553 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
553 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
From walter Wed Sep 14 14:10:10 1983
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To: bboard@mc
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Subject: Return of GSL
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Cc: walter
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Reports of the death of the Graduate Student Lunch
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have been greatly exaggerated.
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Friday, September 16th, at High Noon in the AI Lab Playroom:
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GSL Returns!
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To: bboard@mc
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Subject: Graduate Student Lunch
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Cc: bboard.mail
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The Graduate Student Lunch returns AGAIN!
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Same time (Friday at noon)...
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Same place (8th Floor Playroom)...
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Different selfless volunteer (Phil Agre) !!!
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******************************************************************
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From walter Thu Oct 6 12:24:13 1983
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To: bboard@mc
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Subject: GSL This Week?
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Cc: bboard.mail
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Yes!
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(Noon, 8th Floor, etc...)
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*******************************************************************
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From walter Thu Mar 1 10:00:31 1984
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To: *mac@mc
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Subject: GRADUATE STUDENT LUNCH
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Cc: bboard.mail
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Computer Aided Conceptual Art (CACA)
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Eternally Evolving Seminar Series
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presents
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YOKO: A Random Haiku Generator
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Interns gobble oblist hash | We will be discussing YOKO and the
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Cluster at operations | related issues of computer modeling
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Hidden rep: convert! | of artists, modeling computer artists,
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| computer artists' models, computer
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Chip resolve to bits | models of artists' models of computers,
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Bus cycle inference engine | artist's cognitive models of computers,
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Exposing grey codes | computers' cognitive models of artists
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| and models, models' models of models,
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Take-grant tinker bucks | artists' models of computer artists,
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Pass oblist message package | modelling of computer artists' cognitive
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Federal express | models and artist's models of cognition.
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Hosts: Claudia Smith and Crisse Ciro
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REFRESHMENTS WILL BE SERVED
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********************************************************************
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Computer Aided Conceptual Art
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Evolving Seminar Series presents
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SMALLTALK-52 AND THE WHEELER SEND
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Recently discovered documents reveal that J.M. Wheeler
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designed the first version of Smalltalk in 1952.
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It was intended to run on the University of Cambridge's
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EDSAC Computer. The initial implementation, however,
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required the entire 512-word memory and was deemed
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infeasible. Wheeler, who is credited with the invention
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of bootstrap code, subroutine calls, assemblers, linkers,
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loaders, and all-night hacking, can now be properly
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credited with inventing message passing, object oriented
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programming, window systems, and impractical languages.
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This fascinating historical discussion will be hosted
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by Steve Berlin and will be preceded by Lunch.
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Next week: Lady Lovelace's Encryption Algorithm
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********************************************************************
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From walter Thu Apr 5 18:41:57 1984
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To: *mac@mc
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Subject: Computers and Incomprehensibility
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Cc: gsl.mail
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ANNALS OF COMPUTER SCIENCE SEMINAR SERIES
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Presents
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LADY LOVELACE'S ENCRYPTION ALGORITHM
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Wkh iluvw frpsxwhu surjudpphu zdv d qlqhwhhqwk0fhqwxuqreohzrpdq/
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Odg| Dxjxvwd Dgd Oryhodfh/ gdxjkwhu ri wkh srhw Orug E|urq.
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Dv d whhqdjhu/ Dxjxvwd glvsod|hg dvwrqlvklqj surzhvv lq pdwkhpdwlfv.
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Zkhq vkh zdv hljkwhhq dxjxvwd iluvw vdz Fkduohv Edeedjh*v dqdo|wlfdo
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hqjlqh/ d fdofxodwlqj pdfklqh wkdw zdv wkh iruhuxqqhu ri wkh prghuq
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frpsxwhu. Lq hljkwhhq iruw|0wzr/ vkh wudqvodwhg d sdshu rq wkh
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hqjlqh iurp Iuhqfk wr Hqjolvk/ dgglqj khu rzq yroxplqrxv qrwhv. Lq
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vxevhtxhqw zulwlqjv vkh ghvfulehg wkh %orrs% dqg %vxeurxwlqh%
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frqfhswv.
