Sigaccess annual Report



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SIGACCESS Annual Report

July 2012 - June 2013
Submitted by: Andrew Sears, Chair

SIGACCESS continues to refine its activities to meet member needs. This report highlights SIGACCESS Awards as well as the SIG’s conference, publication, and other activities.


Awards

ACM Student Research Competition (SRC)

SIGACCESS continues to conduct this competition in conjunction with the ASSETS conference. For ASSETS 2012, the winners are:


Graduate Awards:

1st - Javier Torrente, Complutense University of Madrid, Reusable Game Interfaces for People with Disabilities


2nd - Yury Puzis, Stony Brook University, Accessible Web Automation Interface: a User Study
3rd - Wei Tzu-Wei, Chung Yuan Christian University, Detecting the Hand-Mouthing Behavior of Children with Intellectual Disability Using Kinect Imaging Technology
Undergraduate Awards:

1st - Nithin Santhanam, University of Pittsburgh, Wii Remote as a Customizable Web Navigation Device For People with Cerebral Palsy


SIGACCESS Best Paper Award
Shiri Azenkot, Kyle Rector, Richard Ladner, and Jacob Wobbrock. 2012. PassChords: secure multi-touch authentication for blind people. In Proceedings of the 14th international ACM SIGACCESS conference on Computers and accessibility (ASSETS '12). ACM, New York, NY, USA, 159-166. DOI=10.1145/2384916.2384945 http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/2384916.2384945
SIGACCESS Best Student Paper Award
Ha Trinh, Annalu Waller, Keith Vertanen, Per Ola Kristensson, and Vicki L. Hanson. 2012. iSCAN: a phoneme-based predictive communication aid for nonspeaking individuals. In Proceedings of the 14th international ACM SIGACCESS conference on Computers and accessibility (ASSETS '12). ACM, New York, NY, USA, 57-64. DOI=10.1145/2384916.2384927 http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/2384916.2384927
SIGACCESS Outstanding Contribution to Computing and Accessibility Award

This award is given every other year. For 2012, the recipient was Dr. John Gardner, Professor Emeritus of Physics at Oregon State University and is founder and president of ViewPlus Technologies, Inc. After losing his sight in 1988 in mid-career, John Gardner formed the Science Access Project (http://dots.physics.orst.edu) to do research and development on new technologies for access to complex information by people with print disabilities. ViewPlus Technologies (http://www.ViewPlus.com) is a spin-off company formed to commercialize the Tiger tactile graphics embosser technology and other technologies developed in the Science Access Project.



SIGACCESS Scholarship in Computers and Accessibility

The SIGACCESS Scholarship Award aims to provide support for participation in the ASSETS conference for individuals who would not otherwise be able to attend. Practitioners, researchers, members of advocacy groups, or individuals with disabilities are eligible to apply. Applicants must have a demonstrated interest in accessible computing. Awardees will have the opportunity to actively participate in the ASSETS conference and gain experience and knowledge from interacting with experts in the field. The scholarship award is in the amount of $2,000. SIGACCESS awards up to five scholarships per year, pending availability of funds. The 2012 scholarships were awarded to Tuuli Keskinen, Jennison Asuncion, and Katherine Kahl to attend ASSETS 2012. In addition, consistent with the mission of SIGACCESS, we provided travel support for an assistant that needed to travel with one of the recipients.


Supporting ACM-W Scholarships

Beginning with ASSETS 2010, SIGACCESS has supported the ACM-W Scholarship program by providing a complimentary registration to ACM-W Scholarship recipients. For ASSETS 2012, SIGACCESS hosted Clara Bayarri, Universitat Politecnica de Catalunya.



Significant Programs

ASSETS Conference

ASSETS 2012 was held in Boulder, Colorado. The number of submissions was consistent with recent history with submissions from numerous countries spanning a variety of topics. The acceptance rate, near 30%, was also consistent with recent history. Attendance was solid, and the conference was profitable.


