Tomorrow the First International Workshop on Software Research and Climate Change is being held as part of the Onward! 2009 conference in Florida. Jorge and I are going to attempt to attend the workshop remotely, so wish us luck. I'll be blogging about the experience tomorrow.
To begin, and as a refresher, I thought I'd post a single sentence summary of each of the position papers submitted for this workshop. Position papers were solicited from participants and were to respond to the challenge stated on the opening page of the workshop. In summary, the challenge is: how do we apply our expertise in software research to save our butts from certain destruction due to climate collapse. Or, as Steve puts it, "how can we apply our research strengths to make significant contributions to the problems of mitigation and adaptation of climate change."
In answer to that challenge, the position papers suggest software research should...
"Data Centres vs. Community Clouds", Gerard Briscoe and Ruzanna Chitchya
... tackle the energy inefficiency of cloud computing by investigating decentralised models where consumer machines also become providers and coordinators of computing resources.
"Optimizing Energy Consumption in Software Intensive systems", Arjan de Roo, Hasan Sozer and Mehmet Aksit
... provide the tools and design patterns for building software systems that meet both their energy-consumption requirements and their functional design requirements.
"Modeling for Intermodal Freight Transportation Policy Analysis", J. Scott Hawker
... improve three aspects of decision-making tools (like, say, an intermodal freight transportation policy analysis model): make them easier to use and interact with (HCI-wise); deal with the complexity of the models and the troubles with integrating various existing implementations; as well as (my favourite), make sure the software is built well since most of the folks doing the building are not trained.
"Computing Education with a Cause", Lisa Jamba
... investigate how to involve computer science students in research "toward improving health outcomes related to climate change" as part of the university curriculum.
"Some Thoughts on Climate Change and Software Engineering Research", Lin Liu, He Zhang, and Sheikh Iqbal Ahamed
... investigate how to navigate and integrate knowledge from many different disciplines and perspectives so as to help people communicate and work together; build decision-support, analysis and educational tools for people, companies, and government; build tools for incorporating environmental non-functional requirements into software construction.
"Refactoring Infrastructure: Reducing emissions and energy one step at a time", Chris Parnin and Carsten Görg.
... use insights from software refactoring to develop refactoring techniques for physical infrastructure (energy grid, water supply, etc.).
"In search for green metrics", Juha Taina and Pietu Pohjalainen
... establish a "framework for estimating or measuring the effects of a software systems' effect on climate change."
"Enabling Climate Scientists to Access Observational Data", David Woollard, Chris Mattmann, Amy Braverman, Rob Raskin, and Dan Crichton
... build systems to help climate scientists locate, transfer, and transform observational data from disparate sources.
"Context-aware Resource Sharing for People-centric Sensing", Jorge Vallejos, Matthias Stevens, Ellie D’Hondt, Nicolas Maisonneuve, Wolfgang De Meuter, Theo D’Hondt, and Luc Steels.
... investigate how to use our everyday hand-held devices as sensors to provide fine-grained environmental data.
"Language and Library Support for Climate Data Applications", Eric Van Wyk, Vipin Kumar, Michael Steinbach, Shyam Boriah, and Alok Choudhary
... build language extensions and libraries to make climate data analysis easier and more computationally efficient.
Position papers from the 1st Intl. Workshop on Software Research and Climate Change
Sunday, October 25, 2009
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