The 2007 ACM International Conference on Virtual Execution Environments Call for Papers http://vee07.cs.ucsb.edu VEE brings together researchers and practitioners in the area of virtual execution environments for programs. These areas include such topics as high-level language virtual machines (JVMs, CLRs, etc.), process and system virtual machines, hardware support for virtualization, interpreters, translators, machine emulators, and simulators. The VEE conference seeks original papers in areas including, but not limited to: Virtual machines for high-level languages High-level languages for virtualization System support for virtual execution environments Virtual execution environment support for parallelism Virtualization for security, correctness, and reliability Dynamic compilation techniques Binary translation and optimization Novel aspects or applications of interpreters Processor/architecture simulators Experiences with virtual execution environments Important Dates: Submission deadline: Monday, February 5th, 2007, at 11:59PM PST (see this URL to determine the deadline in your time zone: http://www.timeanddate.com/worldclock/fixedform.html) Author notification: March 11, 2007 Camera-ready deadline: April 5, 2007 Conference dates: June 13-15 in San Diego, CA USA (with FCRC'07!) Submission guidelines: Papers must be formatted according to the ACM proceedings format and should be no longer than 10 pages in this format. This page limit is all inclusive and will be strictly enforced. See the conference webpage for a link to the format templates and additional submission information and a link to the submissions webpage. http://vee07.cs.ucsb.edu The program committee will evaluate the technical contribution of each submission as well as its general accessibility to the VEE audience. Papers will be judged on significance, originality, relevance, correctness, and clarity. The paper must be organized so that it is easily understood by an audience with varied expertise. The paper should clearly identify what has been accomplished, why it is significant, and how it compares with previous work. Papers that introduce new ideas or approaches are especially encouraged. VEE Organization: General Chair: Chandra Krintz, UC Santa Barbara Program Co-Chairs: Steven Hand, Univ. of Cambridge and David Tarditi, Microsoft Research Program Committee: Brian Bershad, Univ. of Washington Jack Davidson, Univ. of Virginia Amer Diwan, Univ. of Colorado Chris Fraser, Google, Inc. Sam Guyer, Tufts Univ. Tim Harris, Microsoft Research Cambridge Gernot Heiser, Univ. of New South Wales Tony Hosking, Purdue Univ. Kate Keahey, Argonne National Laboratory Orran Krieger, IBM Research Roberto Ierusalimschy, Departamento de Informatica, PUC-RIO, Brazil Brian Lewis, Intel Research Michael Philippsen, Univ. of Erlangen-Nürnberg, Germany Timothy Roscoe, ETH Zurich Mauricio Serrano, IBM Research Tatiana Shpeisman, Intel Research Mary Lou Soffa, Univ. of Virginia