
[Date Prev][Date Next][Date Index]
CSLI Calendar, Wednesday, 18 June 2008, vol. 23:39
CSLI CALENDAR OF PUBLIC EVENTS
______________________________________________________________________
18 June 2008 Stanford Vol. 23, No. 39
______________________________________________________________________
A weekly publication of the
Center for the Study of Language and Information (CSLI)
a subdivision of H-STAR, http://hstar.stanford.edu/
Stanford University, Cordura Hall, Stanford, CA 94305-4101
http://www-csli.stanford.edu/
____________
ACTIVITIES FROM 18 JUNE 2008 TO 27 JUNE 2008
WEDNESDAY, 18 JUNE 2008
THURSDAY, 19 JUNE 2008
12 noon Tech Express Brownbag [19-Jun-08]
Turing Auditorium
"Stanford Integrated Email and Calendar - First Look"
Ammy Hill
IT Services
This will be replacing webmail and sundial
(Tech Express events are aimed at the Stanford Community)
http://techexpress.stanford.edu/
4:00pm SRI AI Seminar Series [19-Jun-08]
EJ228, SRI International
"Ingenuity Pathways Analysis: Research Applications of Systems"
Ramon Felciano
Ingenuity Systems
http://www.ai.sri.com/seminars/
Abstract below
4:00pm PARC Forum [19-Jun-08]
George Pake Auditorium at PARC
"SolFocus: Solar Start-up from Garage to Market via PARC"
Ty Jagerson
SolFocus
http://www.parc.com/forum/
6:30pm IEEE Talk [19-Jun-08]
Crown Plaza Hotel, San Francisco International Airport
"Location Based Technologies and Services"
Dave Reid, SiRF Technology Inc.
Jon Metzler, Rosum Corp.
http://www.ewh.ieee.org/r6/scv/comsoc/
Information below
(free, see web page)
FRIDAY, 20 JUNE 2008
MONDAY, 23 JUNE 2008
TUESDAY, 24 JUNE 2008
WEDNESDAY, 25 JUNE 2008
all day NF in the Bay Area [25-Jun-08]
Stanford University
http://www.stanford.edu/~tupailo/nfbayarea08.html
Information below
all day Workshop on Algorithms for Modern Massive Datasets [25-Jun-08]
Stanford University
"Data Analysis and Data Applications"
http://mmds.stanford.edu
(registration required by June 20)
Information below
6:00pm Silicon Valley Web Guild [25-Jun-08]
Microsoft Technology Center (1065 La Avenida, Mountain View)
"Web usability"
http://www.webguild.org/
THURSDAY, 26 JUNE 2008
all day NF in the Bay Area [26-Jun-08]
Stanford University
http://www.stanford.edu/~tupailo/nfbayarea08.html
Information below
all day Workshop on Algorithms for Modern Massive Datasets [26-Jun-08]
Stanford University
"Networked Data and Algorithmic Tools"
http://mmds.stanford.edu
(registration required by June 20)
Information below
all day Directions and Implications of Advanced Computing [26-Jun-08]
UC Berkeley
"Conference on Online Deliberation"
http://www.ischool.berkeley.edu/about/events/conf20080626
http://www.publicsphereproject.org/events/diac08/
Information below
4:00pm PARC Forum [26-Jun-08]
George Pake Auditorium at PARC
"Love and Authentication -- Addressing the problem of password
reset"
Markus Jakobsson
PARC
http://www.parc.com/forum/
Abstract below
FRIDAY, 27 JUNE 2008
all day NF in the Bay Area [27-Jun-08]
Stanford University
http://www.stanford.edu/~tupailo/nfbayarea08.html
Information below
all day Workshop on Algorithms for Modern Massive Datasets [27-Jun-08]
Stanford University
"Statistical, Geometric, and Topological Methods"
http://mmds.stanford.edu
(registration required by June 20)
Information below
all day Directions and Implications of Advanced Computing [27-Jun-08]
UC Berkeley
"Conference on Online Deliberation"
http://www.ischool.berkeley.edu/about/events/conf20080626
http://www.publicsphereproject.org/events/diac08/
Information below
7:00pm Long Now Foundation Talk [27-Jun-08]
Fort Mason Conference Center, San Francisco
"The Dominant Animal: Human Evolution and the Environment"
Paul Ehrlich
Stanford
http://www.longnow.org/
SATURDAY, 28 JUNE 2008
all day Workshop on Algorithms for Modern Massive Datasets [28-Jun-08]
Stanford University
"Machine Learning and Dimensionality Reduction"
http://mmds.stanford.edu
(registration required by June 20)
Information below
all day Directions and Implications of Advanced Computing [28-Jun-08]
UC Berkeley
"Conference on Online Deliberation"
http://www.ischool.berkeley.edu/about/events/conf20080626
http://www.publicsphereproject.org/events/diac08/
Information below
SUNDAY, 29 JUNE 2008
all day Directions and Implications of Advanced Computing [29-Jun-08]
UC Berkeley
"Conference on Online Deliberation"
http://www.ischool.berkeley.edu/about/events/conf20080626
http://www.publicsphereproject.org/events/diac08/
Information below
____________
Stanford Blood Center: Shortage of O, A-, B-, and AB-. For an
appointment: <http://bloodcenter.stanford.edu/> or call 650-723-7831.
