About CLOUD 2011
 CLOUD
2011 Highlights - Photo Gallery
Advance
Program
(7/1/2011): IEEE-CLOUD-ICWS-SCC-SERVICES-AdvanceProgram.pdf
IEEE
CLOUD/ICWS/SCC/SERVICES 2011 Keynotes
Opening Speech: Sorel Reisman, IEEE Computer Society President, 2011
Keynote 1: Data, Data, Data: The Core of Cloud/Services Computing!
(Peter Chen, Fellow of IEEE, ACM & AAAS,
Professor, Louisiana State University (LSU) & Carnegie-Mellon
University (CMU)Professor, Louisiana State University &
Carnegie-Mellon University)
Keynote 2: Clouds: From Both Sides, Now
(Dan Reed, Fellow of ACM, IEEE & AAAS, Corporate
Vice President, Microsoft)
Keynote 3: Web Services in the Scientific Wilds
(Carole Goble, Fellow of Royal Academy of
Engineering, Professor, University of Manchester, UK)
All tracks have
concluded and all notifications have
been sent out.
Research Track: acceptance rate (18%);
full paper (8
pages);
Applications and Experiences Track: acceptance rate (19%); full
paper (8 pages);
Industry Track: accetance rate (15%); full paper (8
pages);
Work-in-Progress Track: 2 pages
Download
a full-page color poster (in November 2010 and December 2010 Issues of
the IEEE Computer and December
2010 Issues of the Communications
of ACM) for the largest Services
Computing event in 2011!
“Change
we
are leading”
is the
theme of CLOUD 2011. Cloud Computing has become a
scalable services
consumption and delivery platform in the field of Services Computing.
The technical
foundations of Cloud Computing include Service-Oriented Architecture
(SOA) and Virtualizations of hardware and software. The goal of Cloud
Computing is to share resources among the cloud service consumers,
cloud partners, and cloud vendors in the cloud value chain. The
resource sharing at various levels results in various cloud offerings
such as infrastructure cloud (e.g. hardware, IT infrastructure
management), software cloud (e.g. SaaS focusing on middleware as a
service, or traditional CRM as a service), application cloud (e.g.
Application as a Service, UML modeling tools as a service, social
network as a service), and business cloud (e.g. business process as a
service).
In
the fast growing Services
Computing community,
we have launched a series of events to promote and grow Cloud Computing
in the past years. In 2002, we promoted Business Grid to share business
processes and applications. In early 2008, The
IEEE Transactions on
Services Computing (TSC) has
adopted Cloud Computing to be
included in the taxonomy as a body of knowledge
area of
Services Computing. In July
2008, the IEEE International Conference on Services Computing (SCC
2008) has delivered a keynote
panel “Business
Cloud: Bridging
The Power of SOA and Cloud Computing” and a keynote
“Cloud Computing”. In September 2008, the 2008 IEEE
International Conference on Web Services (ICWS
2008) has delivered a
keynote “Web Services: Software-as-a-Service (SaaS),
Communication, and Beyond” and a panel "Cloud Computing and
IT as a Service: Opportunities and Challenges" to further motivate the
community members to define Cloud Computing in various areas.
Based
on the technology
foundations and industry
driving forces, the 2009 International Conference on Cloud Computing
(CLOUD 2009) was created to provide a prime international forum for
both
researchers and industry practitioners to exchange the latest
fundamental advances in the state of the art and practice of Cloud
Computing, identify emerging research topics, and define the future of
Cloud Computing.
CLOUD 2009 is the hot-topic conference co-located with the
2009 World
Congress on Services (SERVICES
2009). The two
well-established theme
conferences, the 2009 IEEE International
Conference on Web Services (ICWS
2009) held in July 2009 in USA
and the 2009
IEEE International Conference on Services Computing (SCC
2009) held in
September 2009 in India, also enjoyed the success of launching CLOUD-I
2009 and CLOUD-II
2009. CLOUD
2009 was
jointly sponsored by IEEE Computer Society Technical Committee on
Services Computing (TC-SVC)
and Services
Society. As a community, we
have accomplished very well around CLOUD 2009's theme
"Change
We Can Lead" in 2009.
In July 2010, CLOUD
2010 was co-located with IEEE
International Conference on Web
Services (ICWS
2010), IEEE International
Conference on Services Computing (SCC
2010), and
IEEE World Congress on Services (SERVICES
2010) in
Miami, Florida, USA. Three cloud-centric keynotes were
delivered: "Cloud Computing in an Outcome Centric World,"
"Securing Data in the Cloud-Challenges and Research Directions," and
"Thinking outside the Box: How Cloud, Grid, and Services can Make Us
Smarter."
CLOUD
2011 will be
co-located with the 7th IEEE 2011 World Congress on Services (SERVICES
2011), the 9th IEEE 2011
International Conference on Web
Services
(ICWS
2011), the
8th IEEE 2011
International Conference on Services
Computing (SCC
2011), and 2nd IEEE Cloud Forum
for Practioners (ICFP
2011) to grow itself to
continue to be the most
prestigious professional conference dedicated to cloud computing.
To
discuss this emerging enabling
technology of
the modern services industry, CLOUD 2011 invites you to join the
largest academic
conference to explores modern services and software
sciences in the field of Services Computing, which was formally
promoted by IEEE Computer Society since 2003. From technology
foundation perspective, Services Computing has become the default
discipline in the modern services industry.
See
you in July 2011 in Washington DC, USA!
========================================================
Please join us at
IEEE Services
Computing
Community (https://www.ieeecommunities.org/services).
Press the "JOIN" button to
apply for a
FREE membership. As a member, you will be permitted to login and
participate
in the community. This invitation allows you to join a community
designed to facilitate collaboration among a group while minimizing
e-mails to your inbox. As a registered member of the Services Computing
Community, you can also access IEEE Body of Knowledge on Services
Computing (http://www.servicescomputing.tv).
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