USENIX SUMMER 1991 TECHNICAL CONFERENCE & EXHIBITION

Carolyn Carr carolyn at usenix.ORG
Thu Jun 6 08:19:13 AEST 1991


       	USENIX SUMMER 1991 TECHNICAL CONFERENCE & EXHIBITION
	             Nashville, Tennessee

                MULTIMEDIA FOR NOW AND THE FUTURE  

            *** ON SITE REGISTRATION IS ENCOURAGED ***

For Registration and Hotel Information contact: 

                        USENIX Conference Office
                        22672 Lambert St., Suite 613
                        El Toro, CA  92630
                        Telephone # (714) 588-8649
                        FAX # (714) 588-9706
                        email address:  judy at usenix.org

Special rates have been arranged for USENIX attendees at the hotels
listed below.  Call the hotel of your choice DIRECTLY.  BE SURE TO
MENTION that you are attending the USENIX Conference/Exhibition to take
advantage of the group discount.  A one night's deposit is required
for each room reserved.

*Opryland Hotel (Headquarters)
 2800 Opryland Drive, Nashville, TN 37214
 615/889-1000

 "Traditional Room" rates:     Single:  $114	Double:  $129
 "Golden Terrace" room rates:  Single:  $144	Double   $159

*Sheraton Music City Hotel
 777 McGavock Pike, Nashville, TN 37214
 615/885-2200

	      Room Rates:  Single or Double Room: $92

***********************************************************************

TUTORIAL PROGRAM
Monday and Tuesday, June 10 & 11

M1
Programming in Perl
Instructor:     Tom Christiansen, CONVEX Computer Corporation

INTENDED AUDIENCE: This tutorial is designed for programmers who 
do substantial amounts of shell programming.  It is especially suited 
for system administrators in a heterogeneous environment.  Some 
experience in sh, sed, awk, or the C language is assumed.  

M2
An Introduction to the TCP/IP Protocol Suite
Instructor:     Richard Stevens, Consultant

INTENDED AUDIENCE:  This tutorial is for UNIX users and 
programmers interested in learning about the TCP/IP protocol suite.  
No networking knowledge is assumed.

M3
An Introduction to C++
Instructor:    Robert Murray, AT&T Bell Laboratories

INTENDED AUDIENCE:  The audience is assumed to be technical (as 
opposed to managerial).  A fairly complete knowledge of C is 
assumed.  Knowledge of object-oriented programming or data 
abstraction is not required.

M4
UNIX System V Release 4.0 Internals Part I:  Virtual Memory and 
File Systems
Instructors:   Steve Buroff, AT&T and Mike Scheer, ProLogic 
Corporation.

INTENDED AUDIENCE:  This tutorial is intended for people who 
maintain, modify, or port the UNIX system or who are interested in 
learning about its internals.  Attendees should have a good working 
knowledge of UNIX applications programming and the C language; 
those with knowledge of UNIX internals will particularly benefit from 
the focus on new and changed features of Release 4. 

M5
Programming the X Window System, Version 11
Instructor:     Oliver Jones, Saber Software, Inc.

INTENDED AUDIENCE:  This tutorial is for software developers and 
other people interested in UNIX-based graphical user interfaces who 
are beginning the process of learning to program using the X Window 
System.  A working knowledge of UNIX and the C programming 
language are the only prerequisites.

M6  NEW!
An Introduction to UNIX System Security
Instructor:     Matt Bishop, Dartmouth College

INTENDED AUDIENCE:  This new tutorial is intended for UNIX users 
and system administrators who are concerned about system security; 
no knowledge of UNIX security features is assumed.

M7  NEW!
UNIX Programming Tools
Instructor:     Kenneth Ingham, Consultant

INTENDED AUDIENCE:  This new tutorial is aimed at programmers 
familiar with basic Unix topics, and preferably those who are familiar 
with the C programming language.

M8  NEW!
OSF/1 Internals
Instructor:     Thomas W. Doeppner Jr., Brown University

INTENDED AUDIENCE:  This new tutorial benefits the individual who 
is involved with porting or supporting the OSF/1 operating system, 
as well as those who are simply interested in what the OSF/1 kernel 
is all about.  It assumes a general knowledge of how UNIX systems 
are organized and some previous exposure to UNIX internals (such as 
an earlier USENIX tutorial on UNIX internals).

M9
Mach Overview
Instructor:    Avadis Tevanian, Jr., NeXT, Inc.

INTENDED AUDIENCE:  This tutorial is of interest to a wide range of 
people, from those working closely with Mach to those who would 
just like to find out more about Mach and its internals.  People 
interested in doing a port of Mach will find the tutorial especially 
useful.

