International Parallel and Distributed Processing Symposium
The International Parallel and Distributed Processing Symposium (or IPDPS) is an annual conference for engineers and scientists to present recent findings in the fields of parallel processing and distributed computing. In addition to technical sessions of submitted paper presentations, the meeting offers workshops, tutorials, and commercial presentations & exhibits. IPDPS is sponsored by the IEEE Computer Society's Technical Committee on Parallel Processing.
IPDPS is a week-long symposium that typically includes three days of a main track, two days of about 20 workshops bookending the main track, one or more tutorials, a panel, several keynote talks, and a banquet. The main track consists of high-quality, peer-reviewed papers representing original unpublished research in all areas of parallel and distributed processing, including the development of experimental or commercial systems. IPDPS topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
- Parallel and distributed algorithms, focusing on issues such as: stability, scalability, and fault tolerance of distributed systems, communication and synchronization protocols, network algorithms, and scheduling and load balancing.
- Applications of parallel and distributed computing, including web applications, peer-to-peer computing, grid computing, scientific applications, and mobile computing.
- Parallel and distributed architectures, including shared memory, distributed memory (including petascale system designs, and architectures with instruction-level and thread-level parallelism), special-purpose models (including signal and image processors, network processors, other special purpose processors), nontraditional processor technologies, network and interconnect architecture, parallel I/O and storage systems, system design issues for low power, design for high reliability, and performance modeling and evaluation.
- Parallel and distributed software, including parallel programming languages and compilers, runtime systems, operating systems, resource management, middleware, libraries, data mining, and programming environments and tools.
Conference history
The conference began in 1987 as the Orange County Parallel Processing Conference, before being renamed as the International Parallel Processing Symposium (IPPS). In 1998, the Symposium on Parallel and Distributed Systems (SPDP) merged with IPPS; and in 2000, the conference took the now familiar name: International Parallel and Distributed Processing Symposium (IPDPS). Five of the original volunteer organizers have served the conference for over two decades: Viktor Prasanna, George Westrom, Sally Jelinek Westrom, Susamma Barua, and Bill Pitts.
- 1987 - Fullerton, California, United States
- 1988 - Fullerton, California, USA
- 1989 - Fullerton, California, USA
- 1990 - Fullerton, California, USA
- 1991 - Anaheim, California, USA
- 1992 - Beverly Hills, California, USA
- 1993 - Newport Beach, California, USA
- 1994 - Cancún, Mexico
- 1995 - Santa Barbara, California, USA
- 1996 - Honolulu, Hawaii, USA
- 1997 - Geneva, Switzerland
- 1998 - Orlando, Florida, USA
- 1999 - San Juan, Puerto Rico
- 2000 - Cancún, Mexico
- 2001 - San Francisco, California, USA
- 2002 - Fort Lauderdale, Florida, USA
- 2003 - Nice, France
- 2004 - Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA
- 2005 - Denver, Colorado, USA
- 2006 - Rhodes Island, Greece
- 2007 - Long Beach, California, USA
- 2008 - Miami, Florida, USA
- 2009 - Rome, Italy
- 2010 - Atlanta, Georgia, USA
- 2011 - Anchorage, Alaska, USA
- 2012 - Shanghai, China
- 2013 - Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA
- 2014 - Phoenix, Arizona, USA
- 2015 - Hyderabad, India
- 2016 - Chicago, Illinois, USA
- 2017 - Orlando, Florida, USA
- 2018 - Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
- 2019 - Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
- 2020 - New Orleans, USA
- 2021 - Portland, USA
IEEE Computer Society Charles Babbage Award
In 1989, the conference established the Charles Babbage Award to be given each year to a conference participant in recognition of exceptional contributions to the field. In almost all cases, the award is given to one of the invited keynote speakers at the conference. The selection is made by the steering committee chairs, upon recommendation from the Program Chair and General Chair who have been responsible for the technical program of the conference, including inviting the speakers. It is presented immediately following the selected speaker's presentation at the conference, and he or she is given a plaque that specifies the nature of their special contribution to the field that is being recognized by IPDPS.[1]
Past recipients:
- 2019 - Ian Foster
- 2017 - Mateo Valero
- 2015 - Alan Edelman
- 2014 - Peter Kogge
- 2013 - James Demmel
- 2012 - Chris Johnson
- 2011 - Jack Dongarra
- 2010 - Burton Smith
- 2009 - Wen-Mei Hwu
- 2008 - Joel Saltz
- 2007 - Mike Flynn
- 2006 - Bill Dally
- 2005 - Yale N. Patt
- 2004 - Christos Papadimitriou
- 2003 - Michel Cosnard
- 2002 - Steve Wallach
- 2001 - Thomson Leighton
- 2000 - Michael O. Rabin
- 1999 - K. Mani Chandy
- 1998 - Jim Gray
- 1997 - Frances E. Allen
- 1995 - Richard Karp
- 1994 - Arvind
- 1993 - K. Mani Chandy
- 1992 - David Kuck
- 1991 - Harold S. Stone
- 1990 - H.T. Kung
- 1989 - Irving S. Reed
References
- "IEEE CS Charles Babbage Award". IEEE International Parallel & Distributed Processing Symposium. IPDPS. Retrieved 8 April 2017.