It only takes an hour of your time and you get free cookies. They are
particularly short of O-.
____________
SRI AI SEMINAR SERIES
on Thursday, 19 June 2008, 4:00pm - 5:30pm
EJ228, SRI International
http://www.ai.sri.com/seminars/
"Ingenuity Pathways Analysis: Research Applications of Systems"
Ramon Felciano
Ingenuity Systems
The "omics" revolution has generated reams of data increasingly
isolated from the broader biological context in which it exists.
Systems biology, through combined application of system sciences, life
sciences and informatics, aims to create a more holistic understanding
of biological systems to better enable discovery of biologically-
driven diagnostics and therapeutics. We will describe our efforts to
deliver the promise of systems biology through large-scale,
high-fidelity acquisition, structured modeling, and computational
management of scientific knowledge and biomedical ontologies.
Ingenuity Pathway Analysis (IPA) is a software application that
enables biologists and bioinformaticians to model complex biological
systems by identifying and exploring biological mechanisms, pathways
and functions relevant to their experimental datasets and drug
discovery research questions. IPAs algorithmic analytics integrate
functional and physical relationships such gene regulations,
protein-protein interactions, post-translational modifications, and
drug-target interactions at the gene, protein, cellular and tissue
levels. The results provide semantically-consistent representations of
biochemical pathways and biological functions implicated by empirical
data sets, and help scientists to compile panels of biomarkers for
follow-on screening assays. This technology has been successfully
deployed to 10,000s of life sciences researchers at all major
pharmaceutical and research organizations worldwide, with applications
throughout the drug discovery process, from early stage target ID and
validation, to later stage activities such as toxicology,
pharmacogenomics, biomarker identification, and alternative
indications of approved drugs. IPA is built on the Ingenuity Knowledge
Platform (IKP), a semantic knowledge representation platform that
contains a large-scale, manually-curated, ontologically-structured
database of experimental findings describing millions of relationships
between proteins, genes, complexes, cells, tissues, drugs, and
diseases. We will describe the core capabilities of IPA and its
research applications, and as well as provide an "under the hood" view
of the IKP technology. IPA is available for evaluation at
<http://www.ingenuity.com/>.
About the Speaker: Dr. Felciano co-founded Ingenuity in 1998 and leads
the company's science and technology R&D efforts, holding the positions
of Chief Technology Officer and Vice President, Research. Previous to
founding Ingenuity, Dr. Felciano co-founded SUMMIT, the Stanford
University Medical Media and Information Technologies lab, where he
held the position of Associate Director. Dr. Ramon Felciano holds a
Ph.D. and M.S. in Biomedical Informatics, a B.S. in Computer Science
and a B.A. in English and French Literature from Stanford
University. While at Stanford, Dr. Felciano performed research on
interaction design, scientific information visualization, and
distributed knowledge-based biomedical information systems. His
doctoral research with Dr. Russ Altman focused on the automatic
generation of knowledge-driven scientific information
visualization. Dr. Felciano is a founding member of RiboWeb, one of
the first to successful applications of semantic technologies to
support to collaborative molecular biology over the
Internet. Dr. Felcianos other research efforts include Lamprey, a
patented user tracking technology for the World Wide Web; and the
study of Human Error in Medicine and its impact on the design of
medical information systems. Dr. Felciano has authored several
patents, articles and papers in Nature, Gene, ISMB, Briefings in
Bioinformatics, AMIA, CHI, and STQE.
