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Wednesday, January 31, 2007
More NSF News
Posted by Lance
CMU's Jeannette Wing named head of the CISE directorate. Hopefully she can put some of that Computational Thinking into the NSF.
1:19 PM
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Theory Candidates
Posted by Lance
Having looked at the applications of several theoretical computer science job
candidates, I notice some interesting differences from even one year
ago.
- Last year many of the stronger candidates were coming off of
postdocs looking for tenure-track jobs. This year we see more strength
from the fresh Ph.D.s.
- Last year there were a large number of outstanding cryptography
candidates. This year no particular field dominates.
- Last year the strongest candidates were heavily weighted with MIT
Ph.D.s. The degrees of this year's candidates are much more spread
out.
The last two points are not completely uncorrelated.
There are some notable exceptions to the above and the differences are
easily explained by statistical variations on small sample spaces. But
still worthy to note how much variation we see in the theory market
from one year to the next.
9:52 AM
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Tuesday, January 30, 2007
Good News for the NSF
Posted by Lance
A 6% increase for the National Science Foundation for the current fiscal year (via the CRA Blog). Now go write those proposals.
1:47 PM
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Monday, January 29, 2007
Thought of the Day
Posted by Lance
Life is just a big Markov chain, whose stationary distribution is death.
5:00 PM
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Sunday, January 28, 2007
Rating Papers
Posted by Lance
Suzanne Zeitman, associate editor of AMS Mathematical
Reviews (and on the web), would like to get
suggestions from the TCS community on how MR "can do a better job at
covering the literature (wherever it is) in theoretical computer
science."
Looking at a random sampling of papers, the reviews seem to give a
short description of the main results of the paper without much or any
opinion on the quality of the paper though the fact the paper has a
review indicates some positive view of the paper. Other than that the
review doesn't seem to give more information than a well-written
abstract.
As comments on this weblog show, many people will give more honest
views if they don't have to reveal their identities. Anonymous
reviews of papers might prove equally fruitful.
On this topic, David Bacon created a Digg-like
site scirate.com for quant-ph. Kudos
to Dave for bringing some Web 2.0 tools to highlight important
papers.
Still researchers looks at papers more like movies—we like
different genres and then have different preferences within these
genres. Could some sort of recommender system for
academic papers help us find good papers to read?
7:59 PM
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Thursday, January 25, 2007
Too Useful to be a Computer Scientist
Posted by Lance
A conversation I heard about several years ago.
Physicist: Computer scientists have done nothing for quantum computing.
Computer Scientist: What about Shor's quantum factoring algorithm?
Physicist: Peter Shor is a physicist.
This becomes a self-fulfilling prophesy. Once computer scientists have
done something physicists care about they cease to be computer
scientists and are now physicists.
This view has changed a bit, now we do see a number of physicists
(though certainly not all of them) seeing value in many of the tools,
techniques and results from computer science. We are also making
headway in other fields like economics and biology.
If we want computer science to continue to prosper we need to continue
to reach out to other fields and do our best to make them understand
the role computer science can play in helping understand their basic
questions.
9:38 PM
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Wednesday, January 24, 2007
The Bourbaki Lecture
Posted by Lance
Hanging in the Indiana University Mathematics Lounge is a letter
dated November 16, 1948 written to Max Zorn from Nicolas Bourbaki and
cc'd to André Weil.
I am glad to be able to inform you that the American Consulate in Paris has now
granted me a visa, and that I have booked passages, for my wife and
myself, which should just enable us to reach Columbus, Ohio, in time
for my scheduled talk to the Association for Symbolic Logic.
At the same time, I must say that I have learnt with no little
surprise the rejection, on technical grounds which I do not
understand, of my application for membership in the American
Mathematical Society. Under such circumstances, it will be clear to
you that I cannot but decline your kind invitation to attend a dinner
which, I believe, is chiefly sponsored by that Society.
Perhaps the AMS rejected his application on the technicality that
Bourbaki did not actually exist as a person, he was just a pseudonym
for a collection
of French mathematicians writing a series of books on modern
mathematics.
Bourbaki did have an invited paper
presented at the ASL Meeting in Columbus on December 31. Weil, one of
the founders of the Bourbaki group,
presented the paper at the conference.