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*********************************************************************
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From Zvona@MIT-OZ Fri Apr 20 09:55:01 1984
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Received: from mit-oz by mit-htvax with CHAOS; 20 Apr 1984 09:54:26-EST
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Received: from MIT-MORRISON by MIT-OZ via Chaosnet; 20 Apr 84 09:54-EST
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Date: Friday, 20 April 1984, 09:55-EST
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From: David Chapman <Zvona at MIT-OZ>
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To: walter at MIT-OZ
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The first computer programmer was a nineteenth-centurnoblewoman,
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Lady Augusta Ada Lovelace, daughter of the poet Lord Byron.
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As a teenager, Augusta displayed astonishing prowess in mathematics.
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When she was eighteen augusta first saw Charles Babbage's analytical
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engine, a calculating machine that was the forerunner of the modern
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computer. In eighteen forty-two, she translated a paper on the
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engine from French to English, adding her own voluminous notes. In
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subsequent writings she described the "loop" and "subroutine"
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concepts.
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Hey, I really like these hack GSL announcements.
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***************************************************************************
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From MONTALVO%MIT-OZ@MIT-MC.ARPA Thu Apr 26 17:45:03 1984
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Received: from mit-oz by mit-htvax with CHAOS; 26 Apr 1984 17:42:11-EST
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Received: from MIT-MC by MIT-OZ via Chaosnet; 26 Apr 84 17:41-EST
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Date: Thu 26 Apr 84 17:32:46-EST
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From: MONTALVO%MIT-OZ@MIT-MC.ARPA
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Subject: Video tape from Brown University
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To: *bboard%MIT-OZ@MIT-MC.ARPA
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cc: MONTALVO%MIT-OZ@MIT-MC.ARPA
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I can say something about the video tape that STRAZ is showing on Mon.
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from Brown University. I went to the presentation given here by Andy
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Van Dam. He is a well known figure in computer graphics and he
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together with Jim Foley from GW Univ. have written the only (correct
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me if I'm wrong) book on interactive computer graphics and one of the
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very few textbooks on computer graphics. The talk was on the
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illustration of hard, computer science concepts using computer
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graphics, specifically animation graphics. It was also on how they
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actually used this system to teach comp. sci. at Brown. I highly
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recommend the talk.
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If you want to know more you can ask me.
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Fanya
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-------
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From root Thu Apr 26 19:40:03 1984
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Received: from mit-oz by mit-htvax with CHAOS; 26 Apr 1984 19:38:17-EST
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Received: from MIT-MC by MIT-OZ via Chaosnet; 26 Apr 84 19:38-EST
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ReSent-date: Thu 26 Apr 84 19:37:44-EST
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ReSent-From: Bernard M. Gunther <SE.BMG%MIT-EECS@MIT-MC.ARPA>
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ReSent-To: *bboard@MIT-MC
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OVERCROWDING: THE BLACK HOLE OF COURSE VI
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Forum for all Course VI students including newly declared
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froshlings.
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Featuring a panel of Course VI faculty and administrators.
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Date: May 3rd, 1984
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Time: 7:30 PM
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Place: 34-101
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Bring flames, beefs, tar, and feathers: AUDIENCE DISCUSSION WILL FOLLOW.
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From walter@mit-htvax Thu Apr 26 20:30:06 1984
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Received: from mit-oz by mit-htvax with CHAOS; 26 Apr 1984 20:28:25-EST
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Received: from MIT-MC by MIT-OZ via Chaosnet; 26 Apr 84 20:27-EST
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Date: 26 Apr 1984 20:25:24-EST
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From: walter at mit-htvax
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To: montalvo@oz
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Cc: *mac@mc
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Fanya,
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I can say something about the GSL that TAR and ELISHA
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are doing on Friday (see message below). I went to a
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GSL last week. Tom and Elisha are well known figures
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in LCS and are are doing the only (correct me if I'm
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wrong) GSL this week. I highly recommend the food.