____________
IEEE TALK
on Thursday, 19 June 2008, 6:30pm
Crown Plaza Hotel, San Francisco International Airport
http://www.ewh.ieee.org/r6/scv/comsoc/
(free, see web page)
"Location Based Technologies and Services"
Dave Reid, SiRF Technology Inc.
Jon Metzler, Rosum Corp.
Location-based advertising, e-commerce and social networking are
increasing the revenue opportunities for cellular carriers embedding
Global Positioning Systems (GPS) and other tracking technologies into
their offering. As the social media market picks up momentum, there is
a huge opportunity for new services, based on a subscriber's location
and time of day. What are the technologies and services that will make
this possible?
This special IEEE ComSoc session examines some of the new and exciting
possibilities using GPS-enabled mobile phones and social networking
services. The two speakers did an excellent job of addressing these
topics at the Spring VONx conference earlier this year. Each speaker
will present for 30-35 minutes followed by a panel session and then an
open mike/ Q and A.
To stimulate interest, here are a few questions to ponder:
* What are the relevant technologies- is GPS the only game in town?
* What's this about using broadcast video channels for tracking location?
* Why has the use of cell towers to pinpoint location in a cell not used
more?
* Who are the new location based services targeted towards?
* What are the applications that are driving shared location services?
* When and where can we expect to see these new services to be rolled out?
Program
6:30 - 7:00PM Refreshments and Networking
7:00 - 7:10PM Welcome and Opening Remarks
7:10 - 8:10PM Panelists Presentation
* "Locations: Because Life Moves", by Dave Reid, SiRF Technology Inc.
* "When Location Becomes a Utility", by Jon Metzler, Rosum Corp.
8:10 - 8:50pm Panel Session: Q&A
8:50pm Concluding remarks and wrap up
About the Speakers: Dave Reid, Director of Business Development, SiRF
Technology Inc.
Dave Reid joined SiRF in June 2007, and is in charge of global
business development for the company's wireless segment. In this role,
Reid is responsible for identifying and developing new business
prospects for SiRF's wireless solutions, which include GPS chipsets
and carrier-grade software for use in handsets, smartphones, personal
locators, asset tracking devices, fleet management systems and carrier
infrastructure globally for location-based services (LBS) and mobile
resource management (MRM). Reid also develops new opportunities for
the SiRFecosystem, a comprehensive suite of products and services
designed to help the global LBS developer community more easily
develop, test, and market their location applications. Prior to SiRF,
Reid worked at Qualcomm and its SnapTrack subsidiary, which focuses on
hybrid A-GPS technology for E911, consumer and enterprise LBS
applications. While at Qualcomm, he served in lead product management
and business development roles in its SnapTrack, gpsOne, QPoint, BREW
and QChat product lines, where he worked closely with operators,
handset OEMs, infrastructure providers, systems integrators and
application providers around the globe.
Jon Metzler, Director of Strategic Initiatives, Rosum Corp.
Jon Metzler is Strategic Initiatives and Government Affairs Director
for Rosum Corporation. He is responsible for partnership development
in mobile TV markets, standards development, and regulatory advocacy
on public safety and broadcast TV issues. Prior to joining Rosum, Jon
was Vice President at Performance Analysis Inc, a services firm
specializing in business development in Asia for technology
companies. Prior to joining PAI, Jon was part of multiple successful
launches into the Japanese market, in the fields of technology,
services and media. Jon is a graduate of the MBA/MA-Asian Studies
program at UC-Berkeley. He is now an adviser to the UC-Berkeley
Management of Technology program. Jon also has a B.A. from the
University of Michigan . Jon publishes regularly on technology and
policy issues and is a member of the E911 Institute.
____________
NF IN THE BAY AREA
On Wednesday - Friday, 25-27 June 2008, all day
Stanford University
http://www.stanford.edu/~tupailo/nfbayarea08.html
Marking the 100th anniversary of the birth of Willard Van Orman Quine,
Philosopher and Mathematician, on June 25, 1908. The workshop is
devoted to Quine's "New Foundations" axiomatic set theory and
associated topics. Both open questions and new results will be
discussed. The subjects involved include Model Theory, Proof Theory,
and Set Theory.