If the same kind of story happened today would we hang a framed
email on the wall?
6:24 AM
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Tuesday, January 23, 2007
Is it Morning or Mourning for American Science?
Posted by Lance
Last week Chicago Cosmologist Michael Turner gave a talk "Trends
in Science Funding: From NSF to the ACI". Turner was head of the
Mathematical and Physical Sciences, NSF's largest directorate, from 2003 until
last summer (computer
science is mostly funded from the CISE directorate).
The slides
describe the state and process of science funding in the
US and argues for the importance of physical science funding.
In his position, Turner played a role in helping to push the American
Competitive Initiative that Bush proposed at the State of the Union last
year that would have, among other things, doubled
the NSF budget over ten years, about a 7% increase a year. The ACI was
"stillborn" with the continuing resolution that froze most
of the government's budgets at last year's level. The continuing
resolution has put a very tight squeeze at NSF and other governmental
scientific institutions.
Still Turner has some reason for optimism. He expects the president to
push for ACI again, if not in tonight's State of the Union, then in
his budget for FY08 and has hopes congress will support ACI or a similar plan. Also several congressmen have signed a Dear
Colleague letter
requesting to add funding to the NSF for this fiscal year,
though Turner was pessimistic that this request would be fulfilled.
5:45 AM
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Monday, January 22, 2007
Complexity Textbooks
Posted by Lance
A reader asks
What
are currently considered to be the best textbooks for complexity? I
know the choice is small (Papadimitriou is probably still the best
even if it is very outdated and somewhat buggy), do most of the
lecturers just write their own lecture notes? Is there a set of notes
that is especially popular and also used by others. I also know the
upcoming book by
Arora/Barak but it's still far from complete, would
you recommend it for teaching?
You have more choices than you think with textbooks by Homer
and Selman ,
Hemaspaandra and Ogihara ,
Ko
and Du ,
Wegener , and several others. Also several
complexity theorists have put their lecture notes on line, quite a
valuable resource. Jin-Yi Cai has the makings of a textbook from his
lecture notes.
The topics and style of a computational complexity course varies from
instructor to instructor and no single book would work for all. You
really just need to find what best works for you and your class.
I personally don't use a textbook when I teach graduate
complexity. I've been so close to the field no book would fit my philosophy
unless I write it myself. And that's not going to happen anytime soon.
6:32 AM
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Friday, January 19, 2007
Proceedings Papers
Posted by Lance
Grant Schoenebeck asked this question for the Q&A Podcast but we
didn't get to it.
In proceedings, papers are printed in a hard-to-read two column format
and are artificially cut off at (usually) 10 pages. Personally, I
look for a more readable/extended format on-line before suffering
through the conference format. However, if we no longer have printed
proceeding (or even if we did, but also had on-line proceedings) then
these restrictions would no longer need to apply. We could print
things is a way that would be much easy to read and could have
original versions of the papers that we not oddly missing some proofs
or sections.
Is this a good idea? Why don't we start doing this now?
We have the two-column format in proceedings because it saves space, a
paper typically drops 30-40% by moving to a two-column format. Less
white space.
But I would go further than Grant and suggest that every author should
have a complete version of their paper available on their web pages
and/or an archive site before the conference. I hate the phrase
"A full proof will be available in the full paper" when one
doesn't exist. But I don't want to require the extra version or we
may end up discouraging people from writing up their results properly
with yet another deadline.
8:30 AM
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Thursday, January 18, 2007
The Academic Road Trip
Posted by Lance
Jason Teutsch is an Indiana Math Ph.D. student who has been working
with me via the CIC Traveling Scholars
program. Tomorrow he defends his thesis so today I'm
driving Jason and another faculty member and graduate student down to
Bloomington. Road Trip!
In graduate school we took these trips quite often. Many conferences
meet in the Northeast and we would pile into cars and drive out. A
good chance to bond with your fellow students.
Fewer conference meet in the Midwest and in Chicago you tend to fly to
travel. But we do have the occasional reason to take the long drive.