T1 - FILLED
Advanced Topics in Systems Administration
Instructors:    Evi Nemeth, University of Colorado and Rob Kolstad, 
Sun Microsystems

INTENDED AUDIENCE:  System administrators in networked 
computing environments.  The ever-popular Nemeth and Kolstad 
Systems Administration tutorials almost always sell out.  Preregister 
early.

T2
UNIX Network Programming
Instructor:     Richard Stevens, Consultant

INTENDED AUDIENCE:  UNIX/C programmers interested in learning 
how to write programs that communicate across a network.  A basic 
familiarity with networking concepts and the TCP/IP protocols is 
assumed.  

T3 
C++ Programming Style
Instructor:     Tom Cargill, Consultant

INTENDED AUDIENCE:  Programmers who are starting to program in 
C++ or have a reading knowledge and are looking for guidance on 
how to use C++ features in practice.  Knowledge of C++ language basics 
is assumed.  Advanced language features are clarified as needed.  
The material is code intensive, for programmers who like to read and 
understand programs.

T4
UNIX System V Release 4.0 Internals 2 Part II:  Streams I/O and 
Process Management
Instructors:    Mike Scheer, ProLogic and Steve Buroff, AT&T

INTENDED AUDIENCE:  Attendees should have attended "UNIX System 
V Release 4.0 Internals Part I:  Virtual Memory and File Systems," 
or have equivalent knowledge.  This is a newly revised tutorial and a 
source license is not required.

T5
Introduction to Programming With the X Toolkit Intrinsics
Instructor:    Paul Kimball, Digital Equipment Corporation

INTENDED AUDIENCE:  Programmers who are new to X Toolkits, or 
interested end-users who want a better understanding of the 
technology.  Attendees should have a good working knowledge of the 
X Window System Architecture, including the Xlib programming 
interface, or should attend the X Window System Tutorial. For the 
more advanced material, a good understanding of C language syntax 
and structures is required.

T6
Network Security: The Kerberos Approach
Instructors:    Dan Geer, DEC and Jon A. Rochlis, MIT

INTENDED AUDIENCE:  Systems developers responsible for networked 
workstation environments, particularly those whose environments 
may include networks which are not themselves physically secure 
(i.e., "open" networks).  Systems managers concerned about the 
inherent lack of security for managing today's network-based 
environments (e.g., UNIX's .rhosts files).

T7 NEW!
Introduction to Hypertext Systems and Hypermedia Applications
Instructor:     Paul Kahn, Brown University

INTENDED AUDIENCE:   This new tutorial assumes no previous 
experience with hypertext or hypermedia software. It is for 
managers, end-users, and software engineers interested in 
understanding hypermedia concepts and applying hypermedia 
software solutions in their work.

T8
The Network Computing System (OSF/DCE Remote Procedure Call)
Instructors:    Nathaniel Mishkin and Paul J. Leach, Hewlett-Packard; 
Richard Mackey, Open Software Foundation

INTENDED AUDIENCE:  No prior knowledge about distributed 
computing will be assumed.  A  knowledge of general networking 
issues will be helpful.  The tutorial should give attendees a good 
overall sense of what NCA/NCS is and how one writes applications 
using NCS.

T9
New Kernel Facilities in 4.3BSD-Reno
Instructors:       Marshall Kirk McKusick and Michael J. Karels, 
University of California, Berkeley

INTENDED AUDIENCE:  This tutorial is directed to systems 
programmers that have taken a tutorial on 4.3 internals or who have 
had at least a year of experience working on the 4.3 kernel.  No 
source license is required for this tutorial.

***********************************************************************

For information on registration and hotel, please contact:

                        USENIX Conference Office
                        22672 Lambert St., Suite 613
                        El Toro, CA  92630
                        Telephone # (714) 588-8649
                        FAX # (714) 588-9706
                        email address:  judy at usenix.org

************************************************************************


                          USENIX SUMMER 1991
                  TECHNICAL CONFERENCE & EXHIBITION
                       **TECHNICAL SESSIONS**

                          June 12 - 14

			Nashville, Tennessee


            *** ON SITE REGISTRATION IS ENCOURAGED ***

Note that, due to difficulties in scheduling the audio/visual equipment,
there have been some adjustments to the original schedule.   We have
tried to keep changes to a minimum, and do apologize for any
difficulties this may cause.

