Related articles |
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IEEE RTSS'98 - Program, Registration Info, Related Events rich@cs.umd.edu (1998-10-05) |
From: | rich@cs.umd.edu (Richard Gerber) |
Newsgroups: | comp.compilers |
Followup-To: | poster |
Date: | 5 Oct 1998 20:52:02 -0400 |
Organization: | University of Maryland |
Keywords: | conference, realtime |
=======================================================================
THE 19TH IEEE REAL-TIME SYSTEMS SYMPOSIUM (RTSS'98)
Madrid, Spain
December 2-4, 1998
Sponsors:
- The IEEE Computer Society Technical Committee on Real-Time Systems
- The Technical Univerity of Madrid.
=======================================================================
CONTENTS:
* Conference Overview and Technical Program.
* CFP: PLRTIA - The IEEE Workshop on Programming
Languages for Real-Time Industrial Applications.
* Call For Demos: The RTSS Industrial Exhibition.
* CFP: The RTSS '98 Work-in-Progress Track.
* Advance Registration and Hotel Information.
* RTSS '98 Conference Organization.
=======================================================================
RTSS '98 - OVERVIEW AND PROGRAM:
RTSS '98 will bring together a wide body of researchers and developers,
to advance the science and practice of real-time computing. The RTSS program
includes many aspects of real-time and embedded systems, including modeling
and design methods, operating systems, scheduling algorithms, databases, file
systems, networks and communications, programming languages, formal methods,
architecture, middleware and APIs, instrumentation, fault tolerance, software
engineering, performance analysis, embedded systems,signal processing,
multimedia applications, process control, tool support - and a lot more.
In 1998, RTSS received a record number of submitted papers. There were 182
papers in all, 80 more than last year, 50 more than any RTSS ever held. Of
these, 45 were chosen to appear on the program, which follows below.
_______________________________________________________________________
DECEMBER 1, 1998
_______________________________________________________________________
PLRTI: IEEE Workshop on Programming Languages for Real-Time
Industrial Applications. See below for details on the
details on the workshop.
_______________________________________________________________________
DECEMBER 2, 1998
_______________________________________________________________________
09.30: Session 1 - Keynote Talk #1
Speaker: DAVID MARTINEZ, MIT Lincoln Laboratory
Title: Future Challenges in the Development of
Real-Time High Performance Embedded Systems
11.30: Session 2 - Systems and Scheduling I
INTEGRATING MULTIMEDIA APPLICATIONS IN HARD REAL-TIME SYSTEMS.
Luca Abeni and Giorgio Buttazzo
ISOCHRONOUS SCHEDULING AND ITS APPLICATION TO TRAFFIC CONTROL.
Masaaki Iwasaki, Tadashi Takeuchi, Masahiko Nakahara and Takahiro
Nakano
SCHEDULABILITY ANALYSIS FOR TASKS WITH STATIC AND DYNAMIC OFFSETS.
J.C. Palencia Gutierrez M. Gonzalez Harbour
13.00: Lunch
14.30: Session 3.A - Databases and Filesystems
DEADLINE-MODIFICATION-SCAN WITH MAXIMUM-SCANNABLE-GROUPS
FOR MULTIMEDIA REAL-TIME DISK SCHEDULING
Ray-I Chang Wei-Kuan Shih Ruei-Chuan Chang
USING SEPARATE ALGORITHMS TO PROCESS READ-ONLY TRANSACTIONS
IN REAL-TIME SYSTEMS
Kwok-Wa Lam, Sang H. Son, Victor C. S. Lee and
Sheung-Lun Hung
MAINTAINING TEMPORAL COHERENCY OF VIRTUAL WAREHOUSES
Raghav Srinivasan, Chao Liang and Krithi Ramamritham
14.30: Session 3.B - Systems Design and Development I
SPECIFICATION AND MODELING OF DYNAMIC, DISTRIBUTED
REAL-TIME SYSTEMS
Lonnie R. Welch, Binoy Ravindran, Behrooz A. Shirazi
and Carl Bruggeman
DETAILED DESIGN OF AVIONICS CONTROL SOFTWARE
