In V5 N39, I mentioned ONR's FY'96 DoD Multidisciplinary
University Research Initiative (MURI) Program. A second MURI
competition is for "Integrated Approach to Intelligent Systems":
hierarchical, modular, adaptive learning systems with
emergent behavior, able to deal with unknown environments.
"Conduct multidisciplinary research to develop the theoretical
underpinning for design and exploitation of emergent behavior.
Integrate varied approaches to enhance overall performance."
$1.5M/year may be available, split between 1-2 projects led by
US institutions of higher education. 5-page white papers
are due 12/15/95 at the Army Research Office; proposals
will be due 3/20/96. See .
[Raphael Malyankar , 11/11/95.]
(The other announcement was about "Authoring Intelligent
Training Systems with Speech Interaction Capability.")
NSF is currently in shutdown status, and has no authority
to obligate funds until the next budget is passed. Grantees
are warned that nearly all spending is at your own risk.
[grants, 11/14/95.] (And don't think rescissions can't happen,
now or at any other time that funds have not been contractually
awarded.)
NSF has announced awards in its Digital Libraries competition.
For a list, download pr9452.txt from stis.nsf.gov. [grants,
11/13/95.] (Now that there's an established Digital Libraries
community, proposals should usually be integrated with
the funded projects. Reviewers from that community will be
asking what's in your proposal for them.)
Summer Programs in Japan for US Graduate Students in Science
and Engineering (NSF 95-88) has an annual deadline of 12/1/95.
, (703) 306-1701. Ditto for the Summer
Institute in Korea for US Graduate Students in Science and
Engineering (NSF 95-88), (703) 306-1704, (703) 306-0476 Fax.
[NSF Bulletin, 11/95.] The new NSF guideline on 1996 Summer
Programs in Japan is publication NSF 95-160, or nsf95160.txt
on stis.nsf.gov. [grants, 10/30/95.]
Netscape stock is splitting 2-for-1, after having risen
above $100/share. The company is valued at $3.5B -- compared to
Apple's $5.1B on $11B revenues -- even though it's barely turned
its first profit and has revenues under $40M. Most profitless
IPOs achieve values nearer $250M or $300M, but Netscape started
at $1B just 97 days ago. The Internet industry as a whole has
about $1B in revenues, but may reach $25B by the end of
the decade. [Arthur M. Louis and Herb Greenberg, SF Chronicle,
11/15/95, B1.]
Another skyrocketing Internet company is Spyglass Inc.,
which also makes browsers. It closed at $92 on 11/10/95,
up $20 for the week. UUNet Technologies Inc. closed at $72.50,
and Sun at $89.87 -- double its price this summer. Borland's
shares rose 40% after it announced that it would develop
Java software. [Lee Gomes, SJM, 11/11/95, 1D.]
Arbor Software Corp. (Sunnyvale) is another astonishing IPO.
It opened at $17 on 11/7/95, closing at $39.25 -- a 131% jump
that beat Netscape's initial surge of 108%. Arbor develops OLAP
software: online analytical processing, enabling spreadsheet users
to explore data from corporate databases. The company has 115
employees. President James Dorrian, 43, holds stock worth $31M;
CTO Robert Earle, 45, has $37M. Neither man has experience at
a big Silicon Valley company, or even a degree from a prestigious
university. (Ann Winblad, their first venture capital backer,
calls them "smart mutts.") [Mike Langberg, SJM, 11/8/95, 1C.]
Life at the top is high-pressure. Richard Guarino, acting
president of Taligent, died of a heart attack 10/29/95 while
jogging in Los Gatos. [SJM. NewtNews, 11/13/95. Bill Park.]
Oracle says it will be selling $500 Internet "appliances"
by summer, for connection to a monitor or TV. (Some analysts
say it will be more like $1K.) Several phone companies
are planning fast ISDN connections for about $19.95/month.
[Michelle Quinn, SF Chronicle, 11/15/95, B1.]
Oracle has its own Network Computer Operating System (NCOS).
[Mark Halper, SJM, 11/11/95, 1D.] Apple is rumored to be
negotiating with Oracle concerning either Newton interface
technology or running NCOS on the Newton. IBM and Sun
like the idea of diskless home/school computers; Microsoft
and many PC/Windows analysts scoff. "The idea has generated
excitement in the computer industry, mostly because Microsoft
and Intel are not leading the charge." [Michelle Quinn,
SF Chronicle, 11/14/95, C1.]
(I say it'll work. Never run out of disk space again,
or do backups, or use obsolete utilities or application versions,
or have trouble with installations, or worry about viruses,
or have to upgrade your home box with faster chips or new
audio/video cards. It's like connecting a terminal to
a university mainframe, except that the university is now
the whole world. Still, couldn't I have a _little_ private
disk space on my own machine? Maybe a ZIP floppy?)