We will be in a closed environment with no internet (assuming everyone
stays off their cell phones). We'll actually have to talk to each
other, maybe even try and prove a theorem. How quaint.
8:10 AM
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Wednesday, January 17, 2007
Computing Square Roots
Posted by Lance
My daughter learned about square roots and she did her homework taking
those roots using a calculator. She asked me how to compute the square
root without using a calculator.
I actually learned this procedure
in the mid-70's, probably the last generation to do so. But unlike
long division or Euclid's Algorithm, I quickly forgot how to compute
square roots since the process was quite cumbersome, one didn't have
to take square roots that often and reasonably priced calculators appeared
soon thereafter. Almost no one even 50 years ago used
the manual method for square roots, using slide rules or log
tables instead.
I rarely even use calculators today. I find square roots like I find out
anything else, praying to the
Google Gods.
5:04 AM
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Tuesday, January 16, 2007
The Proceedings
Posted by Lance
It is a conference ritual as far back as I remember. Your arrive at
the conference and receive the proceedings, all the papers to be
presented at the conference many of which you are seeing for the very
first time. I would take the proceedings to my room, smell that new
proceedings smell and open it up, first checking that my papers looked
fine, not that I could do anything if they weren't. Using the
proceedings I would plan what talks I would attend the first day.
The proceedings would never leave my room until after the
conference. I just hated lugging the heavy proceedings
around. Sometimes when a speaker said something that didn't make sense
to me, I would simply borrow a proceedings from someone sitting next
to me.
When I returned home I would put the proceedings in its proper place
on my office shelf, marveling at my complete collection of STOC, FOCS
and Complexity proceedings back to 1986, incredibly useful for looking
up recent papers.
How has technology changed how I use a proceedings? Not much during
the conference, but I now rarely use proceedings to look up
papers and no longer have complete collections of STOC and FOCS.
Other people use proceedings during a conference in different
ways. Some never open them up. Some follow along in the proceedings
during a talk. Some read the paper before or after the talk.
That's the important point to keep in mind when we have our debates on
whether to eliminate proceedings, or put them on the web
or on CD-ROMs. We all use proceedings in different ways and no single
solution will address everyone's needs.
6:56 AM
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Monday, January 15, 2007
Events
Posted by Lance
Richard Ladner wants me to remind my readers about the SIGACT student
research competition. From his chair letter in the last SIGACT news.
There will be a new event at STOC 2007, the Student Research
Competition, which will be a poster and short presentation competition
for undergraduates. The deadline for submissions is February 23rd,
2007. If you are working with an undergraduate on research, please
encourage him or her to submit to this competition. Accepted students
are provided up to $500 for travel to the conference. This competition
is an excellent way to engage the next generation of theory
researchers in our conference. I want to thank Brent Heeringa for
chairing this new activity for SIGACT.
The TARK
(Theoretical Aspects of Rationality and Knowledge) conference meets
this year in Brussels in June mixing computer
scientists, economists and philosophers discussing knowledge,
rationality and how it all plays in CS and economic models. And I'm on
the PC this year. Submission deadline is January 30.
The 27th Crypto
conference will be held August in Santa Barbara, one of the few
conferences held in the same location each year. Submission deadline
February 19th. For those who feel Crypto focuses too much on applied
research, the Theory of Cryptography
Conference (TCC) meets next month in Amsterdam.
ICALP, the granddaddy of
European theory conferences, meets in Poland in July. Submissions by
January 25.
RANDOM/APPROX in
Princeton in August. Deadline April 7. MFCS (Eastern European
Theory) in Czech Republic in August, deadline April 2.
There are many many more. DMANET
and TheoryNet
will keep you on top on what's going on.
7:16 AM
#

Friday, January 12, 2007
The Sum and Product Riddle
Posted by Lance
A cute problem that I got off Steve Fenner's door that he got from FOM.
Let x and y be two integers with 1<x<y and x+y≤100.
Sally is given only their sum x+y and Paul is given only their product
xy. Sally and Paul are honest and all this is commonly known to both
of them.
The following
conversation now takes place:
- Paul: I do not know the two numbers.
- Sally: I knew that already.
- Paul: Now I know the two numbers.
- Sally: Now I know them also.
