Conference videos now up on YouTube!

We've finally processed our backlog of recordings and they've hit teh interwebz! Check out our YouTube account at https://www.youtube.com/user/compconaustralia!

Unfortunately, due to various issues we were unable to record the talks by Michael Still and Vinitha Palaniveloo and workshops by Tim Nugent, Ged Ellis and Daniel Axtens. We apologise for the inconvenience.

MP4 versions will be available from this website shortly.

Workshops

Workshop Sign-ups are now open.

All Workshops have limited numbers and require registration. If you are interested in attending a workshop please sign-up as soon as you can.

Be aware some workshops have pre-requisite tasks and knowledge, make sure you fit the criteria.

Find sign-up links here:
http://compcon.net.au/schedule

Accommodation - Single Rooms Status

CompCon does not have any single rooms left for booking. We still have space at YHA for those still looking for accommodation, however this means that you will be sharing a room with others. We apologise for any inconvenience that this may cause.

Travel scholarship recipients who decide to find their own accommodation due to this may submit a receipt to get the $50 discount on accommodation.

Should you have any further questions feel free to contact us through the form on our website.

Keynote Speaker: Pascal Van Hentenryck

The CompCon 2013 Committee is proud to announce our first keynote speaker, Professor Pascal Van Hentenryck!

Pascal will be speaking on Saving Lives with Computational Thinking. This talk presents a number of projects in health care and disaster management where computational thinking dramatically improves human and social welfare. It also explains why these problems are extremely challenging computationally and gives a brief overview of some of the problem-solving methodologies to approach them.

Pascal Van Hentenryck leads the Optimisation Research Group at National ICT Australia (NICTA), the centre of excellence for ICT research in Australia. Van Hentenryck is the recipient of two honorary degrees and is a fellow of the Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence. He was awarded the 2002 INFORMS ICS Award for research excellence at the intersection of operations research and computer science, the 2006 ACP Award for research excellence in constrain programming, the 2010-2011 Philip J. Bray Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching at Brown University, and is a 2013 IFORS Distinguished speaker. Van Hentenryck is the author of five MIT Press books and has developed a number of innovative optimization systems that are widely used in academia and industry. He also teaches a successful and innovative massively online course on discrete optimization (check it out on YouTube!).

Van Hentenryck has recently been appointed to the position of Strategic Chair in Data Intensive Computing at the Australian National University.

CompCon 2013 will be held from 28-30 September 2013. Early bird registrations are still open!

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Speaker Profile: Buck Shlegeris

Buck Shlegeris is an undergraduate computer science student at ANU (and also the Director of Sponsorship for CompCon 2013!). His interests are varied, and range from the highly theoretical (How hard is the median instance of the halting problem?) to the practical (How should I make this GUI have a right click menu?). In his spare time, he writes music for his band Buck et al.

Buck will be speaking on The algebraic behaviour of data structures. His talk description is below:

"Data structures have a rich algebraic structure which hasn't really been properly explored. To start with, I'll explain the isomorphism between set size expressions and immutable data structures. I'll explain how differentiation leads to the zipper over a mutable data type, and what zippers are.

Then, we'll get to the interesting stuff. There's a correspondence between data structures and context-free grammars, which is really cool.

In software engineering, we talk about contracts and class invariants. We can carefully select data structures such that these class invariants and contracts are ensured by the type system.

We can describe problems in combinatorics as questions about abstract data structures. I'll exposit this.

Most of this presentation is not original. However, the isomorphism between this algebra and context free grammar is original as far as I know."

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Introducing: Bob Williamson

Professor Bob Williamson is the leader of the Machine Learning group at NICTA.

He received a Bachelor of Electrical Engineering from the Queensland University of Technology in 1984 and a Masters of Engineering Science (Electrical Engineering) from the University of Queensland in 1986. In 1990 he obtained a PhD in Electrical Engineering from the University of Queensland. He is a fellow of the Australian Academy of Science. He joined the Australian National University as a postdoctoral fellow in the Department of Systems Engineering in 1990 and held a series of appointments before becoming a professor and head of the Computer Sciences Laboratory, Research School of Information Sciences and Engineering at the Australian National University. From 2003 to early 2006 Professor Williamson was the Director of NICTA’s Canberra Research Laboratory. In 2006 he was appointed as NICTA's Scientific Director. Since 2011 he has been leading the Machine Learning group. He is a member of the advisory board of the National Institute of Informatics (Japan) and was previously a member of the Scientific Advisory Board of the Max-Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics. His scientific interests include signal processing and machine learning.

He will be presenting on Machine Learning and Big Data and will give an overview of machine learning problems that arise in the area of big data. He will present some example projects that NICTA is using machine learning to solve a range of real-world problems, and outline some of the exciting research challenges that remain.

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Introducing: Rajeev Gore

Professor Rajeev Gore is the leader of the Logic and Computation Group at the ANU Research School of Computer Science.

Rajeev did his BSc and MSc at the University of Melbourne and did his PhD at the University of Cambridge, England, in 1992. He was a post-doc at the University of Manchester, UK, from 1992-1994. He has been at the ANU since 1994, first as a Research Fellow, then as an Australian Research Council Queen Elizabeth II Fellow and finally as a researcher in the Research School of Computer Science. He is currently the leader of the Logic and Computation Group.

Rajeev will be speaking about Practical Reasoning About the Real World Using Formal Logic. He will present an outline of how logic can be used to solve real-world problems ranging from digital circuit verification to reasoning about legal documents. The technical content requires only basic first-year knowledge about logic, and he will introduce all the rest.

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