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LISA '04 Call for Papers
November 14-19, 2004, Atlanta, Georgia

CALL FOR PAPERS

LISA '04 Home

Conference Overview

Important Dates/Contact Info.

Conference Organizers

Conference Themes

Refereed Papers

Invited Talks

Tutorials, Workshops, WIPs, and BOFs

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Call for Papers in PDF Format

REFEREED PAPERS

  • Author Guidelines
  • Submit a Paper

    Refereed papers explore techniques, tools, theory, and case histories that extend our understanding of system and network administration. They present results in the context of previous related work. System administration is a broad topic, and good papers take a variety of approaches. A few examples:

    • Description/analysis of a new technique, tool, technology, or theory
    • Applying an existing technique, tool, etc. in a novel way
    • Critical analysis of the alternatives for solving a common problem, including new recommendations
    • New lessons learned from a detailed and honest evaluation of a case history
    The crucial component of all of these is something new or timely, something that was not previously available, discussed, considered or recognized.

    The Program Committee is particularly interested in contributions from full-time students. Cash prizes will be awarded at the conference for the best refereed paper and the best refereed paper with a student as lead author.

    Writing a refereed paper for LISA is a rewarding challenge. A properly crafted paper can make a difference in the thinking or practice of thousands of your colleagues. For the best possible impact, your paper should be written so that it is understandable by and relevant to a majority of our attendees. An ideal paper is understandable by an intermediate-level system administrator while containing ideas that will be new and timely for expert administrators.

    It is particularly important to fit your own work into the context of past work and practice. LISA papers must provide references to prior relevant work and describe the differences between that work and their own. Authors should browse proceedings of previous LISA conferences for references and can use the online proceedings (going back to 1993) at https://www.usenix.org/events/bytopic/lisa.html, search the Usenix site for specific papers or topics at https://www.usenix.org/publications/library/proceedings/, or use the bibliography and resource page at Oslo University College (https://www.iu.hio.no/SystemAdmin) to find references to related work. The Program Chair and Program Committee members can also give you tips on previous work that might be relevant (send email to lisa04chair@usenix.org for help).

    Proposal and Submission Details

    Potential authors must submit the following items for review:

    • An extended abstract of 500-1500 words (not counting figures and references)
    • A brief outline of the final paper
    Full papers and papers lacking outlines will not be accepted. Proposals can be submitted only by the author of the paper. For administrative reasons, every submission must begin by listing:
    1. Paper title and names and affiliations of all authors. Indicate whether each author is a full-time student.
    2. The author who will be the contact to the Program Committee. Include his/her name, affiliation, paper mail address, daytime and evening phone numbers, email address, and fax number (as applicable).
    3. Whether the paper's lead author is a student (for awards purposes).
    4. Whether you would prefer to present the paper as a "long talk" or a "short talk" (see below), if you have a strong preference.
    All abstract submissions must be electronic, in ASCII or PDF format only. ASCII format is greatly preferred. Proposals must be submitted using the Web form located on the LISA '04 Web site at https://www.usenix.org/events/lisa04 Papers whose only purpose is to promote a commercial product will not be accepted.

    Proposals are due by April 20, 2004.

    The Program Committee will judge submissions on the quality of the written submission, the novelty of approach, and its technical correctness. Be aware that the best abstracts provide many specific details about the work they describe.

    To aid authors in creating a paper suitable for LISA's audience, authors of accepted papers will be assigned one or more "shepherds" to help with the process of completing the paper. The shepherds will read one or more intermediate drafts and provide comments before the authors complete the final draft.

    Like most conferences and journals, LISA requires that papers not be submitted simultaneously to more than one conference or publication and that submitted papers not be previously or subsequently published elsewhere for a certain period of time. All submissions are held in the highest confidence prior to publication in the conference proceedings both as a matter of policy and as protected by the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976. Copyrighted materials and papers or proposals accompanied by nondisclosure agreement forms are not acceptable and will be returned unread.

    Presenting the Paper at the Conference

    All accepted papers must be presented at the LISA conference by at least one author. One author of each accepted paper receives a discount on technical session registration. If the registration fee poses a hardship to the presenter, USENIX can offer a complimentary registration.

    There are two lengths of presentations at the conference: 20 and 30 minutes (both formats include 5 minutes of Q&A). These "short" or "long" talks are assigned to accepted papers based on the Program Committee's judgment as to how straightforward the content is to describe. Presentation length is not a reflection of perceived paper quality, and it has no effect on the best paper competition.

    Authors of an accepted paper must provide a final paper for publication in the conference proceedings. Final papers are limited to 16 pages, including diagrams, figures, references, and appendices. Complete instructions will be sent to the authors of accepted papers.

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