MacWay, or the Macintosh EvangeList, is an announcement list
from Apple evangelist Guy Kawasaki, .
Send a "subscribe macway your name" message to
. [comp.sys.mac.advocacy, 11/11/95.]
("With all this horse manure, there's just got to be a pony in
there somewhere." -- Social scientist Langdon Winner, about the
Web. [Technology Review, 11/95, p. 66. EDUPAGE.])
Big Dreams is a monthly magazine about business as
a journey to personal development. "Reading this regularly
should be a part of any new employee's requirements."
. [Robert Jacobson
, 11/2/95.]
Business Strategies is a monthly newspaper for business owners
and managers. . Topics include human
resources, marketing, selling, time management, creativity,
managing people, etc. [, newjour, 9/3/95.]
FinanceHub lists financial info of all kinds, especially
venture capital and project financing resources. Over 6500 users
connected to last month, after
it was named an October TOP 5% site. FinanceHub is from John Bro,
who is finishing graduate studies at UFlorida and starting
InterSoft Solutions,
or . [, 11/7/95.]
Small US businesses hurt by defense cutbacks can tap a new
$1B loan guarantee program from DoD and the Small Business
Administration. Loans are at 2.25%-2.75% over prime rate.
Call 1-800-8-ASK-SBA for info about the Defense Loan and
Technical Assistance program. [SJM, 11/10/95, 1C.]
("It's always easy to work wonders with somebody else's money.
The trouble is that you constantly need a fresh supply of somebody
elses." -- , com-priv, 5/25/93.)
UMAX Data Systems Inc. (Taiwan) has just licensed Apple's
technology to make Mac clones adapted for Chinese applications.
[SF Chronicle, 11/15/95, B3.]
Apple demonstrated a working model of Chinese Voice
Recognition (CVR) at MacWorld Expo Asia 95 -- a full-blown
dictation translating spoken Mandarin into printed Chinese
characters in real time. [Andrew Tong ,
NewtNews, 11/13/95. Bill Park.] (Macs have always led
in non-English computing. iNews says that the latest language
kits from Apple's Claris are for Arabic, Hebrew, and Cyrillic.)
Min-Hung Liao of UBuffalo's Center for Cognitive Science
has added Chinese-to-English text translation to the CASSIE
program built on Stuart Shapiro's SNePS semantic-network
processing system. The system translates a page at a time --
using context to disambiguate meaning -- and can answer questions
about the texts. Translations may vary depending on what is
in the knowledge base, and CASSIE corrects itself if it
discovers that its assumptions were wrong. Ellen Goldbaum
, 716-645-2626. [Peter M. Weiss
, 11/11/95.]
(This threatens Lazlo's Chinese Relativity Axiom:
"No matter how great your triumphs or how tragic your defeats
-- approximately one billion Chinese couldn't care less."
[TFTD-L, 7/13/95.])
News from UGent's Contrastive Grammar Research Group
can be found in the quarterly CONTRAGRAM on
.
[, newjour, 9/13/95.]
The Free On-Line Dictionary of Computing (FOLDOC),
including acronyms and jargon, is at
. [WEBster, 6/27/95.]
Dragomir R. Radev is compiling a new Natural Language
Processing FAQ, to be circulated monthly in comp.ai.nat-lang.
Lots of good info there, but he's looking for more.
Topics include an introduction to computational linguistics;
accomplishments; schools; graduate programs; research labs;
publications; discussion lists; newsgroups; associations;
conferences; competitions; resource archives; books; machine
translation; and WWW resources. Contact
with suggestions, after retrieving
or
.
[comp.ai, 11/7/95. David Joslin.]
TechWeb Direct lets you specify news preferences and then
download articles (via dial-up) from NetGuide and 15 other
CMP publications. Free during beta test. Download the client
program from . [Alan Gatlin
, Network News, 11/11/95.]
LIBRES, the quarterly, peer-reviewed Library and
Information Science Research Electronic Journal is now
on . [Keith Morgan
, newjour, 10/25/95.]
H. Vernon Leighton compared the precision of four WWW
indexing/search services, back in 5-6/95: Infoseek (free version),
Lycos, Webcrawler, and WWWWorm. He found Lycos to be the best,
with Infoseek nearly as good and usually faster. Webcrawler
and WWWWorm were disappointing. Jumpstart, Nikos, and other
"minor league" services may be similar, with little depth
outside computer science topics. .
[, PACS-L. IRLIST, 11/14/95.]
The Minerva engine from IBM can simultaneously search
databases such as Oracle, Sybase, and Basic Plus hosted on
varying hardware at multiple locations. It creates an
"info-droid" for each dataset search, generating faster
searches than Lycos and other competitors. Try it at
, for WWW citation searches
ranked by relevance. It gives somewhat different "hits"
from other search engines. [Alan Gatlin ,
Network News, 11/11/95.]
