August 1-3, 2001, Cumberland Falls, Kentucky
This is the home page for the 14th annual workshop on Languages and Compilers for Parallel Computing (LCPC2001). In previous years, LCPC has generally been held at the host institution; however, this year we felt it would be wise to take advantage of one of the state parks near the host institution. About a 1.5 hour drive south of the University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY, is Cumberland Falls, the "Niagra of the South" and home of the "Moonbow" (which should be visible during the workshop):
We believe that this setting will better serve the purposes of LCPC. After all, LCPC isn't a conference, but a workshop. Being at a unique, secluded, and beautiful place should help us all to relax, bond with our rarely-seen coleagues, and think. We want to think about what is being done in our field and about what our field should be doing in the years to come.
LCPC2001 was a resounding success, with 57 attendees.
An attendee list is available as Postscript and PDF.
Some photos also are posted.
For those of you waiting for the Springer/Verlag book, it is finally out... see LNCS 2624.
As in past years, we expect the workshop proceedings will be published by Springer-Verlag as a volume in the Lecture Notes in Computer Science series. The document preparation instructions for the Lecture Notes in Computer Science for authors and editors should be able to answer most of your questions. LNCS also are published, in parallel to the printed books, in a full-text electronic version. Therefore, authors of accepted papers will be expected to submit, in addition to the printed papers, the electronic files of all parts of the manuscript (including front matter pages) as advised in the instructions.
Larry Carter (UCSD)
Siddhartha Chatterjee (UNC Chapel
Hill)
Jeanne Ferrante (UCSD)
Manish Gupta
(IBM Research)
Sam Midkiff
(IBM Research)
Jose Moreira, (IBM Research)
Jan Prins (UNC Chapel Hill)
Bill Pugh (UMD)
Chau-Wen Tseng (UMD)
Utpal Banerjee (Intel Corporation)
David Gelernter(Yale University)
Alex Nicolau (U. California, Irvine)
David Padua (U. Illinois, Urbana-Champaign)
Hank Dietz (email) (University of Kentucky)
The Electrical and Computer Engineering Department of the University of Kentucky