As has become the norm, the conference featured an NSF sponsored Doctoral Consortium (see the January 2013 issue of the SIGACCESS Accessible Computing Newsletter – Issue 105). This consortium allowed doctoral students to present their dissertation topics and receive feedback during formative stages of their work. The conference also hosted a Microsoft Student Research Competition (SRC) event (see information about the winners of the competition above).
The SIGACCESS Business Meeting, held at ASSETS, updated attendees on SIG activities and discussed ideas for new activities. We continued discussions regarding supporting workshops or other smaller events that were more focused with regard to topic or geographical location.
ASSETS offers a mentoring program to authors who are new to the conference as well as authors who are new to presenting research or are submitting work to a new category. Authors who are not familiar with preparing papers in English can also seek assistance. Mentors are experienced ASSETS authors, providing advice to the prospective authors about how their work may fit with the conference and how to effectively present their ideas. Normally, mentoring does not include detailed copyediting. This year the mentoring program received 16 requests. To provide some context, the conference normally receives approximately 100 full paper submissions.
ACM Transactions on Accessible Computing The inaugural issue of the ACM Transactions on Accessible Computing (TACCESS) appeared in May, 2008. Volume one included three issues, with volumes two and three both including the full set of four issues. The number of submissions continues to grow. TACCESS is a quarterly journal that publishes refereed articles addressing issues of computing as it impacts the lives of people with disabilities. It provides a technical forum for disseminating innovative research related to computing technologies and their use by people with disabilities.
The SIGACCESS newsletter continues with its regular online publications: see http://www.sigaccess.org/community/newsletter/. Jinjuan Feng (Towson University) has served as the Newsletter Editor since June, 2010.
Also available on the SIGACCESS website is the periodic ‘Left Field’ column (see http://www.sigaccess.org/community/left_field/), which is now produced by Markel Vigo of the University of Manchester. The goal of Left Field is to bring to the attention of members publications from the ACM Digital Library that are of interest, but published in venues typically outside the reading of SIGACCESS members.
SIGACCESS Website

The SIGACCESS webmaster is Joshua Halpern (HP Labs), who is working on a redesign of the SIGACCESS web site for easier maintenance. The SIGACCESS web site provides information about the SIG’s activities including awards and conferences as well as a repository of dissertations and theses, our newsletter, the “Left Field” column, writing guidelines, and other resources, which may be of value to the community.


Innovative programs

SIGACCESS has developed several resources, which are made available to the community at large via the SIGACCESS web site. The first is a set of writing guidelines, which reflect current thinking on language for writing in the academic accessibility community. Certain words or phrases can (intentionally or unintentionally) reflect bias or negative, disparaging, or patronizing attitudes toward people with disabilities and in fact any identifiable group of people. Choosing language that is neutral, accurate, and represents the preference of the groups to which it refers can convey respect and integrity. The second resource is a guide for planning accessible conferences. This document contains information for organizers of academic conferences who wish to make their events as accessible as possible, so that people with disabilities can participate fully.


SIGACCESS was pleased to support a workshop held in conjunction with the ECRC event in May 2013 in Paris. The workshop, titled Towards an Inclusive Europe: Reflections on the Digital Agenda for eAccessibility (http://www.inclusive-europe.eu/), attracted participants from numerous countries and featured a presentation by ACM President Vint Cerf. The purpose of the workshop was to consider what progress has been made towards the eAccessibility aspirations in Europe and propose ways in which European stakeholders can push the digital agenda for eAccessibility further forward.
Key Issues

Moving forward, there are a number of issues that SIGACCESS must address including developing future leaders for the community and continuing our efforts to reach new audiences. The SIG is actively engaged in developing leaders, recruiting new members of the community to participate both in the conference organizing committee and in other SIG activities. To reach new audiences, and become a more international organization, the SIG arranges for ASSETS to be periodically held in Europe. We were pleased that ASSETS continues to receive numerous submissions and have very strong attendance. We will be considering the possibility of holding ASSETS outside of the US more frequently.


The most recent SIGACCESS election had a full slate of candidates. The current Chair and Secretary/Treasurer were re-elected and Clayton Lewis of the University of Colorado was elected to serve as the Vice Chair.

2013 SIGACT REPORT

July 2012 - June 2013

Submitted by: Paul Beame, Chair

1. Awards


  • 2013 Gödel Prize: This was shared between Antoine Joux, “A One Round Protocol for Tripartite Diffie-Hellman” Journal of Cryptology, Vol. 17, Issue 4 (2004) and Dan Boneh and Matthew K. Franklin “Identity-Based Encryption from the Weil Pairing” SIAM Journal on Computing, Vol. 32, No. 3 (2003). The prize is awarded jointly with the EATCS and this year was awarded at the STOC conference.