Also note that the program includes refereed papers, "invited
presentations" (i.e.  interactive worksessions, minitutorials, etc.),
and multimedia demos.
------------------------------------------------------------------------

	WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12

Wed 9 - 10  		PLENARY SESSION
	Introductory Remarks
	Deborah K. Scherrer, mt Xinu

	KEYNOTE ADDRESS: Musical Dreams and Musical Reality
	Paul Lansky, Princeton University

Wed 10:30 - 12:30	A.  FILE SYSTEMS
	Long-Term Caching Strategies for Very Large Distributed File 
	Systems	
	Matt Blaze, Rafael Alonso, Princeton University

	Management of Replicated Volume Location Data in the Ficus 
	Replicated File System	
	Thomas W. Page, Jr., Richard G. Guy, John S. Heidemann,
	Gerald J. Popek, Wai Mak, Dieter Rothmeier
	University of California, Los Angeles

	Exploiting Multiple I/O Streams to Provide High Data-Rates
	Luis-Felipe Cabrera, IBM Almaden Research Center and 
	Darrell D. E. Long, University of California, Santa Cruz

	An Open and Extensible Event-Based Transaction Manager
	Edward C. Cheng, Edward Chang, Johannes Klein, Dora Lee, 
	Edward Lu, Alberto Lutgardo, Ron Obermarck
	Digital Equipment Corporation

Wed 10:30 - 12:30 	B.  HYPERMEDIA
	Overview of Hypertext  ["invited talk"]
	John J. Puttress, AT&T Bell Laboratories

	Emerging Hypermedia Standards -
	Hypermedia Marketplace Prepares for HyTime and MHEG
	Brian D. Markey, Multimedia Engineering, Digital Equipment 
	Corporation

	Multimedia Presentation System "Harmony" with Temporal 
	and Active Media	
	Kazutoshi Fujikawa, Shinji Shimojo, Toshio Matsuura, Shojiro 
	Nishio, Hideo Miyahara, Osaka University

Wed 2:00 - 3:30	 	A.  MULTIMEDIA DEMOS
	Spacio-Temporal Editing Using Multi-Layered Image 
	Synthesis (HDTV)
	Seiki Inoue, Masahiro Shibata,  NHK

	DIDDLY:  Digital's Integrated Distributed Database 
	LaboratorY
	David B. Wecker, Database Systems Research, Digital Equipment 
	Corporation

Wed 2:00 - 3:30 	B.  MULTIMEDIA DATA RATES AND SYNCHRONIZATION
	Distributed Multimedia:  How Can the Necessary Data Rates be 
	Supported?	
	Michael Pasieka, Paul Crumley, Ann Marks, Ann Infortuna
	Information Technology Center, Carnegie Mellon University

	Multimedia/Realtime Extensions for the Mach Operating 
	System	
	Jun Nakajima, Masatomo Yazaki, Hitoshi Matsumoto
	Human Interface Laboratory, Fujitsu Laboratories, LTD.

	A Testbed for Managing Digital Video and Audio Storage
	P. Venkat Rangan, Walter A. Burkhard, Robert W. Bowdidge, 
	Harrick M. Vin, John W. Lindwall, Kashun Chan, Ingvar A. 
	Aaberg, Linda M. Yamamoto, Ian G. Harris
	University of California, San Diego

Wed 4:00 - 5:30 
	Neural Orchestration:  From Cortical Simulation to Cortical 
	Symphony	
	Matthew Witten, Robert E. Wyatt, University of Texas at Austin

	UNIX and MIDI for the Masses	["invited talk"]
	Tim Thompson, AT&T Bell Laboratories

Wed 4:00 - 5:30 	A.  MULTIMEDIA PUBLISHING I
	MAEstro -- A Distributed Multimedia Authoring Environment
	George D. Drapeau, Stanford University
	Howard Greenfield, Sun Microsystems

	A Structure for Transportable, Dynamic Multimedia Documents	
	Dick C. A. Bulterman, Guido van Rossum, Robert van Liere, 
	CWI:  Centrum voor Wiskunde en Informatica

	Parsing Movies in Context
	Thomas G. Aguierre Smith, Natalio C. Pincever
	Interactive Cinema Group, The Media Lab, MIT

THURSDAY, JUNE 13

Thurs 9:00 - 10:30 	A.  MULTIMEDIA DEMO
	The Architecture of the IRCAM Musical Workstation
	Eric Lindemann, Miller Puckette, Eric Viara, Maurizio De Cecco,
	Francois Dechelle, Bennett Smith
	Institut de Recherche et Coordination of Acoustique/Musique
	(IRCAM)

Thurs 9:00 - 10:30	B.  STRINGS AND THINGS
	Fast String Searching
	Andrew Hume, AT&T Bell Laboratories
	Daniel Sunday, Johns Hopkins University

	SFIO: Safe/Fast String/File IO
	David G. Korn, K.-Phong Vo
	AT&T Bell Laboratories

	Activity Server:  You can run but you can't hide	
	Sanjay Manandhar, MIT Media Lab

Thurs 11:00 - 12:30 	A.  USER INTERFACE
	8-1/2, the Plan 9 Window System
	Rob Pike, AT&T Bell Laboratories

	Integrating Gesture Recognition and Direct Manipulation
	Dean Rubine, Information Technology Center, Carnegie Mellon 
	University

	A Minimalist Global User Interface	
	Rob Pike, AT&T Bell Laboratories

Thurs 11:00 - 12:30 	B. ["invited talks"]  
	From Blazon to PostScript	
	Daniel V. Klein, Software Engineering Inst., Carnegie Mellon 
	University

	The KornShell Past, Present and Future
	David G. Korn, AT&T Bell Laboratories

Thurs 2:00 - 3:30 	A.  MULTIMEDIA DEMO
	Software Technology at NeXT
	Avadis Tevanian, Trey Matteson, David Jaffe, Bryan 
	Yamamoto, NeXT, Inc.

