LLVM Developers’ Meeting
>
> This document is a guide to help you submit the best proposal and increase
> your chances of your proposal being accepted. The LLVM Developers’ Meeting
> program committee receives more proposals than can be accepted, so please
> read this guide careful.
>
> If you have never presented at an LLVM Developers’ Meeting, then do not
> fear this process. We are actively looking for new speakers who are excited
> about LLVM and helping grow the community through these educational talks!
> You do not need to be a long time developer to submit a proposal.
>
> General Guidelines:
>
> - It should be clear from your abstract what your topic is, who your
> targeted audience is, and what are the takeaways for attendees. The program
> committee gets a lot of proposals and does not have time to read 10 page
> papers for each submission.
> - Talks about a use of LLVM (etc) should include details about how
> LLVM is used and not only be about the resulting application.
> - Tutorials on “how to use X” in LLVM (or other subproject) are
> greatly desired and beneficial to many developers. Entry level topics are
> encouraged as well.
> - Talks that have been presented at other technical conferences tend
> to not get accepted. If you have presented this topic before, make it clear
> what is new and different in your talk.
>
>
>
> Technical Talk and SRC Talk Proposal Template:
>
> Title:
>
> - This will be displayed on the website, schedule, and signs. Keep it
> short and catchy to attract attendees to your talks. A couple of examples
> are “WebAssembly: Here Be Dragons” or “Beyond Sanitizers: guided fuzzing
> and security hardening”.
>
>
> Speaker Name(s), Company, Email:
>
> - This should be only the people giving the talk. EasyChair only
> allows you to select one speaker in its interface and we need to know if
> there is more than one. Additional authors can be listed through EasyChair.
>
>
> Abstract:
>
> - 1-2 paragraphs. Keep in mind that this is displayed on the schedule
> and website for attendees to consider when selecting talks.
> - We suggest you proof read and pay attention to grammar.
>
>
> Details:
>
> - Here you can include more details about your talk. An outline, demo
> description, background of the speaker, etc. 1-2 paragraphs is sufficient
> usually.
> - This section will not be published and is intended for the PC to
> better understand how interesting your talk will be to the audience. For
> example, if you would prefer not to reveal some conclusions in the
> published abstract, explaining them here ensures that the PC can take them
> into account when evaluating your proposal.
>
>
>
> BoF Talk Proposal Template:
>
> Title:
>
> - This will be displayed on the website, schedule, and signs. These
> tend to be very straight forward about the area being discussed. An example
> is “Future directions and features for LLDB”.
> -
>
> Speaker Name(s), Company, Email:
>
> - This should be only the speakers leading the discussion. EasyChair
> only allows you to select one speaker in its interface and we need to know
> if there is more than one. Additional authors can be listed through
> EasyChair.
>
>
> Abstract:
>
> - 1-2 paragraphs. Keep in mind that this is displayed on the schedule
> and website for attendees to consider when selecting which BoFs to attend.
> - Provide some talking points or potential subtopics.
> - We suggest you proof read and pay attention to grammar.
>
>
> Details:
>
> - Provide additional details: goals of the BoF, presentation style.
> BoFs are to brainstorm ideas on a specific topic but you will be more
> successful if you have a guided discussion with talking points and
> actionable items at the end.
>
>
> Tutorial Proposal Template:
>
> Title:
>
> - This will be displayed on the website, schedule, and signs. Keep it
> short and catchy to attract attendees to your talks.
>
>
> Speaker Names(s), Company, Email Address:
>
> - Those giving the tutorial. Typically 1-2 speakers.
>
>
> Abstract:
>
> - 1-2 paragraphs. Keep in mind that this is displayed on the schedule
> and website for attendees to consider when selecting talks.
> - We suggest you proof read and pay attention to grammar.
>
>
> Details:
>
> - Include additional details such as tutorial outline, what materials
> you will provide attendees, etc.
>
>
> Panel Proposal Template:
>
> Title:
>
> - This will be displayed on the website, schedule, and signs. Keep it
> short and catchy to attract attendees to your talks.
>
>
> Moderator Name(s), Company, Email Address:
>
> - The person keeping speakers on track and asking questions.
>
>
> Speaker Names(s), Company, Email Address:
>
> - The people on the panel. Typically 2-3 speakers. More than 3 tends
> to be difficult in the time slot.
>
>
> Abstract:
>
> - This should list one paragraph about the panel topic and what will
> be discussed. You should also include detailed 2-3 sentence bios for each
> speaker on the panel.
>
>
> Details:
>
> - Include some sample questions for the panel.
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
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>
>
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