  • Knuth Prize: Gary Miller for his algorithmic contributions in a wide range of areas from cryptography and isomorphism testing to parallel computing and linear system solving. The Knuth Prize is given jointly by SIGACT and IEEE TCMFCS and the Knuth Prize and Lecture was given this year at STOC.




  • Paris Kanellakis Theory and Practice Award: Andrei Broder, Moses Charikar and Piotr Indyk for their groundbreaking work on Locality-Sensitive Hashing that has had great impact in many fields of computer science. This award is an ACM award sponsored in part by SIGACT.




  • 2013 Edsger W. Dijkstra Prize in Distributed Computing:

    • Nathan Linial. (1992). "Locality in Distributed Graph Algorithms". SIAM Journal on Computing 21:193-201. The Dijkstra Prize is given jointly by SIGACT and SIGOPS.




  • SIGACT Distinguished Service Award: Lane Hemaspaandra



  • STOC 2013 Best Paper Award: “Low Rank Approximation and Regression in Input Sparsity Time” by Kenneth L. Clarkson and David P. Woodruff, and “Approximation Resistance from Pairwise Independent Subgroups” by Siu On Chan



  • Danny Lewin Best Student Paper Award (STOC 2013): “Approximation Resistance from Pairwise Independent Subgroups” by Siu On Chan and “Maintaining Shortest Paths Under Deletions in Weighted Directed Graphs” by Aaron Bernstein

    • SIGACT awarded approximately thirty student travel awards to allow these and other students to attend the 2013 STOC conference. Some of these awards were supported by NSF Grant CCF-1319775.




  • Though the Turing Award is not directly sponsored by SIGACT, the winners of this year’s award, Shafi Goldwasser and Silvio Micali are prominent members of the SIGACT community.


2. Significant papers on new areas published in proceedings
STOC 2013

The ACM Symposium on Theory of Computing (STOC 2013) covers much of computer science theory.


Kenneth L. Clarkson and David P. Woodruff in their paper “Low Rank Approximation and Regression in Input Sparsity Time” provided a new and important algorithm for the old and well-studied problem of linear regression, whose classic least-squares solution is too inefficient for many of today’s large data sets. In particular, when the amount of data is much larger than the dimension of the space it uses randomization and approximation to reduce the dependence of the running time on the dimension from quadratic to linear. The results also extend to finding low rank matrix approximations more generally.
Siu On Chan in his “Approximation Resistance from Pairwise Independent Subgroups”, which won both a Best Paper Award and the Danny Lewin Best Student Paper Award showed optimal results on the NP-hardness of approximating the Max-k-CSP problem, the problem of finding an assignment that satisfies the maximum number of a given set of Boolean constraints of arity at most k. This had been one of the important cases where optimal results were lacking and had been widely sought. This improved the bounds in previous hardness results by an exponential factor in k. The paper also gave broad conditions under which a randomly chosen assignment provides as good an approximation guarantee as is possible unless P=NP.
The other winner of the Danny Lewin Best Student Paper Award was Aaron Bernstein for his paper “Maintaining Shortest Paths Under Deletions in Weighted Directed Graphs” which gives the first algorithm for handing dynamically changing directed graphs with total running time only a small amount larger than the product of the number of vertices and edges. Previous results had only produced such results for unweighted, undirected graphs, though the results in this paper only apply to deletions of edges.
SODA 2013

SODA is a major conference that focuses on algorithms and combinatorics.


Bruce M. Kapron, Valerie King, and Ben Mountjoy,'s Best Paper at SODA 2013, "Dynamic graph connectivity in polylogarithmic worst case time” solves the long-standing problem of producing a data structure for maintaining connectivity in undirected graphs with very fast response (polylogarithmic in the input size) for every update. This improved a data structure from the 1990’s that solved the same problem but only in an amortized sense – occasionally the algorithm would take a long time to handle an update but averaging over any sequence its total time would not be too long.
Martin Grohe, Ken-ichi Kawarabayashi, and Bruce Reed’s Best Paper at SODA 2013, "A Simple Algorithm for the Graph Minor Decomposition - Logic meets Structural Graph Theory” gives a dramatic improvement in solving an important graph-theoretic problem with many algorithmic implications. It is well known that planar graphs can be characterized as those not having the complete graph K5 or complete bipartite graph K3,3 as minor. In their famous theorem on graph minors, Robertson and Seymour showed that every minor-closed family of graphs has a similar finite characterization. Their result embodied in over 400 pages of its proof a cubic time algorithm for decomposing a graph in such a family and therefore for solving many problems on such graphs. This paper uses a logical characterization to solve the same problem in only quadratic time and, as importantly, much more simply than the algorithm implied in the 400 page proof (though the correctness of the algorithm relies on that proof).

