Deadline for research and industrial paper submissions: May 31, 2006
Workshop Proposals due to the Workshop Chair: March 30, 2006
Tutorial Proposals due to the Tutorial Chair: May 31, 2006
Conference Date: Nov 6-11, 2006
February 21-23, 2007 * Expression of interest to submit paper with abstract: August 15, 2006 * Submission of full paper: September 15, 2006 * Notification of acceptance with comments: October 31, 2006 * Submission of the final papers
MTG 2006 Mastering the Gap: From Information Extraction to Semantic Representation Proceedings of the Workshop on Mastering the Gap, From Information Extraction to Semantic Representation, held in conjunction with the European Semantic Web Conference 20
'The Modernist Atlantic' is the first of two international conferences organised by the Modernist Magazines Project, directed by Peter Brooker (University of Nottingham) and Andrew Thacker (De Montfort University), and funded by the AHRC. Although the study of modernism has been revolutionised over the last decade it is only recently been recognised that periodical publications made a distinctive contribution to the modernist movement. This conference aims to address the role of magazines in the construction of modernism, focussing upon magazines in Britain, Ireland and North America. Papers are invited on the following themes:
studies of individual magazines; studies of individual writers and artists in magazines; archives; serialisation; the short story in magazines; metropolitan and regional cultures; coteries and salons; advertising; visual culture; gender and publishing; race/nationalism/identities; technologies, typists, typefaces; circulation, censorship and readership; patronage; editors; manifestoes and movements; the avant-garde; tradition and the new; 'little' and 'large' magazines; popular and mainstream; transnationalism and geomodernisms; small presses and printers.
Webheads are a community of practice of language teachers and learners and others interested in professional uses of computer mediated communications, who collaborate extensively due to group cohesiveness developed through several years of working togethe
Tim Berners-Lee confirmed as plenary speaker
Tim Berners-Lee is the Director of the World Wide Web Consortium, a Senior Researcher at MIT where he leads the Decentralized Information Group, and a Professor of Computer Science at University of Southampton. While working at CERN, the European Particle Physics Laboratory, he invented the World Wide Web. It was there where he wrote the first Web client (a combination of browser and editor) and the first Web server. His original specifications of URLs, HTTP and HTML were widely adopted and refined as Web technology spread. In 2001 he became a fellow of the Royal Society, and more recently he received the 2007 Charles Stark Draper Prize, given by the National Academy of Engineering (US). His plenary talk will take place on Wednesday May 9 at WWW2007.
Workshops: October 10th, 2008Refereed Papers: November 3rd , 2008Tutorials: November 30th, 2008Panels: December 21st, 2008Posters:January 20th , 2009Developers track: February 2nd, 2009
A. Schmidt. On the Move to Meaningful Internet Systems 2006: CoopIS, DOA, GADA, and ODBASE. Part I., volume 4275 of Lecture Notes in Computer Science, page 995--1011. Springer, (2006)