A place to paste expired events.
--
JackSnoeyink - 04 Feb 2005
Expired conference deadlines:
Papers to write and send: TIN compression, profile queries? Elevation from video, elevation+slope representation
ACM GIS 2006: Washington, DC, Nov 2006.
Abstracts due May 26; papers June 2.
SSTD 2005: Angra dos Reis, Brazil (2007 not announced yet)
Claudia Bauzer Medeiros, Max J. Egenhofer, Elisa Bertino (Eds.): Advances in Spatial and Temporal Databases, 9th International Symposium, SSTD 2005, Angra dos Reis, Brazil, August 22-24, 2005, Proceedings. Lecture Notes in Computer Science 3633 Springer 2005, ISBN 3-540-28127-4
WADS 2007/SWAT 2006: Algorithms conferences.
Alternating Canada/Scandinavia. Paper deadline in February, conference in July-Aug.
CCCG Kingston, Ont, Canada, 14-17 Aug 06
SGP Cagliari, Sardinia, Italy, June 26-28 2006
* Electronic abstract submission deadline: April 19, 2006
* Electronic paper submission deadline: April 26, 2006
* Author notification: May 17, 2006
* Camera ready copy deadline: May 24, 2006
* Symposium: June 26-28, 2006
* Submitted
http://www.cs.unc.edu/~snoeyink/strdel/seecld.pdf, which computes contour maps by streaming, and shows that we can implement modules to try to fit into a processing pipeline with rapid response.
3DPVT Third International Symposium on 3D Data Processing, Visualization and Transmission
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, USA
June 14-16, 2006
prototype visualization tool accepted as a poster.
GIScience Munster, Sept 20-23
Sent
http://www.cs.unc.edu/~snoeyink/strdel/tin2dem.pdf accepted. Matin Isenburg will present.
http://www.cs.unc.edu/~snoeyink/strdel/dtstream.pdf on streaming delaunay for large data sets.
SDH July 2006
Paper deadline was Dec, 2005.
The 11th International Symposium on
Spatial Data Handling was
23rd - 25th August 2004.
JackSnoeyink has the proceedings.
ACM SCG 06 June 5-7 2006, Sedona, Arizona
14th Annual European Symposium on Algorithms
ETH Zurich, Switzerland, September 11-13, 2006
Submission deadline: April 15, 2006
--
TimThirion - 19 Sep 2006
DARPA Geospatial Representation and Analysis (GEO) Program Review
April 11, 2006
The Salish Lodge & Spa
6501 Railroad Avenue SE
Snoqualmie, WA USA
Courses on campus
Finding Data for GIS Projects, September 27
4:00-5:00 pm, Room 14 Manning Hall
Amanda Henley, UNC Davis Library, Email:
ahenley@email.unc.edu
This short course introduces the Davis Library spatial data collection and online sources of GIS data. After completing the workshop, students will be able to use the GIS Data Finder to search the spatial data collection at UNC; find and download spatial data from the Internet; and use data available online by connecting to online mapping services through
ArcMap?/ArcCatalog
see
http://www2.irss.unc.edu/irss/GIS.html for detail on:
Advanced
ArcGIS? Techniques
September 29, 3:00-5:00 pm , Room 01 Manning Hall
Introduction to GPS Data Collection for GIS
October 6, 3:00-5:00 pm , Room 14 Manning Hall
Applied GIS Programming
October 13, 3:00-4:00 pm , Room 14 Manning Hall
GIS and the Mapping of Social Development
October 31, 10:00-12:00 pm , Room 14 Manning Hall
Spatial Statistics with
GeoDA?
November 10, 3:00-5:00 pm , Room 01 Manning Hall
Friday March 17
2:00 PM
Professor Steve Mayo
from Howard
Hughes Medical Institute and California Institute of Technology will
present a lecture titled
Computationally-Directed Protein Design: Past, Present, and Future.
The lecture will be held at the beautiful Sonja Hanes Stone Center, and
will be followed by a reception
Wednesday, March 15
12:00 PM
Biological/Organic Seminar
Design of tunable proteins: control of protein structure by
phosphorylation, by electronics, and by stereoelectronics
Prof. Neal Zondlo - Univ. of Delaware
Venable 308
Site visit: 2-3 June: NGAvisit
Paul Salamonowicz and Ed Bosch of NGA visiting for technical talks, demos, and getting this project rolling! SiteVisitJune2005 has additional details.
RosettaCON developer's conference, Seattle.
Jack attending and Andrew speaking.
ACM GIS 2005 November 12-13. Bremen, Abstract: May 17
Full Paper Submission: May 28
Notification of Acceptance: August 19
Camera-ready version: September 9
Symposium Date: November 12-13
ESA 2005, October 3-6, Submission: April 12, 2005
Hotel Torre del Mar, Eivissa, Spain, October 3-6, 2005
VIS'05 Minneapolis, October 23-28. Submission: 10 April.
The combined Vis 2005 conference and InfoVis symposium make this week in Minneapolis the place to be to participate in this rapidly expanding field.