Shiri Chechik's Best Student Paper at SODA 2013, "New Additive Spanners" gave a number of new construction sof graph spanners from a given input graph. Graph spanners are sparse subgraphs that faithfully preserve the pairwise distances of a given graph (up to some small adjustment). They are very useful for graph algorithms because they allow one to replace an original dense graph with a sparse graph that has essentially the same distance properties but which takes much less time and space to work with. In this construction, the distances are preserved up to an additive absolute distance of 4 using only O(n7/.5) edges. Beating n3/2 size for such spanners was open.


Bernhard Haeupler’s Best Student Paper at SODA 2013, “Simple, Fast and Deterministic Gossip and Rumor Spreading" derives a new simpler algorithm with better performance for broadcasting information in which each processor in a network communicates with a single processor at each time step. Such algorithms are called gossip algorithms and this one is the first of its kind to be efficient on every small diameter network.
SPAA 2013

SPAA is a major conference that focuses on the theory of parallel algorithms and architecture for parallel computation .


Ravi Kumar, Benjamin Moseley, Sergei Vassilvitskii and Andrea Vattani’s Best Paper at SPAA 2013, “Fast Greedy Algorithms in MapReduce and Streaming” showed how to implement greedy algorithms for a wide variety of problems in only logarithmically-many MapReduce rounds and still achieve nearly optimal results. Greedy algorithms normally require a linear number of rounds to achieve optimal results.
Martina Eikel and Christian Scheideler’s Best Paper at SPAA 2013, “IRIS: A Robust Information System Against Insider DoS-Attacks” presents the first scalable distributed information system, i.e., a system with low storage overhead, that is provably robust against Denial-of-Service (DoS) attacks by a current insider. This allows a current insider to have complete knowledge about the information system and to have the power to block any ξ-fraction of its servers by a DoS-attack, where ξ can be chosen up to a constant. Previous solutions only worked for past insiders.
3. Significant programs that provided a springboard for further technical efforts
SIGACT sponsored or co-sponsored a number of important conferences including the Symposium on Theory of Computation (STOC), Symposium on Principles of Distributed Computing (PODC), Symposium on Computational Geometry (SoCG), Symposium on Parallel Algorithms and Architectures (SPAA), Innovations in Theoretical Computer Science (ITCS), Logic in Computer Science (LICS), and Symposium on Discrete Algorithms (SODA).
SIGACT also supports several conferences in-cooperation including Symposium on Principles of Database Systems (PODS), Symposium on Foundations of Computer Science (FOCS), and Symposium on Principles of Programming Languages (POPL).
4. Innovative programs which provide service to our technical community
The Committee for the Advancement of Theoretical Computer Science (CATCS) sponsored by SIGACT continues to be very active. The committee meets by conference call every month and has developed and executed action plans to increase the visibility of theoretical computer science and to increase the funding base for theory of computation at the NSF. The Committee has helped advise the NSF CCF Director and other NSF officers on several matters including recruiting for positions within. The committee has also been working to obtain a more detailed and complete picture of the state of academic employment in theoretical computer science within the broad range of US research universities.
SIGACT continues to support student attendance at SODA and STOC by funding Student Best Paper Awards, travel, lunches, and reduced registration fees. This helps ensure that the maximum number of students can attend these conferences. The NSF has helped support part of these efforts.
STOC, as the flagship conference for SIGACT, has been broadening its reach and increasing its attendance with the inclusion of satellite workshops and a poster session. This year it was held in conjunction both with the Computational Complexity Conference (CCC) with which it is in-cooperation and with a workshop on the Visions of the Theory of Computing held at the new Simons Institute for Theoretical Computer Science.
5. Summary of key issues that the membership of the SIGACT will have to deal with in the next 2-3 years
Funding and articulating the importance of theoretical computer science are perennial issues that are being addressed by the Committee for the Advancement of Theoretical Computer Science (CATCS). Despite the relatively good position for CISE with the sequester, there are still major concerns for the future. One issue that CATCS is currently documenting is an apparent relative concentration of researchers in theoretical computer science at highly ranked institutions versus a relative lack of such researchers at lower ranked institutions. Spreading theoretical computer science more broadly to these institutions could have significant impact on academic employment in theoretical computer science. Some of this may involve educating those institutions that theoretical computer science researchers are indeed able to obtain research funding.
After a year of discussion, in the Fall of 2012, the Symposium on Computation Geometry (SoCG), a conference co-sponsored by SIGACT ran a referendum on whether or not to stay with ACM. The vote favored departure, in large measure because of the many difficulties involved in the financial aspects of running ACM sponsored conferences outside of North America. With the assistance of ACM staff, the new SIGACT leadership has been working closely with the leadership of SoCG to address these concerns and find ways to keep SoCG under the ACM umbrella. A final version of the referendum will be repeated in the Fall of 2013 with more opportunity for ACM and SIGACT to state their case. Some of the specific irritants have been addressed. Despite improvements, the ACM financial model for sponsored overseas conferences has been problematic and SoCG will agree to remain in ACM only if they are able to be in-cooperation when outside North America, with SIGACT covering the increased proceedings cost. The issue of sponsored conference finances outside of North America still seems likely to remain a major irritant for other relatively small ACM conferences.
In 2012, there was dissatisfaction within a large segment of the SIGACT community over ACM’s publication policies. This resulted in a resolution at the STOC 2012 conference in favor of trading reduced returns for more open access. While the proposed changes in the Fall of 2012 improved the situation in some ways, there is still considerable opposition to those policies within the SIGACT community. The promise of ACM’s reassessment of these policies in the Summer of 2013 has left members of the SIGACT community expectant. Following through on these changes will be critical to the community. With well-funded free and open services for dissemination of research like the Arxiv, and profit-oriented publishers that make their older issues available for free, ACM needs to decide its appropriate publication role and how it can best benefit the community.
The role of the logic community within ACM needs to be resolved. This is a potentially large community that SIGACT brought into ACM with its co-sponsorship of LICS, but the fit is not an ideal one. SIGACT strongly supports the creation of SIGLOG, a logic-oriented SIG. In some sense this is not an issue for the current membership of SIGACT but rather an organizational one for ACM.
SIGAda Annual Report

