USENIX supports diversity, equity, and inclusion and condemns hate and discrimination.
Musings
;login: Enters a New Phase of Its Evolution
For over 20 years, ;login: has been a print magazine with a digital version; in the two decades previous, it was USENIX’s newsletter, UNIX News. Since its inception 45 years ago, it has served as a medium through which the USENIX community learns about useful tools, research, and events from one another. Beginning in 2021, ;login: will no longer be the formally published print magazine as we’ve known it most recently, but rather reimagined as a digital publication with increased opportunities for interactivity among authors and readers.
Since USENIX became an open access publisher of papers in 2008, ;login: has remained our only content behind a membership paywall. In keeping with our commitment to open access, all ;login: content will be open to everyone when we make this change. However, only USENIX members at the sustainer level or higher, as well as student members, will have exclusive access to the interactivity options. Rik Farrow, the current editor of the magazine, will continue to provide leadership for the overall content offered in ;login:, which will be released via our website on a regular basis throughout the year.
As we plan to launch this new format, we are forming an editorial committee of volunteers from throughout the USENIX community to curate content, meaning that this will be a formally peer-reviewed publication. This new model will increase opportunities for the community to contribute to ;login: and engage with its content. In addition to written articles, we are open to other ideas of what you might want to experience.
As a certified armchair researcher, I settled into my armchair in a dark room, watching distant flashes of lightning over the desert landscape surrounding me. The scattered storms brought to mind the problem of weather forecasting, or rather, the common failings of accurate forecasts beyond the next several days.
Like other High Performance Computing (HPC) problems, weather forecasting requires enormous computational resources. The world is a big place, after all, and the weather is notoriously fickle. Other HPC problems, such as protein folding and fluid dynamics, suffer from similar issues; duplicating nature with a set of processors is an approximation, at best.
And to make matters worse, the approximations we have today must be performed on von Neumann machines.