Visit our web site http://arch.cs.ucdavis.edu/Micro32 To get a full-color paper version of this CFP, email your full name and address to micro32@cs.ucdavis.edu ______________________________________________________________________________ C A L L F O R P A P E R S M I C R O - 3 2 THE 32nd ANNUAL IEEE/ACM INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON MICROARCHITECTURE Haifa, Israel November 16 - 18, 1999 Important Dates: SUBMISSION: JUNE 1; Acceptance: AUG. 6; Final version: SEP. 3 http://arch.cs.ucdavis.edu/Micro32 Sponsored by IEEE TC-MARCH and ACM SIGMICRO ______________________________________________________________________________ The annual MICRO conference has provided a key venue for the dissemination of ideas and advances in the field of computer microarchitecture research. MICRO is the premier forum for discussing and debating issues relating to instruction-level parallelism, compilation techniques and micro-architectures. This year's conference in Haifa promises to be an invigorating and rewarding continuation of this conversation. The goals of this conference are to bring together researchers in fields related to instruction-level parallelism, to encourage interaction, and to further the state of the art in high-performance computing. Papers are solicited in areas such as the following: - ILP architectures and designs: superscalar, VLIW, multithread, low power... - Compiler techniques for instruction-level parallelism: Software pipelining, global scheduling, register allocation, memory disambiguation, novel optimizations - Advanced SW & HW speculation schemes (Branch/Value prediction, etc.) - Theoretical foundations of instruction-level parallelism and/or fine-grain parallelism - Hardware/compiler techniques for improving memory system performance - Hardware/software techniques for fine-grain parallel processing - Object code translation - Microarchitectures for high performance graphics accelerators - Hardware/software techniques for efficient systems on a single chip THE DEADLINE FOR SUBMISSIONS IS JUNE 1, 1999. Complete instructions on how to electronically submit your paper (5000 words maximum) are available on the Micro 32 Web site (http://arch.cs.ucdavis.edu/Micro32). Notification of acceptance will occur by August 6, 1999. The camera-ready copy of the accepted papers will be due on September 3, 1999. In order to minimize problems with your electronic submission please ensure it can be previewed by either Adobe Acrobat (PDF) or ghostview (Postscript). Contact micro32@cs.ucdavis.edu if you need any help with the electronic submission procedure. Selected papers of MICRO-32 will be published in a special issue of the Journal of Instruction Level Parallelism (JILP, http://www.jilp.org) MICRO-32 hosts the 2nd Workshop on Feedback-Directed Optimization (FDO), Haifa, Israel, November 15, 1999. Visit FDO’s web site at: http://www-cse.ucsd.edu/users/calder/fdo/ GENERAL CO-CHAIRS: Ronny Ronen, Intel Israel, ronen@iil.intel.com Matthew Farrens, UCDavis, farrens@cs.ucdavis.edu PROGRAM CHAIR: Ilan Spillinger, Intel Israel, ilans@iil.intel.com FINANCE CHAIR David Bernstein, IBM Haifa LOCAL ARRANGEMENTS CHAIR Avi Mendelson, National Semiconductors, Herzelia PUBLICATION CHAIR Gabby Silberman, IBM Toronto WORKSHOPS/TUTORIALS CHAIR Todd Austin, University of Michigan STEERING COMMITTEE Rich Belgard, Consultant, Chair Jim Bondi, Texas Instruments Tom Conte, North Carolina State University Wen-mei Hwu, University of Illinois Gearold Johnson, National Technological University Yale Patt, University of Michigan Jim Smith, University of Wisconsin Mark Smotherman, Clemson University PROGRAM COMMITTEE Sarita Adve, Rice University David Bernstein, IBM Israel Jim Bondi, Texas Instruments Doug Burger, University of Texas at Austin Brad Calder, University of California at San Diego Bob Colwell, Intel Tom Conte, North Carolina State University Kemal Ebcioglu, IBM Joel Emer, Compaq Keith Farkas, Compaq Dirk Grunwald, University of Colorado Wen-Mei Hwu, University of Illinois Scott Mahlke, Hewlett Packard Scott McFarling, Microsoft Avi Mendelson, National Semiconductor, Israel Soo-Mook Moon, Seoul National University, Korea Alex Nicolau, University of California at Irvine Yale Patt, University of Michigan Andre Seznec, IRISA/INRIA, France John Shen, Carnegie Melon University Gabby Silberman, IBM Canada Jim Smith, University of Wisconsin Guri Sohi, University of Wisconsin Marc Tremblay, Sun Microsystems Gary Tyson, University of Michigan Mateo Valero, Universitat Politecnica de Catalunya Uri Weiser, Intel Albert Zomaya, University of Western Australia WITH THE GENEROUS SUPPORT OF: Intel, Microsoft, HP Labs, IBM, National Semiconductor, Silicon Graphics