The information technology industry is moving rapidly, so rapidly that
there is a need to communicate new, perhaps incomplete, ideas more rapidly
than is allowed by the rigorous referee process applied to FTCS papers.
To address this need, we have instituted the FastAbstracts session at
this year's symposium.
A FastAbstract is a very brief (two pages at most) presentation of
an idea, opinion, or research effort. The ideas are not refereed, but
are simply presented as is. This, combined with a four minute talk during
the Symposium, allows for the authors to gain immediate feedback from
the technical community. We also hope it will encourage more diverse
participation.
We use the term FastAbstracts because everything about them is fast.
The abstract can be written quickly, the acceptance cycle is short (within
a couple months from annoucement), and the talk will be fast. The submission
process is handled entirely through the Web and the published FastAbstracts
are only keystrokes away at http://www.chillarege.com/ftcs,
in addition to the printed Digest.
The community's response to FastAbstracts has been great. At the launch
of the FastAbstracts concept we reserved a slot for 20 presentations,
inspired by last year's, Work In Progress idea at FTCS-27. We were plesantly
surprised in receiving around 50 FastAbstracts, from 18 countries, and
had to expand the session into two parallel sessions. One of the senior
members from our community, wrote us "this is the best idea I have
seen in ten years."
We hope that the concept will evolve into including a greater diversity
of contributors. The two page concept is simple enough that it should
make contribution more feasible from the practioners as also deliver
the essence of our work in easier to digest chunks. We look forward
to FastAbstracts spreading as a concept in our rapidly changing industry.
Jean Arlat, LAAS-CNRS
Ram Chillarege, IBM Research
Chuck Weinstock, Software Engineering Institute
May 1998