New format: For the full announcement texts, members
and trial subscribers may write to me for the Computists'
Career Jobs (CCJ) distribution or for individual CCJ digests.
(Group members may receive CCJ unless the purchaser requests
otherwise.) We also have a weekly Applied Jobs (APJ) digest
that is available to anyone. Computists who are unemployed
or subscribing to APJ will be sent CCJ by default.
Kent State (OH): chairperson for Mathematics and CS.
Stanford/CS: assistant professor in NL, HCI, theory,
or software systems.
UCentral Florida (Orlando): two tenure-track assistant professors
in AI (NLU, knowledge acquisition, and cognitive modeling),
DB, architecture, systems, etc.
Indiana University-Bloomington: CogSci and CS opening
in NN modeling, logic, reasoning, representation, language
and discourse, robotics, computational vision and speech,
machine learning, HCI, or other area.
North Carolina A&T State University (Greensboro): DBMS,
object-oriented software engineering, and AI.
UMissouri-Rolla: assistant professor in distributed files
and databases and software engineering for scientific computing,
intelligent systems, etc.
JPL's AI Group and Machine Learning Systems Group (Pasadena):
BS/MS/PhD programmers and scientists in planning/scheduling,
intelligent systems monitoring/diagnosis, machine learning/data
mining, and pattern recognition/image understanding.
[Lockheed Martin]: programmers and data analysts to develop
data mining software for scientific databases. Machine learning,
statistics, SAS, deductive DB, visualization, Prolog, RDBMS.
BHASHA (Wayne, PA): Prolog/Lisp software engineers with experience
in NLP, AI, IR, text processing, compiler development, or RDB.
EuroSoft Inc. (Austin, TX): PhD NLP/AI R&D programmer.
Kurzweil Applied Intelligence, Inc. (Waltham, MA): PhD
computational linguist to develop feature-structure task grammars
for verbal control of Windows software. "Systems must fail
in comprehensible ways."
An OH company: experienced BS/MS HW/SW engineer to develop
IR/UV/magnetic NN/fuzzy logic classifiers for currency.
ULondon's Royal Holloway: a CS lecturer, especially
in probabilistic inference, computational learning,
formal methods, or information security.
UStrathclyde (Glasgow): researchers with experience
in vehicle routing, search techniques, constraint satisfaction,
and Ilog Solver.
Universitat des Saarlandes at Saarbrucken, Programming Systems
Lab: 1/96 openings for a researcher in constraint grammars
and another to work on the Oz concurrent constraint language.
Same deal, but also available to non-Computists: Write to me
for the Research Software (RSW) distribution or for any
single RSW digest. (I'll change the name to Computists'
Research Software (CRS) Digest starting 1/1/96. Similarly,
APJ will become Computists' Applied Jobs (CAJ) Digest.)
This week's software listings include:
Egret multiclient, multiserver, multi-agent CSCW Platform.
ILU multilanguage object interface system.
wxWindows free multiplatform GUI class library.
Neural Lab v2.5 for DOS.
Overcoming Depression automated psychotherapy program.
PlainTalk 1.4.1 speech recognition XFCN and web site.
Grail 0.2 browser, with Python/Tk source code.
MicroEMACS 3.12 for Windows.
MOBAL 3.0b knowledge-acquisition and machine learning system.
SciE18 directory of scientific shareware/freeware for DOS.
SciV18 directory of scientific shareware/freeware producers.
Open Inventor 2.0.2 software development kit for WIN32.
OpenDoc 1.0 and the OpenDoc Software Development Kit for the Mac.
Glimpse 3.0 free Unix indexing and file query system.
PLOTTER v7.4 data plotting and analysis program for DOS.
CurveExpert 1.1 curve-fitting with nonlinear regression
and splines.
NetBots 0.2 networked X11 game.
The History of Mathematics website includes 200 detailed
biographies (most with pictures), 800 lesser biographies,
and many other entries and links.
.
[WEBster, 6/27/95.]
"Math-Net Links to the Mathematical World" is a collection
of about 700 resources for mathematics and scientific computing.
,
collected by Joachim Luegger of the
Konrad-Zuse-Zentrum fuer Informationstechnik Berlin (ZIB).
[Wolfram Schneider , de.sci.mathematik,
10/15/95.]
The Decision Support Systems Research Resources website
is . Software,
companies, university links, faculty directory, professional
associations, online newsletters and journals, etc. Dan Power
. [INFOSYS, 11/13/95. Frank Swift.]
Michael Ley's bibliography server for database systems
and logic programming lists tables of contents for major journals
and proceedings, plus an author index and links to many of
the authors' home pages. 17,000 papers by 16,000 authors.