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If you want to know more you can copy HTVAX:/projects/gsl.txt .
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Walter
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----------
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From walter@mit-htvax Thu Apr 19 12:40:02 1984
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Received: from mit-oz by mit-htvax with CHAOS; 25 Apr 1984 12:37:11-EST
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Received: from MIT-MC by MIT-OZ via Chaosnet; 25 Apr 84 12:36-EST
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Date: 25 Apr 1984 12:34:36-EST
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From: walter at mit-htvax
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To: *mac@mc
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Subject: GSL
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OVEREATING: THE BLACK HOLE OF GRADUATE COURSE VI
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Forum for all Course VI Area II graduate students.
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Featuring a flock of vultures in a feeding frenzy:
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You have to be there to see it!
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Date: May 27th, 1984
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Time: 12:00 Noon
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Place: AI Lab Playroom
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Tom Russ and Elisha Sacks will moderate.
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**************************************************************************
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From walter Thu Mar 22 13:31:25 1984
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To: *mac@mc
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Subject: MIT Playroom Eating Club workshop
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Cc: gsl.mail
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The MIT Playroom Eating Club presents
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SCARFING for beginners
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and a professional workshop in
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GLUTTONY
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Workshop Time Prerequisite
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Beginning 12:01-12:10 No previous experience (No food either).
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Professional 11:55-12:01 Beginning workshop or familiarity w/ basic hogging
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Join us in the AI Lab Playroom (the big room 3 floors directly
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above the LCS Student Lounge) at 12 noon on Friday, March 23rd
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for ten minutes of intense pigging out. See you there!
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This week's trough will be filled by Bonnie Dorr and Dave Braunegg.
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If you want to volunteer to provide food for this weekly event,
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please get in touch with Walter in NE43-825 (office) or NE43-825 (home).
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****************************************************************************
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From walter Thu Apr 5 15:39:58 1984
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To: *mac@mc
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Subject: Computer Aided Conceptual Art
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Cc: gsl.mail
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Computer Aided Conceptual Art (CACA)
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Eternally Evolving Seminar Series
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presents
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THE STRATEGIC CONSUMING PROPOSAL
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To meet the challenge of certain critical problems in art,
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the Computer Aided Conceptual Art Consortium of Advanced
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Conceptual Artists (CACACACA) is initiating an important
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new program in Strategic Consuming. By seizing an
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opportunity to leverage recent advances in artificial
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ingestion, cooking science, and microelectronics,
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in particular "GSL" (Gallim-Silicon-Lithium) technology,
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the Consortium plans to create a new generation of "machine
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ingestion". This new technology will create unprecedented
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appetites and promises to greatly increase our national
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self-consciousness and weight as it emerges in the coming
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decadence.
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Hosts:
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Brian Williams and Dan Carnese
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Refreshments will, of course, be served.
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********************************************************************
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From TAR@MIT-MC Thu Apr 26 12:15:02 1984
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Received: from mit-mc by mit-htvax with CHAOS; 26 Apr 1984 12:11:10-EST
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Date: 26 April 1984 12:10-EST
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From: Thomas A. Russ <TAR @ MIT-MC>
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Subject: GSL
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To: walter @ MIT-HTVAX
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cc: ELISHA @ MIT-MC, TAR @ MIT-MC
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Initially contingency plans have been made, planningwise, but
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no final decision has been made as to precisely which of the wide variety
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of action options will in fact be used, if any. Responsible officials
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deny that any specific options for our involvement or reaction have either
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been ruled out or adopted, but (and this is not for direct attribution)
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they appears to be leaning to some form of culinary intervention in line
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with actions in keeping with past precedent in handling crises of this
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variety.
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Tom,
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Director of the Transportation Bureau of the Ad Hoc
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Commitee for the Prevention of Post Graduate and
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Advanced Degree Candidate Mal- and Under-Nutrition.