Financial Support
* Morgan Phoa Family Fund
Confirmed Participants
* Michael Beeson (San Jose State University)
* Solomon Feferman (Stanford University)
* Thomas Forster (University of Cambridge)
* Randall Holmes (Boise State University)
* Grigori Mints (Stanford University)
* Dana Scott (Carnegie Mellon University and Berkeley)
* Sergei Tupailo (Stanford University)
June 25
9:00 -- 9:10 Opening Remarks
9:10 -- 10:40 Thomas Forster: "A Discussion of Some Open Problem in NF and
Related Systems"
11:00 -- 12:30 Sergei Tupailo: "Consistency of Strictly Impredicative NF"
12:30 -- 2:30 Lunch
2:30 -- 4:00 Sergei Tupailo: "Consistency of Strictly Impredicative NF"
4:20 -- 5:50 Randall Holmes: "Symmetry, Comprehension and
Indiscernibility of Urelements in NFU"
June 26
9:00 -- 9:10 Morning Remarks
9:10 -- 10:40 Thomas Forster: "A Discussion of Some Open Problem in
NF and Related Systems"
11:00 -- 12:30 Randall Holmes: "Symmetry, Comprehension and Indiscernibility
of Urelements in NFU"
12:30 -- 2:30 Lunch
2:30 -- 4:00 Open Discussion: "Is NF Consistent?" Chair: Sergei Tupailo
4:20 -- 5:50 Open Discussion: "What are Advantages of Doing
Mathematics in NF-type Theories?" Chair: Randall Holmes
June 27 Reserved Day Suggestions are welcome!
____________
WORKSHOP ON ALGORITHMS FOR MODERN MASSIVE DATASETS
On Thursday - Saturday, 25-28 June 2008, all day
Stanford University
(registration required by June 20)
http://mmds.stanford.edu
The 2008 Workshop on Algorithms for Modern Massive Data Sets (MMDS
2008) will address algorithmic, mathematical, and statistical
challenges in modern statistical data analysis. The goals of MMDS 2008
are to explore novel techniques for modeling and analyzing massive,
high-dimensional, and nonlinearly-structured scientific and internet
data sets, and to bring together computer scientists, statisticians,
mathematicians, and data analysis practitioners to promote
cross-fertilization of ideas.
Preliminary Schedule
This schedule is subject to changes
WEDNESDAY - JUNE 25, 2008 - DATA ANALYSIS AND DATA APPLICATIONS
9:45 - 10:00 Opening: Organizers
10:00 - 11:00 Christos Faloutsos (Carnegie Mellon University)
TUTORIAL: Graph mining: laws, generators and tools
11:00 - 11:30 Deepak Agarwal (Yahoo! Research, Silicon Valley)
Predictive discrete latent models for large incomplete
dyadic data
11:30 - 12:00 Chandrika Kamath (Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory)
Scientific data mining: why is it difficult?
12:00 - 2:00 LUNCH (ON YOUR OWN)
2:00 - 3:00 Edward Chang (Google Research, Mountain View)
TUTORIAL: Challenges in mining large-scale social networks
3:00 - 3:30 Rakesh Agrawal (Microsoft Research, Silicon Valley)
Title TBA
3:30 - 4:00 Sharad Goel (Yahoo! Research, New York)
Predictive indexing for fast search
4:00 - 4:30 COFFEE BREAK
4:30 - 5:00 James Demmel (University of California, Berkeley)
Avoiding communication in linear algebra algorithms
5:00 - 5:30 Jun Liu (Harvard University)
Bayesian inference of interactions and associations
5:30 - 6:00 Fan Chung (University of California, San Diego)
Four graph partitioning algorithms
6:00 - 6:30 Ronald Coifman (Yale University)
Diffusion geometries and harmonic analysis on data sets
6:30 - 9:30 OPENING RECEPTION (NEW GUINEA GARDEN)
THURSDAY - JUNE 26, 2008 - NETWORKED DATA AND ALGORITHMIC TOOLS
9:00 - 10:00 Milena Mihail (Georgia Institute of Technology)
TUTORIAL: Models and algorithms for complex networks,
with network elements maintaining characteristic profiles
10:00 - 10:30 Reid Andersen (Microsoft Research, Redmond)
An algorithm for improving graph partitions
10:30 - 11:00 COFFEE BREAK
11:00 - 11:30 Michael W. Mahoney (Yahoo! Research, Silicon Valley)
Community structure in large social and information networks
11:30 - 12:00 Nikhil Srivastava (Yale University)
Graph sparsification by effective resistances
12:00 - 12:30 Amin Saberi (Stanford University)
Sequential algorithms for generating random graphs
12:30 - 2:30 LUNCH (ON YOUR OWN)
2:30 - 3:00 Pankaj K. Agarwal (Duke University)
Modeling and analyzing massive terrain data sets