,
or start on the ACM SIGMOD WWW server . [, dbworld, 7/15/95.]
Parallel Performance Group (Sedona, AZ) offers 18 free
email newsletters on high-tech software and applications
of parallel processing. Write to for a list.
. [comp.ai, 11/7/95.
Ken Barker.]
InterStat is a site for PDF articles on
statistical research and innovative statistical methods.
.
[, newjour, 8/18/95.]
DNA computers and molecular computation are the subject
of .
Several papers are available for download. [Chuck Morefield
, 9/29/95.]
Elsevier's BioSystems journal is being offered to
Evolutionary Programming Society members for $75, a $500 discount.
Society membership is $40/year ($10 for students),
to Bill Porto . BioSystems:
the J. of Biological and Information Processing Sciences --
now in Vol. 35/36 -- recently added evolutionary computation
to its coverage. Other topics include self-organizing systems,
molecular recognition and computing, and evolutionary systems.
The assoc. editor for computational models is David B. Fogel
. [comp.ai.genetic, 10/31/95. Yan Hui.]
Educom VP Carol Twigg says that if industry would tell
educators what kind of "product" they want, they could contract
with educational institutions to obtain it. Distance learning
schools are the most tightly coupled to community, industry,
and student needs. [Multimedia Today, 10/95, p. 10. EDUPAGE.]
Harvard's John Kotter asks "Why should business schools
offer a two-year 'terminal' degree to people at age 25? Why not
a one-year program at 25 and a month-long program at 28, 31, 34,
and so forth?" The continuing education need not be tied to
campuses or classrooms. [The Futurist, 11/95, p. 27. INNOVATION.
Chuck Morefield.] (Maybe the continuing education would look
like our Communique!)
"In a one-room schoolhouse, the teacher taught English.
On a nationwide net there is demand for Sanskrit, too.
Knowledge workers -- not just teachers but bankers, engineers,
insurers, translators and countless others -- can now
sell skills nationwide or beyond." -- Peter Huber.
[comp.society.futures, 10/31/95.]
(Huber's essays are on .)
The acronym hasn't changed, but FASE is now the electronic
"Forum for Advancing Software engineering Education".
(It was the Forum for Academic Software Engineering, but now
stresses education.) Articles about corporate and government
training can be sent to Kathy Beckman ;
other topics go to Keith Pierce or to
. [FASE, 11/10/95.]
"KMi Stadium" is a Java-based experimental forum
for multimedia "talk radio with graphics" events with 100K
participants or more. (This requires a hierarchy of moderators
to field audience questions and comments. Contact Adam Freeman
to volunteer.) KMi Stadium is from
the Open University's new Knowledge Media Institute.
A prototype non-Java version is at . Obtain the RealAudio player from
to listen to the KMi Stadium audio
channel. [Marc Eisenstadt ,
comp.ai, 11/8/95. David Joslin.] (Guest speakers have been
from the leading-edge communications community, which is nicely
recursive.)
"The Outer Limits" TV show will soon be the object of
a 5,000-player game from MGM Interactive and Worlds Inc.
[Broadcasting & Cable, 10/23/95, p. 76. EDUPAGE.]
Music Encoding is a new mailing list for music representation
and encoding: manuscripts, sound recordings, notional and logical
representations, NIFF (Notation Interchange File Format),
SMDL (Standard Music Description Language), whatever. Send
a "subscribe" subject line to .
[James K. Tauber , comp.music,
10/31/95.]
"New Voices, New Visions" is an annual international artistic
competition in digital media sponsored by Interval Research Corp.
and The Voyager Company. Any subject, any computer platform,
any format. Three $5K awards are given each year.
or info@nvnv.org, 415-855-0788 Fax.
[Sally Rosenthal , Stanford PCD seminar
announcement, 11/13/95. Bill Park.] (Rosenthal's talk will be
11/17/95, 12:30-2:00pm, Skilling Auditorium.)
Maria Zemankova has been asked to serve for a year as
deputy division director (DDD) for NSF/CISE's Information,
Robotics and Intelligent Systems (IRIS), under Y.T. Chen.
Her Database and Expert Systems (DBES) program will be managed
by Dr. Barbara Blaustein , 703-306-1926,
703-306-0599 Fax. [, IRLIST, 11/14/95.]
David Lloyd-Jones has just taken over as moderator
of sci.econ.research, which he intends to shape into a center
of excellence on the net. He's looking for good empirical reports
(rather than "methodological stuff"). "Findings are product;
methodology is overhead." Write to
to participate. [, 11/8/95.] (David built
the first 400 coin laundries in Japan, between 1972 and 1984.
Then he went into manufacturing aftermarket auto brake parts,
but the timing was wrong -- too much competition from China.)
-- Ken