Hi Tanya, To submit for the Student Research Competition, one has to have finished their research right? Because it asks for a paper. For example, I'm a research intern this summer. My research will be finished by October but now I don't have a finished paper to submit. Thanks, Stefanos Baziotis ΣÏÎ¹Ï ÎÎµÏ , 20 ÎÎ¿Ï Î» 2020 ÏÏÎ¹Ï 8:11 Ï.μ., ο/η Tanya Lattner via llvm-dev < llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> ÎγÏαÏε: > A little more than 24 hours left for proposals! > > Submit your proposal here: LLVM2020 Submissions > <https://hotcrp.llvm.org/usllvm2020/> > > Thank you for your support of our first virtual LLVM Developersâ Meeting! > > -Tanya > > On Jul 12, 2020, at 9:55 AM, Tanya Lattner <tanyalattner at llvm.org> wrote: > > The deadline has been extended until July 20 11:59PM PDT. > > Thanks, > Tanya > > On Jun 12, 2020, at 9:01 AM, Tanya Lattner <tanyalattner at llvm.org> wrote: > > All developers and users of LLVM and related sub-projects are invited to > present at the first virtual 2020 LLVM Developersâ Meeting > <http://llvm.org/devmtg/2020-09/>! > > We are looking for the following proposals: > > 1. Technical Talks (25-30 minutes including Q&A): > > Talks on: > > - LLVM Infrastructure,Clang and all related sub-projects > - On uses of LLVM in academia or industry > - On new projects using Clang or LLVM > > > 1. Tutorials (60 minutes) > > In depth talks on LLVM infrastructure or other core libraries, tools, etc. > Demos encouraged. > > 1. Student Research Competition Technical Talks & Poster (20-25 > minutes including Q&A) > > Talks from students using LLVM, Clang, and all sub-projects in research. > The audience usually votes on a winner. > > 1. Lightning Talks (5 minutes, no questions, no discussions) > > Quick talks about a use or improvement of LLVM and other sub-projects. > > 1. Birds of a Feather > <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Birds_of_a_feather_(computing)> (30 > minutes) > > Historically these are informal and ad-hoc, but at our meeting they are > prepared in advance and are guided discussions (usually with a slide deck) > about a specific topic. For informal and ad-hoc, please consider a Round > Table (details to come). > > 1. Panels (30-60 minutes) > > Panels may discuss any topic as long as itâs relevant to LLVM or related > sub-projects. Panels can take many forms, but a common format is to begin > with short introductions from each panel member, and follow with an > interactive dialogue among the panelists and audience members. Panels > should consist of at least 3 people and have a moderator. > > 1. Posters (1 hour session) > > Posters presenting work using LLVM and related subprojects. Poster > presenters will answer questions from attendees and give mini > presentations. > > As this conference is virtual and our very first, we are still working out > the numerous details. The length of the talk types below are subject to > change, but the above gives you an idea of what we expect. The majority of > the talks will be pre-recorded except for panels, birds of a feather, > posters, and possibly lightning talks. In addition, we will be requiring > most speakers to participate in some form of live Q&A. Time zones are a > huge challenge with a virtual conference and we will do our best to be > reasonable in our expectations. > > The timeframe for submission is also much tighter due to allowing time for > speakers to record and us to process videos. We apologize for the > inconvenience. > > Submission Requirements: > The submission deadline is July 15, 2020 at 11:59PM PDT. > > Please submit your proposal here: > LLVM2020 Submissions <https://hotcrp.llvm.org/usllvm2020/> > > For each proposal, please submit a title, short abstract, submission type, > abstract for the website, include who the speakers or panel > member/moderators are, and provide a more detailed description of the talk > through an extended PDF abstract. We highly recommend you consult and > follow the guide at the end of this CFP when submitting your proposal. > > FAQ > > When will I be notified of acceptance? > > Our goal is to notify all submissions by July 31, 2020. > > When is the conference? > > In order to not conflict with another large virtual conference, we have > moved the 2020 LLVM Developersâ Meeting to October 6-8. The exact times of > the conference are still under discussion. > > Should I register if I have submitted a proposal? > > Given this is a virtual conference and we have less space restrictions and > a different fee structure, you can register at any time before the > registration deadline. We will be providing details on registration in > July. > > When will the recordings be due? > > Recordings should be completed by September 14. > > Will I be required to have a video camera? > > We do not want the lack of recording equipment to prevent submissions and > will be sorting out options to help those without recording equipment > available. Please stay tuned for details. > > When will my live Q&A be? > > As the conference is virtual, our attendees and speakers will be in many > different time zones. We wonât know the program until closer to the event > and then we can start to form a schedule. Our