3:00 - 3:30 Leonidas Guibas (Stanford University)
Detection of symmetries and repeated patterns in 3D
point cloud data
3:30 - 4:00 Yuan Yao (Stanford University)
Topological methods for exploring pathway analysis in
complex biomolecular folding
4:00 - 4:30 COFFEE BREAK
4:30 - 5:00 Piotr Indyk (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
Sparse recovery using sparse random matrices
5:00 - 5:30 Ping Li (Cornell University)
Compressed counting and stable random projections
5:30 - 6:00 Yoram Singer (Google Research, Mountain View)
Efficient projection algorithms for learning sparse
representations from high dimensional data
6:00 - 6:30 Joel Tropp (California Institute of Technology)
Algorithms for matrix column selection
FRIDAY - JUNE 27, 2008 - STATISTICAL, GEOMETRIC, AND TOPOLOGICAL METHODS
9:00 - 10:00 Jerome H. Friedman (Stanford University)
TUTORIAL: Fast sparse regression and classification
10:00 - 10:30 Tong Zhang (Rutgers University)
An adaptive forward/backward greedy algorithm for
learning sparse representations
10:30 - 11:00 COFFEE BREAK
11:00 - 11:30 Jitendra Malik (University of California, Berkeley)
Classification using intersection kernel SVMs is efficient
11:30 - 12:00 Elad Hazan (IBM Almaden Research Center)
Efficient online routing with limited feedback and
optimization in the dark
12:00 - 12:30 T.S. Jayram (IBM Almaden Research Center)
Cascaded aggregates on data streams
12:30 - 2:30 LUNCH (ON YOUR OWN)
2:30 - 3:30 Gunnar Carlsson (Stanford University)
TUTORIAL: Topology and data
3:30 - 4:00 Partha Niyogi (University of Chicago)
Manifold regularization and semi-supervised learning
4:00 - 4:30 COFFEE BREAK
4:30 - 5:00 Sanjoy Dasgupta (University of California, San Diego)
Random projection trees and low dimensional manifolds
5:00 - 5:30 Kenneth Clarkson (IBM Almaden Research Center)
Tighter bounds for random projections of manifolds
5:30 - 6:30 PANEL DISCUSSION
6:30 - 9:30 RECEPTION AND POSTER SESSION (OLD UNION CLUB HOUSE)
SATURDAY - JUNE 28, 2008 - MACHINE LEARNING AND DIMENSIONALITY REDUCTION
9:00 - 10:00 Michael I. Jordan (University of California, Berkeley)
TUTORIAL: Sufficient dimension reduction
10:00 - 10:30 Nathan Srebro (University of Chicago)
More data less Work: SVM training in time decreasing
with larger Organizers:data sets
10:30 - 11:00 COFFEE BREAK
11:00 - 11:30 Inderjit S. Dhillon (University of Texas, Austin)
Rank minimization via online learning
11:30 - 12:00 Nir Ailon (Google Research, New York)
Efficient dimension reduction
12:00 - 12:30 Satyen Kale (Microsoft Research, Redmond)
A combinatorial, primal-dual approach to semidefinite programs
12:30 - 2:30 LUNCH (BOX LUNCH PROVIDED)
2:30 - 3:00 Ravi Kannan (Microsoft Research, India)
Spectral algorithms
3:00 - 3:30 Sam Roweis (University of Toronto)
Making the sky searchable: large scale astronomical
pattern recognition
3:30 - 4:00 Anna Gilbert (University of Michigan, Ann Arbor)
Combinatorial group testing in signal recovery
4:00 - 4:30 COFFEE BREAK
4:30 - 5:00 Lars Kai Hansen (Technical University of Denmark)
Generalization in high-dimensional matrix factorization
5:00 - 5:30 Elizabeth Purdom (University of California, Berkeley)
Data analysis with graphs
5:30 - 6:00 Holly Jin (LinkedIn)
Exploring sparse nonnegative matrix factorization
6:00 - 6:30 Lek-Heng Lim (University of California, Berkeley)
Hodge decomposition of skew symmetric matrices and
statistical ranking
6:30 - 8:00 CLOSING RECEPTION
Gunnar Carlsson (Stanford)
Michael Mahoney (Yahoo)
Lek-Heng Lim (Berkeley)
Petros Drineas (RPI)
____________
DIRECTIONS AND IMPLICATIONS OF ADVANCED COMPUTING
DIAC-2008
On Thursday - Sunday, 26-29 June 2008, all day
UC Berkeley
http://www.publicsphereproject.org/events/diac08/
http://www.ischool.berkeley.edu/about/events/conf20080626
At the dawn of the 21st century humankind faces challenges of profound
proportions. The ability of people around the world to discuss, work,
make decisions, and take action collaboratively is one of the most
important capabilities for addressing these challenges.