July 2012 – June 2013

Submitted by: Ricky E. Sward, Past Chair
SIGAda Awards
Started in 1994, the ACM SIGAda Awards recognize individuals and organizations that have made outstanding contributions to the Ada community and to SIGAda. The Outstanding Ada Community Contribution Award is given for broad, lasting contributions to Ada technology and usage. The Distinguished Service Award is given for exceptional contributions to SIGAda activities and products.
This year the Outstanding Ada Community Contribution Awards were awarded to Pat Rogers and Luis Miguel Pinho.
Pat Rogers – Pat is an internationally recognized Ada expert with a long history of contributions to the Ada language and its infrastructure, in particular in the area of real-time embedded systems. He is a founding member of the Ada Run-Time Environment Working Group (ARTEWG). Over the past 25 years, he has taught university and professional courses on Embedded/Real-Time Systems with Ada, Software Fault Tolerance, Hard Real-Time Schedulability Analysis, and Object-Oriented Programming with Ada. Pat served as the Associate Director for Research at NASA’s Software Engineering Research Center where he was

responsible for support of all NASA centers and contractors in the areas of Ada run-time systems and technology, host/target environment issues for real-time, space-based applications, and software engineering.


Luis Miguel Pinho – Miguel has been and continues to be a technically active member of the real-time Ada community with special interest in distributed and parallel computing. He actively participates in multiple European projects, and presents and publishes about his research work in various international conferences and journals. Miguel joined the Board of Ada-Europe in 2007 and served as Program co-chair of the Ada-Europe conference in Stockholm. He established the record of the longest tenure as Editor-in-Chief of the Ada User Journal (21 issues since 2007), and created the on-line AUJ archive and consolidated the flow of contributions. Miguel organized the Ada-Europe conference in Porto, the International Real-Time Ada Workshop series in the wonderful location of Viana do Castelo and was responsible for getting Portugal represented on the ISO working group on Ada (WG9).
This year the Distinguished Service Award was awarded to James C. Morrison.
James C. “JC” Morrison – JC Worked with Ada in early 1990s in Control Data Corporation’s Federal Division. He then worked as a trainer at his consulting company, Ada Solutions. JC was actively involved in both the Baltimore and DC Chapters of SIGAda serving on the Conference Committee and as Local Arrangements Chair for SIGAda 2000 in Baltimore. JC staffed the SIGAda Booth at trade shows at the Washington DC Convention Center in the late 1990s to about 2002. He attended every SIGAda conference from 1998-2010 and served as volunteer, handling registration desk duties and other behind-the-scenes work. JC passed away in 2011 and will be sorely missed.
Significant Papers published in proceedings
This year’s conference included five outstanding keynote speeches. The keynote speakers presented on the following topics:
Kathleen Fisher, DARPA Information Innovation Office, HACMS: High-Assurance Vehicles
Nancy Leveson, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Challenges for Safety-Critical Software
Barbara Liskov, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, Programming the Turing Machine
Greg Morrisett, Harvard University, School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Hardening Legacy C/C++ Code
Guy Steele, Oracle Labs, Programming Language Life Cycles
There were several outstanding papers in the conference this year with equally outstanding presentations. For example:
Program Proving Using Intermediate Verification Languages (IVLs) like Boogie and Why3 by K. Rustan and M. Leino