Ulf Nilsson, Siwert Streiffert, Anders Torne
SCHEDULABILITY ANALYSIS FOR AUTOMATED IMPLEMENTATIONS
OF REAL-TIME OBJECT-ORIENTED MODELS
M. Saksena, A. Ptak, P. Freedman, and P. Rodziewicz
16.30: Session 4.A - Scheduling and Analysis I
A BETTER POLYNOMIAL-TIME SCHEDULABILITY TEST FOR
REAL-TIME MULTIFRAME TASKS
Ching-Chih Han
A GENERAL MODEL FOR RECURRING REAL-TIME TASKS
Sanjoy Baruah
STATISTICAL RATE MONOTONIC SCHEDULING
Alia K. Atlas Azer Bestavros
16.30: Session 4.B - Timing Analysis and Compiler Techniques
TESTING THE RESULTS OF STATIC WORST-CASE EXECUTION-TIME
ANALYSIS
Peter Puschner and Roman Nossal
COMBINING ABSTRACT INTERPRETATION AND ILP FOR
MICROARCHITECTURE MODELLING AND PROGRAM PATH ANALYSIS
Henrik Theiling and Christian Ferdinand
COMPILER OPTIMIZATIONS FOR REAL TIME EXECUTION OF LOOPS
ON LIMITED MEMORY EMBEDDED SYSTEMS
Sundaram Anantharaman and Santosh Pande
18.00: Work-In-Progress Session I
21.00: Conference Banquet
Location: Club de Campo Villa de Madrid
Busses leave from Palace Hotel at 20.30
_______________________________________________________________________
DECEMBER 3, 1998
_______________________________________________________________________
09.30: Session 5 - Keynote Talk #2
Speaker: BRAN SELIC, ObtecTime Ltd.
Title: Animated Structures: Real-Time, Objects and the UML
11.30: Session 6 - Systems and Scheduling II
THE TIME-TRIGGERED MODEL OF COMPUTATION
Hermann Kopetz
SYNTHESIS TECHNIQUES FOR LOW-POWER HARD REAL-TIME SYSTEMS
ON VARIABLE VOLTAGE PROCESSOR
Inki Hong, Gang Qu, Miodrag Potkonjak, and Mani B. Srivastava
TASK PERIOD SELECTION AND SCHEDULABILITY IN REAL-TIME
SYSTEMS
Danbing Seto, John P. Lehoczky, and Lui Sha
13.00: Lunch
14.30: Session 7.A - Testing, Verification and Analysis I
AUTOMATIC TESTING OF REACTIVE SYSTEMS
Pascal Raymond, Xavier Nicollin, Nicolas Halbwachs,
Daniel Weber
ANALYZING NON-DETERMINISTIC REAL-TIME SYSTEMS WITH (MAX,+)
ALGEBRA
Guillaume P. Brat and Vijay K. Garg
TIMED TEST CASES GENERATION BASED ON STATE CHARACTERISATION
TECHNIQUE.
A. En-Nouaary, R. Dssouli, F. Khendek and A. Elqortobi
14.30: Session 7.B - Operating Systems and Services
GENERAL DATA STREAMING
Frank W. Miller, Pete Keleher, and Satish K. Tripathi
DESIGN AND IMPLEMENTATION OF A REAL-TIME ATM-BASED PROTOCOL
SERVER
Martin Borriss and Hermann Haertig
PROPORTIONAL SHARE SCHEDULING OF OPERATING SYSTEM SERVICES
FOR REAL-TIME APPLICATIONS
Kevin Jeffay, F. Donelson Smith, Arun Moorthy, James Anderson
16.30: Session 8.A - Testing, Verification and Analysis II
MEMBERSHIP QUESTIONS FOR TIMED AND HYBRID AUTOMATA
R.Alur and R.P.Kurshan and M.Viswanathan
ON CHECKING TIMED AUTOMATA FOR LINEAR DURATION INVARIANTS
Victor Adrian Braberman and Dang Van Hung
VERIFICATION OF SCHEDULING POLICIES FOR A CLASS OF SIMPLE
CONCURRENT PROCESSES
Michael J. Meyer and Howard Wong-Toi
16.30: Session 8.B - Quality of Serivice Issues
ELASTIC TASK MODEL FOR ADAPTIVE RATE CONTROL
Giorgio Buttazzo, Giuseppe Lipari, Luca Abeni
PRACTICAL SOLUTIONS FOR QOS-BASED RESOURCE ALLOCATION
Chen Lee, Raj Rajkumar, John Lehoczky and Dan Siewiorek
A DYNAMIC QUALITY OF SERVICE MIDDLEWARE AGENT FOR MEDIATING
APPLICATION RESOURCE USAGE
Scott Brandt, Gary Nutt, Toby Berk, James Mankovich
18.00: Work-In-Progress Session II
Exhibitor Presentations
_______________________________________________________________________
DECEMBER 4, 1998
_______________________________________________________________________
09.30: Session 9 - Keynote Talk #2
Speaker: TED BEKER, Florida State University
Title: From Posix Threads to Ada to Java:
A story of runtime development for
real-time programming languages,
and lessons learned the hard way.