Researchers, scholars, activists, advocates, artists, educators,
technologists, designers, students, policy-makers, entrepreneurs,
journalists and citizens are rising to these challenges in many ways,
including, devising new communication technologies that build on the
opportunities afforded by the Internet and other new (as well as old)
media. The interactions between technological and social systems are
of special and central importance in this area.
DIAC-08 combines CPSR's 11th DIAC symposium with the third Conference
on Online Deliberation. The joint conference is intended to provide a
platform and a forum for highlighting socio-technological
opportunities, challenges, and pitfalls in the area of community and
civic action. Technology enhanced community action ranges from
informal communities of practice to democratic governance of formal
organizations to large social movements.
Important Dates
May 15 - June 21, 2008 Regular registration begins
June 22 - June 29, 2008 Late registration begins
June 26 - June 29, 2008 DIAC-2008 / OD2008
June 29, 2008 A Tools for Participation Agenda, Open Space Session Open to
the public!
____________
PARC FORUM
on Thursday, 26 June 2008, 4:00pm - 5:00pm
George Pake Auditorium, PARC
(directions at <http://www.parc.com/directions>)
http://www.parc.com/forum/
"Love and Authentication -- Addressing the problem of password reset"
Markus Jakobsson
PARC
One of the most commonly neglected security vulnerabilities associated
with typical online service providers lies in the password reset
process. By being based on a small number of questions whose answers
often can be derived using data-mining techniques, or even guessed,
many sites are open to attack. To exacerbate the problem, many sites
pose the very same questions to users wishing to reset their forgotten
passwords, creating a common "meta password" between sites: the
password reset questions. At the same time, as the number of accounts
per user increases, so does the risk for the user to forget her
password. Unfortunately, the cost of a customer-service mediated
password reset, currently averaging $22, is far beyond possible for
most service providers. In this talk, an alternative technique will be
presented. It is fast and efficient, is compatible with
input-constrained devices (such as handheld devices), and has low
error rates. It is in the process of being commercialized, with a
Fortune 500 company intending to deploy it by the end of the year.
About the Speaker: Dr. Markus Jakobsson is Principal Scientist at Palo
Alto Research Center. He is a founder of the security startup
RavenWhite, which addresses security problems associated with
authentication, malware and click-fraud. He is also one of the
founders of SecurityCartoon, an educational approach targeting typical
Internet users. Previously, he has held positions as Associate
Professor at Indiana University, Adjunct Associate Professor at New
York University, Principal Research Scientist at RSA Security, and was
a member of the Technical Staff at Bell Labs. He is a visiting
research fellow of the Anti-Phishing Working Group (APWG).
Dr. Jakobsson's recent books Phishing and Countermeasures (Wiley,
2006) and Crimeware: Understanding New Attacks and Defenses (Symantec
Press, 2008) chart new territory in online security. He received his
PhD from University of California at San Diego in 1997.
____________
END MATERIAL
The CSLI Calendar appears weekly on most Wednesdays throughout the
year. Announcements, abstracts, and other information to appear in
the Calendar should be submitted to the editor, who reserves the right
to decide what does or does not go in the calendar
mailto:incalendar@csli.stanford.edu
Requests to be added to the mailing list should be sent to
sympa@lists-csli.stanford.edu. With the lines in the body of the text
of either
subscribe csli-calendar
for the long form or
subscribe csli-short-calendar
for the short form (i.e., no abstracts). You will be asked to confirm
the subscription in either case. To unsubscribe use the word
unsubscribe instead of subscribe. Problems with subscribing or
unsubscribing should be sent to incalendar@csli.stanford.edu
The full current issue is at
http://cslicalendar.stanford.edu/current.shtml
and the archives at
http://cslicalendar.stanford.edu/Archive/
People on many of the CSLI computers can type 'help csli-calendar' to
see the current issue.
The CSLI Calendar is also posted each week to the su.events usenet
newsgroup (only available from computers on the Stanford network)
Information about CSLI's research program is available at
http://www-csli.stanford.edu/
For maps to the Stanford University rooms see
http://cslicalendar.stanford.edu/locations.shtml