Hi-Lite: The Convergence of Compiler Technology and Program Verification by C. Dross, J. Känig, and E. Schonberg
A Robust Implementation of Ada’s Finalizable Controlled Types by H. Kirtchev
Software for FAA’s Automatic Data Comm Between Air Traffic Controller and Pilot by J. O’Leary
Adapting ACATS for Use with Run-Time Checks Suppressed by D. Eilers and T. Koskinen
Overall, the papers being submitted to the SIGAda conference continue to be of high quality.
Significant Programs that provided a springboard for further technical efforts
A formal liaison exists between SIGAda and WG9. ISO/IEC JTC1/SC22 WG9 is that body of international representatives responsible for the maintenance and evolution of the Ada International Standard. The National Bodies represented on WG9 are Belgium, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Switzerland, the United Kingdom, and the United States.
In March 2007 the ISO (the International Organization for Standardization) in Geneva, Switzerland announced the formal completion of the process to revise the Ada 95 language, with the publication of the Ada 2005 standard — officially named ISO/IEC 8652:1995/Amd 1:2007. This announcement culminates a collaborative international effort under ISO's Ada Working Group (WG9) to enhance the 1995 version of the Ada language.
At least one SIGAda Officer participates and represents the membership at the WG9 meetings held twice each year.
Innovative Programs which provide service to some part of our technical community
Since 1994 SIGAda has conducted an "Ada Awareness Initiative". Its centerpiece has been our SIGAda professional booth display unit in exhibition halls at important software engineering conferences. This lets folks know that Ada is very much alive and a sound part of any software engineering effort having real-time, high integrity, high-assurance, and highly distributed requirements. We brought the booth to the SIGCSE conference this year providing good visibility for SIGAda to the Computer Science educational community. We decided not to take the booth to the Software and Systems Technology Conference (SSTC) due to declining attendance at the conference.
Via this exhibiting, SIGAda sustains Ada visibility ("name recognition"), provides various Ada-advocacy materials and makes available Ada experts (our booth staff volunteers) who can intelligently answer questions, provide pointers and help, and debunk the misinformation about Ada that many attendees at these shows have. This program continues to be extremely successful and viewed as a highly important thrust by the SIGAda membership.
Summary of key issues to deal with in the next 2-3 years
The key issue SIGAda will deal with over the next 2-3 years is the financial stability of the organization. Over the past several years, the conferences have not produced a profit with the exception of the SIGAda 2011 conference in Denver. The annual conference is the main source of revenue for the SIGAda organization, so continued losses on the conferences will eventually make SIGAda not viable in the eyes of ACM. SIGAda is up for its viability review this year, so we will present our case for continuing the organization and how we will deal with the financial situation.
In 2012, we decided to rename the SIGAda annual conference in order to focus on a niche in the safety critical, high integrity area of Computer Science. The SIGAda 2012 annual conference was called the High Integrity Language and Technology (HILT) conference. This conference was well attended and included outstanding keynote speeches and paper presentations. The conference suffered a loss in revenue around $5K. The committee for the HILT 2013 conference is already making changes to registration policies that will avoid this situation this year.
We will continue to publish three issues of the Ada Letters journal and seek participation in the form of contributing articles and papers.

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