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********************************************************************
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From walter Thu Apr 5 18:41:57 1984
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To: *mac@mc
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Subject: Computer Aided Conceptual Art
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Cc: gsl.mail
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The date, hour, and location of the Strategic
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Consuming briefing was inadvertently disincluded
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from the preceding message on the identical topic.
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Update follows:
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The Strategic Consuming Seminar will be
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initiated at 1200 hours 06-04-84 in the
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Artificial Intelligence Laboratory Playroom.
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***************************************************************************
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From WELD%MIT-OZ@MIT-MC.ARPA Mon Apr 23 12:45:02 1984
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Received: from mit-oz by mit-htvax with CHAOS; 23 Apr 1984 12:41:34-EST
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Received: from MIT-MC by MIT-OZ via Chaosnet; 23 Apr 84 12:40-EST
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Date: 23 Apr 1984 12:32 EST (Mon)
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Message-ID: <WELD.12009794651.BABYL@MIT-OZ>
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From: "Daniel S. Weld" <WELD%MIT-OZ@MIT-MC.ARPA>
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To: *bboard%MIT-OZ@MIT-MC.ARPA
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Subject: AI Revolving Seminar
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Wednesday 4/25 4:00pm 8th floor playroom
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The Copycat Project:
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An Experiment in Nondeterminism and Creative Analogies
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Doug Hofstadter
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A micro-world is described, in which many analogies involving strikingly
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different concepts and levels of subtlety can be made. The question
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"What differentiates the good ones from the bad ones?" is discussed,
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and then the problem of how to implement a computational model of the
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human ability to come up with such analogies (and to have a sense for
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their quality) is considered. A key part of the proposed system, now
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under development, is its dependence on statistically emergent properties
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of stochastically interacting "codelets" (small pieces of ready-to-run
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code created by the system, and selected at random to run with probability
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proportional to heuristically assigned "urgencies"). Another key element
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is a network of linked concepts of varying levels of "semanticity", in
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which activation spreads and indirectly controls the urgencies of new
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codelets. There is pressure in the system toward maximizing the degree
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of "semanticity" or "intensionality" of descriptions of structures, but
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many such pressures, often conflicting, must interact with one another,
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and compromises must be made. The shifting of (1) perceived boundaries
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inside structures, (2) descriptive concepts chosen to apply to structures,
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and (3) features perceived as "salient" or not, is called "slippage".
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What can slip, and how, are emergent consequences of the interaction
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of (1) the temporary ("cytoplasmic") structures involved in the analogy
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with (2) the permanent ("Platonic") concepts and links in the conceptual
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proximity network, or "slippability network". The architecture of this
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system is postulated as a general architecture suitable for dealing not
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only with fluid analogies, but also with other types of abstract perception
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and categorization tasks, such as musical perception, scientific theorizing,
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Bongard problems and others.
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**************************************************************************
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12:00 NOON 8TH FLOOR PLAYROOM FRIDAY 5/5
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GRADUAL STUDENT LUNCH SEMINAR SERIES
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The G0001 Project:
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An Experiment in G0002 and Creative G0003
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A G0004 is described, in which many G0003 involving strikingly
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different G0005 and levels of G0006 can be made. The question "What
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differentiates the good G0003 from the bad G0003?" is discussed, and
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the problem of how to G0008 a G0009 G0010 of the G0011 G0012 to come
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up with such G0003 (and to have a sense for their quality) is
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considered. A key part of the proposed system, now under
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development, is its dependence on G0013 G0014 G0015 of G0016
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interacting "G0017" (selected at random to G0019 with G0020
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proportional to G0021 assigned "G0022"). Another key G0023 is a
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G0024 of linked G0005 of varying levels of "G0025", in which G0026
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spreads and G0027 controls the G0028 of new G0017. The shifting of
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(1) G0033 G0034 inside structures, (2) descriptive G0005 chosen to
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apply to G0030, and (3) G0043 perceived as "G0031" or not, is called
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"G0032". What can G0031, and how, are G0014 G0033 of the interaction
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of (1) the temporary ("G0034") structures involved in the G0003 with
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(2) the permanent ("G0035") G0005 and links in the G0036 network, or
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"G0037 network". The G0038 of this system is G0039 as a general
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G0038 suitable for dealing not only with fluid G0003, but also with
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other types of G0039 G0040 and G0041 tasks, such as musical G0040,
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G0041 G0042, Bongard problems and others.