What are the numbers?
5:44 AM
#

Thursday, January 11, 2007
The State Universities
Posted by Lance
While Luca suffers
in Hong Kong, I am visiting beautiful Columbia, South Carolina. (The
ribs are better here) Next week a day in Bloomington, Indiana and the
following week a couple of days in Ann Arbor, Michigan as I visit the
flagship universities of those states.
Over my life I have visited the flagship campuses in Arizona, Indiana,
Iowa, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska, New
Jersey (Rutgers), North Carolina, Oregon, Pennsylvania (Penn State),
South Carolina, Texas, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia
and Wisconsin. (Illinois is conspicuously absent). I have also visited several campuses of the California
and New York systems which don't have a specific flagship. I
can more locations of flagship campuses than I can state capitals.
The state
universities got a strong push from the Morrill Land Grant
Act passed during the Lincoln administration after the southern
states that objected (like South Carolina) had left the union.
One of the great strengths of the US higher education system are these
state universities, independent and competing, instead of a system of
nationalized universities that you find in many other countries.
8:13 AM
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Wednesday, January 10, 2007
Four Eyes
Posted by Lance
Why do so many scientists wear glasses? Thirty years ago this question
was essentially equivalent to "Why so many scientists have bad
eyesight?" I don't have a good answer to this second riddle,
perhaps some genetic link between scientific ability and eyesight,
perhaps scientists don't have worse eyesight than society in general
and I just have biased beliefs.
But now the question "Why do so many scientists wear
glasses?" has much less to do with eyesight. With advances in
contact lenses and surgery most people can do away with their
glasses. But most scientists seem to keep their glasses, even wearing
them with pride. Is it really a fashion statement? I've asked some of
my colleagues, they worry about the price or the risks, both of which
are quite low once you do the research.
I couldn't wait to get rid of my glasses. I started wearing contacts
in college in the late 80's and had LASIK surgery in 2002. I've had
better than 20/20 vision and haven't needed to worry about my eyesight
since. How do your glasses feel?
10:18 AM
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Monday, January 08, 2007
SODA and Funding
Posted by Lance
Suresh and Jeff cover the
SODA Conference
currently meeting in New Orleans. Suresh talked
about a lecture given by Luc Devroye giving techniques that might help
determine the actual constant factors in some algorithms.
I usually ignore constants even in the exponents. Perhaps that's why
you tend not to see me at SODA conferences.
Many readers pointed to a New York Times article
discussing how the freeze on spending levels for 2007 will affect
science funding, a problem I mentioned
last month. The Times article mostly describes the affect on big
science projects but those of us doing "small science" will
be hit hard as well. The CRA recommends
that you contact your representatives and senators.
6:13 PM
#

Sunday, January 07, 2007
Dress for Success
Posted by Lance
A graduate student asks
What should I wear for an academic job
interview?
Most computer scientists won't notice and will completely
forget what you wore when it comes to decision making time. But the
wrong clothes might make a bad impression on some of them and you
might meet administrators or faculty from other department with
different standards of attire. You never want to give the appearance
that you are not taking the interview seriously.
On the other extreme I have seen candidates looking uncomfortable in
suits they clearly borrowed or bought off the rack. My suggestion,
dress as nicely as you feel comfortable. To be specific, I'd suggest
nice pants and a jacket with or without a tie for men. For women the
best I can say is dress professionally.
Don't feel afraid to ask the person hosting your visit about these
kinds of questions. The host generally wants you to succeed and can
tell you about who you will meet and any expectations they may have.
8:27 PM
#

Friday, January 05, 2007
2007 Celebrations
Posted by Lance
Jan van Leeuwen runs down many of the anniversaries coming up this
year.
Reading your post 2006 Year in Review, I was reminded of a number of
memorable things that are coming up in 2007.
Are there any commemorative facts to be noted in 2007? Most certainly there
are, although it isn't anything like the Gödel year we just had. I'm not
counting the Robert
A. Heinlein Centennial to be held in Kansas City later
this year, undoubtedly a major event for the science fictionists among us.
