Friday, June 21, 2024

[Extended Deadline] GRCon24 - Abstracts Due July 8



Dear GNURadio Community,

The deadline for submitting abstracts for this year's event has been extended until July 8, 2024 (just a couple more weeks).

GNU Radio Conference 2024 (GRCon24) will be held September 16-20 at the Knoxville Convention Center in Knoxville, Tennessee, USA.  Visit https://events.gnuradio.org/event/24/ for all the details.

GNU Radio Conference (GRCon) is the annual conference for the GNU Radio project and community, and has established itself as one of the premier industry events for Software Radio. It is a week-long conference that includes high-quality technical content and valuable networking opportunities. GRCon is a venue that highlights design, implementation, and theory that has been practically applied in a useful way. GRCon attendees come from a large variety of backgrounds, including industry, academia, government, and hobbyists.  Offering an annual program with broad appeal, GRCon attracts a variety of participants: people new to software radio who are interested in learning more, seasoned developers ready to show off their latest work, and experts who want to keep their finger on the pulse and direction of the industry.

We highly encourage student attendees and participants.  Students presenting their work are offered free admission to the conference thanks to our generous sponsors.  The benefit to students attending and participating in the conference can be tremendous for their future careers.


Call for Participation open through Monday June 17 July 8 (Abstract Submission)

https://events.gnuradio.org/event/24/abstracts/

We are seeking talks, papers, posters, and workshops on Software Radio related topics including the following:

  • 5G/6G/FutureG Wireless Technology

  • Amateur Radio

  • Atmospheric Research

  • Channel Modeling

  • Cognitive Radio and Agile Spectrum Sharing

  • Citizen Science

  • Analog and Digital Signal Processing

  • Education (any level)

  • Front-end Analog characterization

  • Hardware in the Loop

  • Hardware for GNU Radio

  • Heterogeneous signal processing frameworks

  • IOT and M2M applications

  • Machine Learning

  • Massive MIMO and synchronization

  • Non-SDR use of GNU Radio

  • Packaging GNU Radio for improved end user experience

  • Practical applications using GNURadio

  • Radio Astronomy

  • SETI

  • RADAR systems

  • SDR as Instrumentation

  • Space Systems, including ground based systems

  • Wireless Security research

  • SigMF and other archival tools

  • SDR Framework Development


Our first three keynote speakers have been announced:

https://events.gnuradio.org/event/24/page/147-keynote-speakers

Jack Dongarra - University Distinguished Professor of Computer Science in the Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Department at the University of Tennessee;  Dongarra received the 2021 Turing Award "for pioneering contributions to numerical algorithms and libraries that enabled high performance computational software to keep pace with exponential hardware improvements for over four decades." His algorithms and software are regarded to have fueled the growth of high-performance computing and had significant impacts in many areas of computational science, from artificial intelligence to computer graphics. [1]

Shahriar Shahramian - Director of the Communication & Sensing ASICs Research Group, Nokia Bell Labs.  He is also the chair of the mm-Wave & THz subcommittee of IEEE BCICTS and member of the technical program committee of IEEE RFIC & ISSCC. He is also a guest Editor of the IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits (JSSC). His research focus includes the design of mm-wave wireless and wireline integrated circuits and systems. Shahriar is a Bell Labs Fellow and leads the design and architecture of several state-of-the-art ASICs for optical coherent and wireless backhaul products.

Philip Erickson - Director of the MIT Haystack Observatory and Principal Research Scientist at MIT. He also leads Haystack's Atmospheric and Geospace Sciences Group, conducting fundamental research on the near-Earth space environment through radio-based experiments and data analysis using a variety of remote sensing techniques involving ground- and space-based data. Phil also is a co-director of the education and public outreach efforts at MIT Haystack, spanning undergraduate research programs, graduate student interactions, K–12 classroom units and outreach, and public Observatory tours and lectures.

Please let us know if you have any questions - grcon@gnuradio.org -  We look forward to seeing you at the conference this year!

Sincerely,

The GRCon24 Organizers



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