ohohlfeld.com : blog
Ohohlfeld.com Banner

Sigmetrics 2009

July 2, 2009

Filed under: conferences, research — Tags: , , , , — Oliver @ 5:34 pm
Sigmetrics

Auditorium

I have spend the last weeks in the States and, among other things, attended ACM Sigmetrics 2009 held in Seattle to give a talk about my paper and visited Stanford University, located south of San Francisco.

Sigmetrics presented a technical program of high quality and was supplemented by some very good workshops.  I had the feeling that the technical program was a bit more practical this year, but I may be biased, especially as I know of some good theoretical submissions that have been rejected. All of the talks presented at the main conference have been recorded, and, those whose authors permit a publication will be available on the web soon (similar to Sigcomm last year). I personally like the availability of conference recordings. Unfortunately, this is very rare, still, so I hope this will be catching on!

sigmetrics-lunch

Lunch

Regarding to some side-aspects of the conference like quality and quantity of lunch, one may think of feeling the economic down-turn directly :) Although the banquet was a very good event. Unfortunately, it’s common in some cultures to leave directly after having dinner and switch to another place, so it was harder to catch up and many possible discussions “abruptly” ended.

There is one point that keeps on puzzling me. I believe that it is a clear benefit for the conference to have a best presentation award, as this gives the speaker the incentive to prepare a good presentation that is easy to follow for the audience (see Rob’s talk at Sigcomm last year as an example. He created an own Python presentation framework for the sake of improving the presentation). I understand the point that selecting a best paper during the curse of the conference is not feasible for the audience, as that would practically mean everyone who is interested in voting would have to read every paper. So the best paper is selected by a small set of PC members, and, thus might be biased by their own believes. However, I don’t understand why it is not possible to let every attendee vote for the best presentation. One would listen to them anyways and the additional overhead for the voting is negligible.

sigmetrics-poster_session

Poster Session

In this years Sigmetrics conference, only travel grant holders were permitted to vote for the best presentation award, which excludes the majority of the attendees. Why is the major part of the audience excluded? Just to keep the organizational overhead in collecting the votes low? What does a best presentation award mean if only a minority is allowed to vote? Sceptically speaking, is it as meaningless as the best paper award? I believe this years best presentation award goes to the right person, but the concept should still be reconsidered.

sigmetrics-demo_session

Demo Session

One of my major criticism about Sigmetrics was the demo session. Sigmetrics considers itself as one of the flagship conferences, so this should not happen to this kind of conferences, I believe.  From what I heard from people presenting demos, the session was highly unorganized. When I entered the room, three “demonstrations” where shown, where only one demo was what I would consider being a demo, namely showing some program / hardware. All of the other demos where plain PowerPoint presentations, so in fact only talks. Funny enough, the best demo award goes to a power point talk. Moreover, Sigmetrics didn’t provide a popper setting for presenting the demos; some chairs were located around three tables where the presenters placed their laptops. There was no projector installed (the auditorium could have been used instead of the room where we used to have lunch), nor a possibility to show posters explaining the technical details of the presented program. As even local tier-3 conferences have much better demo sessions, I consider this session as a major flop of this years conference. Hope there will be a better one next year, that is more seriously organized.

Besides these two points of cristism, Sigmetrics 2009 was a very good conference and I enjoyed attending.

© 2001-2008 by Oliver Hohlfeld, M.Sc. | Imprint

Send me mail to my E-Mail address:
jm4ntgzmde@tntler.de
jm4ntgzmde@abc.thomas-graf.de
jm4ntgzmde@abc.ohohlfeld.com

thimotheos.kirsanova@namesp.ohohlfeld.com
max.mustermann@namensp.ohohlfeld.com

Send me mail to my E-Mail address:
jeymtkzmde@tntler.de
jeymtkzmde@abc.ohohlfeld.com
jeymtkzmde@abc.thomas-graf.de

Send me mail to my E-Mail address:
zgznzgzmde [at] tntler [dot] de
zgznzgzmde [at] abc.ohohlfeld [dot] com
zgznzgzmde [at] abc.thomas-graf [dot] de

Send me mail to my E-Mail address:
EMail EMail EMail

Name: e-mail: Subject: Message:

Leave a comment

cseg.roggenstein
cseg.roggenstein
cseg.roggenstein
My Super Secret Homepage

Warning: stristr() [function.stristr]: Empty delimiter. in /home/oliver/public_html/ohcomblog/wp-content/plugins/wassup/wassup.php on line 2093