Staying closer to our field, in 2007 it will be 100 years ago that John
Mauchly was born. Together with Howard Aiken and J. Presper Eckert he
is one of the best known, early computer pioneers from the US. Together
with Eckert he built the ENIAC and later the UNIVAC I (built between 1946
and 1951).
2007 also marks the 100 year anniversary of another computer pioneer, namely
Antonin
Svoboda from the Czech Republic. He was the main designer of the
first Czechoslovak relay automatic computer SAPO (built between 1947 and
1951), working in the Research Institute of Mathematical Machines within
the Czech Academy of Sciences.
From a more theoretical perspective, in 2007 it will be 100 years ago that
Hassler Whitney was born. As a mathematician he made some highly original
contributions to early graph theory, notably on the four color problem and
on planarity (cf. Whitney's planarity criterion). He is also widely credited
as the inventor of matroid theory, of which the foundations were defined in
his 1935 paper On
the Abstract Properties of Linear Dependence.
Other mathematicians whose centennials are coming up include H.M.S.
Coxeter and Harold
Davenport. But 2007 also marks the
300 year (!) anniversary of the birth of Leonhard Euler. The math
community is celebrating the Tri-Centennial Birthday of Euler in many
ways.
8:26 AM
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Thursday, January 04, 2007
Solving Puzzles
Posted by Lance
An economist, a physicist and a computer scientist were sitting at a
table. A true story, not the beginning of a joke. One of them said
We were solving fundamental problems twenty to thirty years
ago. There is still much we don't understand but today we are only
solving puzzles.
Any one of them could have said that,
scientific insecurity runs through all fields. A similar set of
scientists probably had a similar discussion twenty years ago as well.
At the end they all concluded that the future of their fields lied not
in the cores of their fields but in the interaction between them and
other fields not represented, like biology. They probably also said
that twenty years ago.
6:14 AM
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Wednesday, January 03, 2007
Baseball and Opera
Posted by Lance
The New York Times reports
on a possible merger of the two major US satellite radio
companies. This would resolve one of the great dilemmas as XM carries the audio of every Major
League Baseball
game and Sirius has a station
devoted to live and archival broadcasts of the Metropolitan Opera.
On the face of it, you would expect most baseball fans would rather
watch paint dry than attend an opera and vice versa. But I'm not alone
among the people who fanatically follow both. I can't pin down the
exact connection between opera and baseball and one can make many
philosophical comparisons (e.g. both require large teams but at most fixed
times individuals rule the stage, both require a good attention
span). Most lovers of both that I know are
also scientists though that might just be my lack of a good
sample. And I can't explain the Italians who seem to embrace opera and
soccer.
In the academic world we get little choices about where we can live,
so I find myself extremely lucky to be in a city with a great
tradition in both baseball and
opera. I've mentioned baseball
more than opera in this weblog, but it was the baseball season tickets
that I gave up once the kids were born.
If you are a great lover of baseball or opera you should give the
other a try. And if you read the title of today's post and thought
about the browser, shame on you.
8:48 AM
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Tuesday, January 02, 2007
The Job Talk
Posted by Lance
As we begin January so begins the hiring season. In January CS
departments start sifting through candidates deciding whom to bring in
for interviews. Don't wait until you get your interview call, now is
the time to get your job talk ready.
A great job talk by itself won't guarantee you a job, but I've heard
of many an instance where a bad talk has ruined a candidate's chances
despite otherwise stellar credentials. A good job talk should achieve
three goals.
- Explain your results.
- Explain why your results are important.
- Explain how you achieved your results.
Fail to do the first two and you will not get the job. We theorists
have a tendency to want to "wow" an audience with our clever
techniques but first you must spend several slides carefully giving an
intuitive description of your research and why those in the audience
should care about the results. Be sure and mention what your own
research is early in the talk and again at the end.
Know your audience, usually a broad spectrum of computer
scientists. You give a different talk to them than you would in a
regular theory seminar. Motivation and intuitive explanations of your
research are key.
Repeat the following mantra as you prepare your slides: Formulas
bad. Pictures good. Formulas bad. Pictures good.
Give a practice talk in your own department. Invite some people from
outside theory. Listen to the comments. Revise your talk. Repeat.
7:29 AM
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