11.30: Session 10 - Operating Systems and Runtimes
TECHNIQUES FOR SOFTWARE THREAD INTEGRATION IN REAL-TIME
EMBEDDED SYSTEMS
Alexander G. Dean and John Paul Shen
A WORST CASE TIMING ANALYSIS TECHNIQUE FOR MULTIPLE-ISSUE
MACHINES
Sung-Soo Lim, Jung Hee Han, Jihong Kim, Sang Lyul Min
EFFICIENT OBJECT SHARING IN QUANTUM-BASED REAL-TIME SYSTEMS
James H. Anderson, Rohit Jain, and Kevin Jeffay
13.00: Lunch
14.30: Session 11.A - Systems Design and Development Tools II
A DEVELOPMENT FRAMEWORK FOR ULTRA-DEPENDABLE AUTOMOTIVE
SYSTEMS BASED ON A TIME-TRIGGERED ARCHITECTURE
Bernd Hedenetz
INTEGRATED DESIGN TOOLS FOR HARD REAL-TIME SYSTEMS
Carlos Puchol and Aloysius K. Mok
PERFORMANCE MEASUREMENT USING LOW PERTURBATION AND HIGH
PRECISION HARDWARE ASSISTS
Alan Mink, Wayne Salamon, Jeffrey K. Hollingsworth,
and Ramu Arunachalam
14.30: Session 11.B - Scheduling and Analysis II
REAL-TIME SCHEDULING IN A GENERIC FAULT-TOLERANT
ARCHITECTURE
A.J. Wellings, Lj. Beus-Dukic & D. Powell
IMPROVED RESPONSE TIME ANALYSIS CALCULATIONS
Mikael Sjodin and Hans Hansson
SYMBOLIC SCHEDULABILITY ANALYSIS OF REAL-TIME SYSTEMS
Hee-Hwan Kwak, Jin-Young Choi, Insup Lee, Anna Philippou,
and Oleg Sokolsky
16.30: Session 12.A - Dependability & Fault Tolerance
FAULT-TOLERANT CLOCK SYNCHRONIZATION IN CAN
Luis Rodrigues and Mario Guimaraes and Jose Rufino
USING LIGHT-WEIGHT GROUPS TO HANDLE TIMING FAILURES IN
QUASI-SYNCHRONOUS SYSTEMS
Carlos Almeida and Paulo Verissimo
DEPENDABLE ONLINE SYSTEM UPGRADE USING ANALYTICALLY
REDUNDANT CONTROLLERS
Lui Sha
16.30: Session 12.B - Communications and Networks
STATISTICAL DELAY GUARANTEE OF VIRTUAL CLOCK
Pawan Goyal and Harrick M. Vin
REALIZING SERVICES FOR GUARANTEED-QOS COMMUNICATION ON A
MICROKERNEL OPERATING SYSTEM
Ashish Mehra, Anees Shaikh, Tarek Abdelzaher, Zhiqun
Wang, and Kang G. Shin
SCHEDULING COMMUNICATION NETWORKS CARRYING REAL-TIME
TRAFFIC
John P. Lehoczky
________________________________________________________________
THE INVITED SPEAKERS
________________________________________________________________
Speaker: DAVID MARTINEZ, MIT Lincoln Laboratory
Title: Future Challenges in the Development of Real-Time High
Performance Embedded Systems
DAVID MARTINEZ received a B.S. degree in Electrical Engineering from
New Mexico State University in 1976. He received an M.S. and
E.E. degree in Electrical Engineering from MIT, jointly with the Woods
Hole Oceanographic Institution in 1979. Mr. Martinez completed an MBA
degree from the Southern Methodist University in 1986, and worked at
the Atlantic Richfield Co. in seismic signal processing from 1979 to
1988. During this time, Mr. Martinez worked on algorithm development
and technology field demonstrations. While at Atlantic Richfield Co.,
he received the ARCO Special Achievement Award for the conception,
management, and implementation of a multidisciplinary project. He
holds three U.S. patents relating to seismic signal processing
hardware. He has worked at MIT Lincoln Laboratory since 1988. His
areas of interest are in VLSI signal processing and high performance
parallel processing systems. He has been responsible for managing the
development of several complex real-time signal processor systems. In
1994-1995, he served as co-chairman on a national study to define the
next generation real-time signal processor requirements for future
surveillance enhancements to the Navy and Air Force airborne early
warning systems. He was also the chairman for the second annual
workshop on high performance embedded computing, held at MIT Lincoln
Laboratory in September, 1998. Mr. Martinez is the Group Leader of
the Digital Radar Technology Group concentrating on signal processing
and high performance embedded processor systems. He also served as an
Associate Editor for IEEE Signal Processing Magazine.