schedule will attempt to meet > the needs of many time zones, but will not be a perfect solution. You may > be asked to give a live Q&A early in the morning, late at night, or > multiple times. > > Who is on the program committee? > > The program committee is composed of active developers of the LLVM, Clang, > and related sub-communities. The website will be updated with the list of > the program committee members. > > I have a question, who do I contact? > > Please email the LLVM Dev Mtg Organizers (devmtg-organizers at lists.llvm.org), > or the LLVM Developersâ Meeting mailing list. > http://lists.llvm.org/mailman/listinfo/llvm-devmeeting > > > Detailed guidance on writing a proposal for the LLVM Developersâ Meeting > > Writing a proposal for the LLVM Developersâ Meeting > > This document is a guide to help you submit the best proposal and increase > your chances of your proposal being accepted. The LLVM Developersâ Meeting > program committee receives more proposals than can be accepted, so please > read this guide carefully. > > If you have never presented at an LLVM Developersâ Meeting, then do not > fear this process. We are actively looking for new speakers who are excited > about LLVM and helping grow the community through these educational talks! > You do not need to be a long time developer to submit a proposal. > > General Guidelines: > > - It should be clear from your abstract what your topic is, who your > targeted audience is, and what are the takeaways for attendees. The program > committee gets a lot of proposals and does not have time to read 10 page > papers for each submission (excluding SRC submissions). > - Talks about a use of LLVM (etc) should include details about how > LLVM is used and not only be about the resulting application. > - Tutorials on âhow to use Xâ in LLVM (or other subproject) are > greatly desired and beneficial to many developers. Entry level topics are > encouraged as well. > - Talks that have been presented at other technical conferences tend > to not get accepted. If you have presented this topic before, make it clear > what is new and different in your talk. > > > > Technical Talk and SRC Talk Proposal Template: > ** Include in the extended abstract PDF attachment ** > > Title: > > - This will be displayed on the website, schedule, and signs. Keep it > short and catchy to attract attendees to your talks. A couple of examples > are âWebAssembly: Here Be Dragonsâ or âBeyond Sanitizers: guided fuzzing > and security hardeningâ. There is also a field in the submission form for > this same title. > > > Description: > > - 1-2 paragraphs. You can also use this for the Website Abstract field > in the submission form. > - We suggest you proof read and pay attention to grammar. > > > Details: > > - Here you can include more details about your talk. An outline, demo > description, background of the speaker, etc. 1-2 paragraphs is usually > sufficient. > - This section will not be published and is intended for the PC to > better understand how interesting your talk will be to the audience. For > example, if you would prefer not to reveal some conclusions in the > published abstract, explaining them here ensures that the PC can take them > into account when evaluating your proposal. > > > SRC Paper: > > - If this is an SRC talk, please attach your paper as well. > > > Panel Talk Proposal Template: > ** Include in the extended abstract PDF attachment ** > > Title: > > - This will be displayed on the website, schedule, and signs. These > tend to be very straight forward about the area being discussed. An example > is âFuture directions and features for LLDBâ. There is also a field in the > submission form for this same title. > > > Description: > > - 1-2 paragraphs. May also be used for the website abstract field in > the submission form. > - Provide some talking points or potential subtopics. > - We suggest you proof read and pay attention to grammar. > > > Details: > > - Provide additional details: goals of the panel, and example > questions. Panels are to brainstorm and discuss ideas on a specific topic > between the experts on the panel and the audience. You should also include > detailed 2-3 sentence bios for each speaker on the panel. You may or may > not include speaker names as the submissions are blind. > > > Tutorial Proposal Template: > ** Include in the extended abstract PDF attachment ** > > Title: > > - This will be displayed on the website, schedule, and signs. Keep it > short and catchy to attract attendees to your talks. There is also a field > in the submission form for this same title. > > > Description: > > - 1-2 paragraphs. May also be used for the website abstract field in > the submission form. > - We suggest you proof read and pay attention to grammar. > > > Details: > > - Include additional details such as tutorial outline, what materials > you will provide attendees, etc. > > > > > _______________________________________________ > LLVM Developers mailing list > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org > https://lists.llvm.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20200720/9441f07e/attachment.html>
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