Thurs 2:00 - 3:30 	B. ["invited talk"]  
	Overview of Motif	
	Ellis Cohen, Open Software Foundation

Thurs 4:00 - 5:30 	A.  MULTIMEDIA PUBLISHING II
	Plastic Editors for Multimedia Documents
	Matthew E. Hodges, Digital Equipment Corporation
	Russell M. Sasnett, GTE Laboratories Inc.

	MediaView:  An Editable Multimedia Publishing System
	Developed with an Object-Oriented Toolkit	
	Richard L. Phillips, Los Alamos National Laboratory

	Newspace: Mass Media and Personal Computing
	Walter Bender, Hakon Lie, Jonathan Orwant,
	Laura Teodosio, Nathan Abramson
	Electronic Publishing Group, MIT Media Lab

Thurs 4:00 - 5:30 	B.  ["invited panel"]
	WINDOW PAINS 
	Moderator:  Jon Steinhart, Consultant
	Panelists:  James Goslind, Sun Microsystems
		    Kee Hinckley, Alfalfa Software
		    Mark Linton, Stanford University
		    Rob Pike, AT&T Bell Laboratories

FRIDAY, JUNE 14

Fri 9:00 - 10:30 	A.  MULTIMEDIA DEMOS
	The MIT Media Laboratory
	Glorianna Davenport, MIT Media Lab

	Integrating Real-Time Video with Sun Workstations
	Jennifer Overholt, Dave Berry, Sun Microsystems

Fri 9:00 - 10:30 	B. ["invited talk"]  
	Scaling Up:  Automating System Administration	
	Doug Kingston, Morgan Stanley & Co.

Fri 11:00 - 12:30 	A.  SYSTEM IMPLICATIONS OF COMPRESSION
	Design Considerations for JPEG Video and 
	Synchronized Audio in a UNIX Workstation Environment
	Bernard I. Szabo, Gregory K. Wallace, Digital Equipment 
	Corporation

	Shared Video under UNIX	
	Paul G. Milazzo, BBN Systems and Technologies

	Compressed Executables:  An Exercise in Thinking Small
	Mark Taunton, Acorn Computers Ltd.

Fri 11:00 - 12:30 	B. ["invited talk"]
	Networks: Friend or Foe?	
	Hal Stern, Sun Microsystems

Fri 2:00 - 3:30 	A.  AUDIO AND CONFERENCING
	Experiences with Audio Conferencing Using the X Window 
	System, UNIX, and TCP/IP	
	Robert Terek, Joseph Pasquale
	University of California, San Diego

	Integrating Audio and Telephony in a Distributed Workstation 
	Environment	
	Susan Angebranndt, Richard L. Hyde, Daphne Huetu Loung
	Nagendra Siravara, Digital Equipment Corporation
	Chris Schmandt, MIT Media Lab

	A Brief Overview of the DCS Distributed Conferencing System
	R. E. Newman-Wolfe, C. L. Ramirez,  H. Pelimuhandiram, 
	M. Montes, M. Webb, D. L. Wilson, University of Florida

Fri 2:00 - 3:30 	B. ["invited talk"]
	C Programming Style	
	Rob Kolstad, Sun Microsystems

Fri 4:00 - 5:30 	A.  PANEL (refereed)
	Software and Intellectual Property -- Who Owns Your Work? 	
	Organizer:  Dan Geer, Digital Equipment Corp.
	Moderator:  Rob Kolstad, Sun Microsystems
	Panelists:  Dan Appelman, Attorney, Heller, Ehrman, White &
		    McAuliffe
		    Barry Shein, an independent software developer 
		    Glen Self, Vice President of Research & Development,
                               EDS
		    Jack Biddle, President, Computers & Communications
		   		 Industry Assoc

Fri 4:00 - 5:30 	B.  MULTIMEDIA DEMO and WIPs
	A Workstation-based Multi-media Environment for Broadcast
	Television
	Keishi Kandori, Asahi Broadcasting Corporation

	Works-in-Progress 	

************************************************************************

For REGISTRATION and HOTEL INFORMATION please contact:


                        USENIX Conference Office
                        22672 Lambert St., Suite 613
                        El Toro, CA  92630
                        Telephone # (714) 588-8649
                        FAX # (714) 588-9706
                        email address:  judy at usenix.org




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