Macaulay 2 Workshop, June, 2008
From: "Daniel R. Grayson" <[email protected]> To: "Macaulay 2 Users"@math.uiuc.edu Subject: Macaulay 2 workshop in June, second announcement Reply-to: [email protected] Dear Macaulay 2 user, I have a few things to add to the announcement below, which went out earlier: -- let Amelia Taylor know whether you will be willing to share a room, as rooms are in limited supply. If additional single rooms are available, and you want one, we may be asking you to pay the additional cost of $52 per night -- if we are to pay for your travel, it should be on an American air carrier, if at all possible. -- please commit to being present for the entire workshop period -- the deadline for applications, March 1, is this Saturday. We hope to make decisions as soon as possible so we can make a firm commitment for a certain number of rooms. Send your applications to Amelia Taylor. -- our meals will be joint and our menus will be arranged in advance -- bring your laptop with Macaulay 2 on it to the workshop Dear Macaulay 2 user, With funding from the NSF, we are organizing a Macaulay 2 workshop, for the period Saturday, June 28, 2008 to Thursday, July 3, just after the MRC meetings of the AMS. Pending final confirmation, the location of the workshop will be Snowbird, Utah. Travel days will be the Saturday and the Thursday, and activities will start Saturday evening. (This is not the same event as the Macaulay 2 conference in March.) The purpose of the workshop is to bring the Macaulay 2 developers together with those who would like to share or to develop their skills at writing packages for Macaulay 2 and at developing the corresponding mathematical algorithms. Sample software projects that might be undertaken are visible here: http://www.math.uiuc.edu/Macaulay2/dev/projects/ Attendance is by invitation only, and financial support is available for approximately 15 people. If you would like to attend, please let us know as soon as possible. Everyone interested is encouraged to apply, including graduate students and postdocs. Your application should include 1. information about what algorithms you would like to work on, and what you have done in the past, 2. a good estimate of travel expenses, and whether you would require financial support for housing and meals, 3. your current institution, and if you are a graduate student, your advisor's name. We would like to receive applications by March 1 and to allocate funds to participants by March 15. Our organizer for the workshop is Amelia Taylor, and applications should be directed to her. David Eisenbud <[email protected]> Daniel R. Grayson <[email protected]> Michael E. Stillman <[email protected]> Amelia Taylor <[email protected]>