_________________________________________
Speaker: BRAN SELIC, ObjecTime Ltd.
Title: Animated Structures: Real-Time, Objects, and the UML
BRAN SELIC is the Vice President of Advanced Technology at ObjecTime
Limited. He has over 25 years of experience in constructing
large-scale real-time systems in a number of different disciplines
including telecommunications, aerospace, and robotics. He is the
principal author of the popular book, "Real-Time Object-Oriented
Modeling" that describes how the object paradigm can be used
effectively in real-time applications. Most recently, he has been
active in the specification of the Unified Modeling Language (UML)
standard for object-oriented analysis and design.
_________________________________________
Speaker: TED BAKER, Florida State University
Title: From Posix Threads to Ada to Java: A story of runtime
development for real-time programming languages, and
some lessons learned the hard way.
TED BAKER holds a PhD in Computer Science from Cornell University. His
published work spans a wide range of topics, from recursive function
theory to real-time operating systems and programming languages. In
these latter areas, he and his group at FSU produced one of the first
validated Ada cross-compilers for embedded systems.
In 1991 he participated on the Ada9X Mapping-Revision Team, as Domain
expert for Real-Time and Systems Programming. Dr. Baker drafted key
sections of the Ada 95 reference manual on real-time and systems
programming, which have since been adopted as international standards
for Ada95. His practical work in this area was realized via his FSU
team's multi-tasking runtime system for the Gnu NYU Ada 95 Translator
(GNAT). This is believed to have been the first validated
implementation of Ada 95 tasking for non-embedded systems, and is
perhaps the most widely used Ada implementation today. Based on the
POSIX threads API, the runtime system has been successfully ported to
number of different execution environments, most recently the Java
Virtual Machine.
Dr. Baker is also well known for key foundational results in real-time
systems, including the Stack Resource Protocol, Agenda-Based
scheduling, the Deadline Sporadic Server, and many others. Currently,
Dr. Baker's group is developing validation tests for POSIX real-time
Ada bindings, with funds provided by the U.S. Defense Information
Systems Agency. He is also participating in a group studying real-time
extensions for the Java language, and is porting the GNAT Ada runtime
to a ``bare machine'' implementation, based on an Ada rewrite of
Real-Time Linux.
Dr. Baker also has been active in software standards related to all
types of real-time systems, including the Ada95 language standard, and
several POSIX standards. He serves as chair for Language Bindings on
the IEEE Portable Applications Standards Committee, and is involved in
the POSIX and Ada working groups of both the ISO and IEC.
=======================================================================
WORKSHOP ON PROGRAMMING LANGUAGES:
RTSS '98 is co-hosting the IEEE Workshop on Programming Languages for
Real-Time Industrial Applications, to take place on December 1 - the day
preceding the conference. Several topics to be covered at the workshop are:
developments in real-time and embedded flavors of Java; implementing
real-time virtual machines for Java; Java vs. Ada 95 real-time profiles;
support for distributed applications using real-time Java, Ada, and MPI;
getting real-time functionality in Java chips; developments in real-time
POSIX - ongoing and in the future.
If you're interested in these or related topics, please consult the
PLRTIA '98 home page:
http://www.informatik.hu-berlin.de/~mueller/plrtia98
=======================================================================
INDUSTRIAL EXHIBITION AND DEMOS:
RTSS '98 will include an industrial exhibition in a centrally located space,
for vendors to demonstrate state-of-the-art systems, development tools and
applications; where RTSS attendees can engage in technical discussions with
product engineers and developers; and where company representatives meet (and
recruit) young researchers specializing in real-time and embedded systems.
