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The Almaden Institute is held annually at IBM's Almaden
Research Center in San Jose, California. The Institute brings together
eminent, innovative thinkers from academia, government, industry, research
labs and the media for an intellectually charged, stimulating and vigorous
dialogue that addresses fundamental challenges at the very edge of science
and technology.
Fools ignore complexity. Pragmatists suffer it. Some can avoid it.
Geniuses remove it.
Alan Perlis - first recipient of the Turing Award
I don't think I've ever seen a piece of commercial software where the
next version is simpler rather than more complex.
Walter Bender, Executive Director of the MIT media lab
Everything should be made as simple as possible, but not simpler.
Albert Einstein
Computing and communication networks touch our everyday
lives-- from mobile phones to email and instant messaging and from computational
biology to grid computing for shared scientific research. Yet those of
us in the IT industry are still working to deliver the necessary robustness,
resiliency and security for this networked computing fabric to function
invisibly and reliably. Our systems are often mysteriously slow, and “blue
screen" crashes occur all too often; malicious virus attacks cripple our
networks, and identity theft threatens the very freedom of the open use
of the web.
Many of today’s computing applications stand in stark contrast to traditional
closed systems, historically created and operated inside an enterprise.
More and more, applications are open, spanning the globe, involving billions
of interacting components, supplied by myriad of vendors and continuously
updated and used by millions of people. In order to take full advantage
of this opportunity, we must move away from studying problems as piece
parts and focus on the bigger picture as we create the computing systems
of the future.
Can understanding systems biology help us design multi-layer robust,
resilient systems? Can comprehending statistical mechanics from physics
help us identify the necessary properties of multi-billion computing element
ensembles? Can a better grasp of the principles of economics help us formulate
scientific foundations and implications of global technology services
business? Will such cross-disciplinary influences help us deliver a robust,
globe-spanning fabric of computing utility and also prepare the next generation
of university students with new skills for shaping technology development
and services?
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The Institute will endeavor to construct a collective bird's
eye view both of the state of the art and of what is to come, to elucidate
and formulate the main open questions in this grand quest and to highlight
promising directions. As always, the goal of the institute is to ask tough
questions, to raise important discussions and to prompt significant constructive
action around a contemporary scientific and technological theme.
Confirmed speakers include:
The Institute format is designed to facilitate and foster discussion,
debate, interaction, and networking.
If you are interested in attending this years Institute on Navigating Complexity: Doing more with less,
please send a note to: almadeninst2007@almaden.ibm.com
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