Co-located with Vis 2005 is:
InfoVis 2005 IEEE Symposium on Information Visualization
October 23 - 25, 2005
http://www.infovis.org/infovis/2005
April 10, 2005 Paper Abstracts
April 20, 2005 Full Papers, Tutorial Proposals
May 20, 2005 Panel Proposals
June 30, 2005 Workshop Proposals, Posters, Visualization Contest
Abstract Deadline: Feb 15, 2005
Acceptance Notice: March 15, 2005
Full Paper Deadline: June 15, 2005
Conference Dates: August 17–19, 2005
SIGGRAPH 2005, Jul 31-Aug 4, Los Angeles
WADS 2005, 15-17 Aug, Waterloo, Canada. Submission: 21 feb
The Workshop on Algorithms And Data Structures, which alternates with the Scandinavian Workshop on Algorithm Theory, is intended as a forum for researchers in the area of design and analysis of algorithms and data structures.
Submission deadline: Feb. 21, 2005
Notification: April 25, 2005
Final version due: May 12, 2005
Deadlines
April 1, 2005 - submission of minisymposium proposals
May 2, 2005 - submission of abstracts of contributed
and minisymposium talks
July 2005 - acceptance notification
Hanyang University, Seoul, Korea
Paper submission : July 15, 2005 (extended)
Notification of the acceptance : August 15, 2005
Final manuscript : September 15, 2005
We are also organizing the 1st International Exhibition of Voronoi Art
as posted on http://voronoi.hanyang.ac.kr/vd2005/Voronoi_Art/
and the due date for the submission of artwork is the beginning of
September, 2005. We welcome any piece of artwork based on the
concept of Voronoi and Delaunay diagram.
SRTM Workshop, June 14-16, 2005 in Reston, Virginia
on SRTM Data Validation and Applications.
Early registration, June 3
February 2005 marked five years since the flight of the Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM. The result of the mission is an unprecedented near-global high-resolution elevation dataset. To help document the SRTM data quality and characteristics, and to describe applications benefiting from the data, a workshop is being convened for the SRTM data user community.
It is dedicated to Professor Charles Chui on the occasion of his 65th birthday. Professor Chui has made fundamental contributions to the development of Applied and Computational Harmonic Analysis as well as
various areas of Approximation Theory and its applications.
Abstract Submission: 1.July 2005
Final Paper Submission: 1.September 2005
Contributions of Cartography,Geoinformation,Computer Sciences,
Telecommunication,Geodesy,Spatial Cognition,GeoVisualization
should address current topics of:
·Location Based Services
·TeleCartography (Map based Location Based Services - LBS)
·Applying Multimedia to LBS
·Ubiquitous Mapping
·Wearable Mapping
·Positioning Methods
·Navigation Systems
·Mobile Mapping
·Cartographic Theories and Techniques
·Visualization,VR and Augmented Reality
·Personalization & Adaptive Methods
·Spatial Decision Support
·Persistent Spatial Assistants
·Smart Environments and Active Landmarks
JackSnoeyink will present "Topology compression and streaming processing: potential impact in GIS
applications" with Leo, Martin, and Peter Lindstrom.
DARPA GEO* Kick-off, Marriott Savannah Riverfront, GA, Tuesday March 29th 2005.
The meeting will begin early Tuesday morning and will conclude in the late afternoon, Tuesday.
Detailed information at Darpa's passworded site: http://www.eventmakeronline.com/dso/View/index.asp?MeetingID=328.
For the group, our travel plans can co-evolve on GeoKickoff.
Pipelined processing of streaming meshes: Fun with large planar graphs and
limited memory resources
Jack Snoeyink, Computer Science, UNC Chapel Hill
Meshes of polygons and triangles are a basic representation for geometric
models in many processes of design, modeling, and simulation. Standard file
formats were designed for smaller models than can be collected now, and do
not make good use of the resources of internal memory, external storage, and
special purpose graphics processors that are found on typical computers.
I'll present, primarily in pictures, some of the options for compact
representations of planar graphs and how they combine with "typical" meshes
and the resources available for their processing.
This is work with recent PhD graduate Martin Isenburg,
and collaborators Peter Lindstrom and Steven Gumhold.
Leslie Kuhn : 11am Thurs, Feb 24, 408 Mary Ellen Jones Bldg.
(a biochemist who works on rigidity applied to proteins with
Michael Thorpe) will be visiting on Feb 24th. She'll speak in the series
for molecular and cellular biophysics at 11am, and join my group meeting at
4pm (Sitterson 252).
11am Thurs, Feb 24, 408 Mary Ellen Jones Bldg.
Leslie Kuhn, Dept Biochemistry, Michigan State Univ.
Learning from Nature in Modeling Protein Flexibility Upon Ligand Binding
Mariel Vazquez : 4pm Monday, February 7, Phillips 385,
"Topological Analysis of Enzymatic
Actions: Site-specific ecombinases and Topoisomerases,
Refreshments in Phillips 330 at 3:30pm
ABSTRACT
DNA topology is the study of geometrical (supercoiling) and topological
(knotting) properties
of DNA loops and circular DNA molecules. Virtually every reaction
involving DNA is influenced
by DNA topology, or has topological effects. Site-specific recombinases
and topoisomerases
are enzymes able to change the topology of circular DNA by breaking the
DNA and introducing
one or more crossing changes. Mathematical analysis of such changes may
provide relevant
information about the possible enzymatic pathways, and about DNA
conformation at the moment
of double-stranded break induction. In this talk I will discuss some of
the problems that I am
currently interested in, and the topological tools used in their analyses.
First I will talk about Xer recombination and how we applied, and
extended, the tangle model
for site-specific recombination to propose a unique topological
mechanism for this enzymatic
action. I will then present the Java applet TangleSolve? that makes the
tangle model easily
accessible to the scientific community. Finally, I will talk about my
recent work on DNA
unknotting by type II topoisomerase.
to top