To reserve space for the exhibition, contact the RTSS '98 Industrial Chair,
Dr. Gerhard Fohler (mailto:gerhard.fohler@mdh.se), or check the RTSS '98
Industrial Exhibition Home Page:
http://www.idt.mdh.se/personal/gfr/rtss98-exhibit.html
=======================================================================
WORK-IN-PROGRESS SESSIONS:
As in previous years, RTSS '98 is soliciting contributions to a
special Work-In-Progress (WIP) track, featuring short presentations on
new work in real-time systems and applications. The purpose of this
session is to provide researchers with an opportunity to discuss new
and evolving ideas, and gather feedback from the real-time community
at large. All accepted papers to the RTSS'98 WIP sessions will be
presented at the conference, in short 10-minute talks. Papers will be
published in a special RTSS'98 WIP proceedings, to be distributed to
all RTSS'98 conference participants, and then made available on the
WWW, via the IEEE-CS TC-RTS Home Page.
Submissions to RTSS'98 WIP should describe original, on-going
work, and should be limited to 2,000 words. Authors should email
papers to the RTSS'98 WIP Chair:
Steve Goddard
Dept of Computer Science and Engineering
Email: mailto:goddard@cse.unl.edu
University of Nebraska-Lincoln
Lincoln, NE 68588-0115 USA
Phone: +1-402-472-9968
Fax: +1-402-472-7767
The deadline for submissions is October 23, 1998. Notification of acceptance
will be sent out on November 2, 1998. For more information, please contact
the RTSS'98 WIP Chair or check the RTSS '98 WIP Page at:
http://www.cse.unl.edu/rtss98wip
=======================================================================
REGISTRATION FOR RTSS '98:
Due to the large number of papers submitted, the technical program was
expanded to include 50% more papers than usual, and the scope of the
conference was broadened. Due to the large attendance expected, you should
consider registering early, and reserving your hotel room well in advance.
Registration for RTSS '98 includes admission to the symposium, admissions
to the exhibition, a copy of symposium proceedings, complimentary lunch every
day, 2 coffee-breaks per day, and a gala banquet on Wednesday night.
Students are welcome to attend all functions. Registration for PLRTIA '98
includes admission to the workshop, pre-prints of the symposium proceedings,
lunch, and 2 coffee-breaks.
To register for RTSS, see the the RTSS Registrataion Page
http://http://www.cs.umd.edu/~rich/rtss98/register.html
Or alternatively, just use following form.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Instructions: Register by email, by FAX or by post; payment can be made
with a major credit card, check, or money order, payable in US dollars to
"RTSS '98." For FAX or electronic registration, payment should be made
using a major credit card. Please be sure to include the name on the credit
card, the number of the credit card, the card type, and its expiration date
(as appears on the card). If you're using the email registration form, we
will need to get your signature at the conference site.
Advance fees apply to registrations made before 15 November, 1998, and
are After 15 November, registration can be accepted on-site only, is
payable by check, major credit card, or cash.
Written requests for refunds must be postmarked no later than 15
November, 1998. Refunds are subject to a US $50 processing fee. All
no-show registration will be billed in full.
Please fill in all the fields, and then send the form to the RTSS
Registration Chair, Linda Buss at the coordinates listed below:
First Name: ______________________________________________________
Last Name: ______________________________________________________
Affiliation: ______________________________________________________
Address: ______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
City: ______________________________________________________
State/Provice: ____________________ Country: __________________
Zip/Code: ____________________ Email: __________________
Phone: ____________________ Fax: __________________
IEEE Number: ____________________ Vegetarian? __________________
RTSS '98 REGISTRATION By 15 November After 15 November
IEEE Member $425 $520
Non-Member $535 $650
Full-Time Student $220 $270
PLRTIA'98 REGISTRATION By 15 November After 15 November
IEEE Member $130 $165
Non-Member $165 $200
Full-Time Student $130 $165
Extra Banquet Tickets _____ @ $70.00 ea = $ ________
Extra Proceedings _____ @ $40.00 ea = $ ________
Total: Add up your above charges, and enter the total due below,
payable in US dollars. The total fee below is the amount
you will be charged on your credit card, if one is used.
Enter the card type, number, expiration date, and your name
as it appears on the card.
Payment can me made with Visa, MasterCard, Discover, Amex,
DinersClub, Check or Money Order.
Total Due: US $ __________ Payment Method: _________
Card Number: ________________ Exp Date (MM/YY): __________
Name on card: ______________________________________________
Signature: ______________________________________________
Email, FAX or mail your form to Linda Buss, the RTSS Registration chair,
at the following coordinates:
Linda Buss
E3774 550th Ave
Menomonie, WI 54751 USA
FAX: +1.715.232.6244, +1.715.235.2258
TEL: +1.715.235.0487
Email: mailto:ljbuss@win.bright.net
=======================================================================
CONFERENCE LOCALE AND HOTEL INFORMATION:
Events for RTSS '98 will be held at several locations in Madrid's Museum
District, all within a block of each each other. Keynote talks and
single-track sessions will be held in the Consejo Superior de
Investigaciones Cientificas (CSIC), located at 6 Duque de Medinaceli.
Other events will be hosted at the Palace Hotel and the Hotel Villa Real;
these include coffee breaks, exhibits, parallel track sessions, and
conference luncheons.
The registration desk will be set up at the Palace Hotel. Please check the
registration desk when you arrive, and pick up a final conference schedule.
Three hotels have been selected for RTSS, all of which are a few
blocks from the famed Museo del Prado.
___________________________________________________________
The Palace Hotel
Address: Plaza de las Cortes, 7
28014 Madrid
fax: +34-91-429-8266
tel. +34-91-360-8000
Single and double rooms are 28.000 and 33.000 ptas,
respectively, plus 7% VAT. Breakfast is included.
___________________________________________________________
Hotel Villa Real
Plaza de las Cortes, 10
28014 Madrid
fax: +34-91-420-2547
tel. +34-91-420-3767
Single and double rooms are 18,500 and 21,000 ptas,
respectively, plus 7% VAT. Breakfast is included.
___________________________________________________________
Hotel Reina Victoria
Plaza de Santa Ana, 14
28014 Madrid
tel. +34-91-523-5215
fax: +34-91-522-0307
Single and double rooms are 14,500 and 16,050 ptas,
respectively, plus 7% VAT. Breakfast is included.
___________________________________________________________
Please phone or FAX you your reservation directly to the hotel of your
choice, and make sure you mention "IEEE RTSS'98" for the conference rate. A
block of rooms has been reserved until November 7th, 1997. After this date,
room reservations will be accepted on a space available basis. For
attendees who plan on staying for longer periods, we suggest either taking
advantage of the IEEE conference rate, or obtaining other discounted rates
offered by the hotel or a travel agent.
=======================================================================
CONFERENCE ORGANIZATION:
General Chair: Kwei-Jay Lin, University of California, Irvine
Program Chair: Richard Gerber, University of Maryland
Finance Chair: Walt Heimerdinger, Honeywell Technology Center
Local Arrangements Chair: Angel Alvarez, Universidad Politecnica de Madrid
Industrial Chair: Gerhard Fohler, Malardalen University
Work-In-Progresss Chair: Steve Goddard, University of Nebraska
Registration Chair: Linda Buss
Local Treasurer: Juan A. de la Puente, Universidad Politecnica de Madrid
Publicity Co-Chairs:
Alejandro Alonso, Universidad Politicnica de Madrid (Europe)
Chao-Ju Jennifer Hou, Ohio State University (Americas)
Joseph Ng, Hong Kong Baptist University (Asia/Pacific)
European Chair: Alan Burns, University of York
Ex-Officio: (RTS-TC Chair) Doug Locke, Lockheed Martin Corporation
=======================================================================
PROGRAM COMMITTEE
James Anderson (University of North Carolina)
Azer Bestavros (Boston University)
Sanjoy Baruah (University of Vermont)
Giorgio Buttazzo (Scuola Superiore e Sant'Anna)
Gerhard Fohler (Malardalen University)
Michael Gonzalez Harbour (Universidad Cantabria)
Jeffrey Hollingsworth (University of Maryland)
Seongsoo Hong (Seoul National University)
Farnam Jahanian (University of Michigan)
Kevin Jeffay (University of North Carolina)
Hermann Kopetz (Vienna University of Technology)
Kim G. Larsen (Aalborg University)
Insup Lee (University of Pennsylvania)
Jane W.S. Liu (University of Illinois)
Keith Marzullo (University of California at San Diego)
Sang Lyul Min (Seoul National University)
Al Mok (University of Texas at Austin)
Ragunathan Rajkumar (Carnegie Mellon University)
Jennifer Rexford (AT&T Research)
Manas Saksena (Concordia University)
Bran Selic (ObjectTime, Ltd.)
Andy Wellings (University of York)
David Wilner (Wind River Systems)
Sergio Yovine (CNRS/VERIMAG)
Hui Zhang (Carnegie Mellon University)
=======================================================================
FOR MORE INFORMATION:
For more information on RTSS, see the conference home page
http://www.cs.umd.edu/~rich/rtss98
or contact the Program Chair:
Richard Gerber
Department of Computer Science
University of Maryland
Email: mailto:rich@cs.umd.edu
URL: http://www.cs.umd.edu/~rich
=======================================================================
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