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Hosts: Harry Voorhees and Dave Siegel
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****************************************************************
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From walter@mit-htvax Thu May 10 16:30:03 1984
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Received: from mit-oz by mit-htvax with CHAOS; 10 May 1984 16:29:42-EDT
|
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Received: from MIT-MC by MIT-OZ via Chaosnet; 10 May 84 16:23-EDT
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Date: 10 May 1984 16:06:22-EDT
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From: walter at mit-htvax
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To: *mac@mc
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Subject: Graduate Student Lunch
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Barring the remote possibility of a volunteer stepping
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forward from out of the blue who's willing to do GSL on
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miserably short notice, there will be no graduate
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student lunch on May 11th.
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GSL will however return *next* week,
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for the semester's final feeding frenzy.
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****************************************************************
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Friends:
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This Friday noon marks the end of GSL's for this academic year.
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On this occasion I am reminded of the immortal words of the
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late (great) Jim Morrison:
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This is the end, my friend
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It really is
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Yes, it is the end
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This is the end
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My friend
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No kidding, it really is the end
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It's the end
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It is
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The end
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-- The Doors
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It's a Dan Weise GSL, and you know what that means.
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Calories, Calories, Calories-- Diabetes City, fer sure.
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Or, in the immortal words of Mac Davis:
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Sugar Sugar
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Honey Honey
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You are my candy cane
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-- The Archies
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Bye now.
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Be good.
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************************************************************
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From MEYER@MIT-MC Mon Sep 10 15:45:02 1984
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Received: from mit-oz by mit-htvax with CHAOS; 10 Sep 1984 15:40:46-EDT
|
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Received: from MIT-MC by MIT-OZ via Chaosnet; 10 Sep 84 15:39-EDT
|
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Date: 10 September 1984 15:36-EDT
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From: Albert R. Meyer <MEYER @ MIT-MC>
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Subject: Seminar on Types in Programming
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To: (*MSG *MIT) @ MIT-MC
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SEMINAR ANNOUNCEMENT:
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GENERALIZED TYPES IN PROGRAMMING LANGUAGES
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FIRST MEETING: Friday, Sept. 14, 1984, 3:30-5:00.
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PLACE: NE43-315, MIT Lab. for Comp. Sci., 545 Tech. Sq., Cambridge.
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ORGANIZER: A.R. Meyer, Net Address: Meyer@@Mit-MC.Arpa, Phone: 253-6024.
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A reading seminar about generalized types and type-checking; polymorphism;
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classes, modules, and inheritance; and related notions appearing in current and
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proposed programming languages. The slant will be toward identifying the
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underlying semantical problems raised by the desired programming features. For
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the first five weeks (during the visit of Prof. Boris Trakhtenbrot, Univ. of
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Tel Aviv) we will present and discuss the papers below starting with the first
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two:
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----------------------------------------------------------------------------
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1. Burstall, Rod M., ``Programming with modules as typed functional
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programming'', PROC. INT'L. CONF. 5TH GENERATION COMPUTING SYSTEMS, Tokyo, to
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appear. Manuscript from Dept. of Computer Science, Univ. of Edinburgh, 1984.
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2. Burstall, Rod M. and Butler Lampson, ``A Kernel language for abstract data
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types and modules'', SEMANTICS OF DATA TYPES: PROCEEDINGS, (eds.) Kahn,
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MacQueen and Plotkin, Springer-Verlag, Lect. Notes in Comp. Sci. 173, 1-50,
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1984.
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3. MacQueen, David, ``Modules for standard ML'', ACM SYMP. ON LISP AND
|
||
FUNCTIONAL LANGUAGES, 1984.
|
||
|
||
4. Mitchell, John C., ``Lambda Calculus Models of Typed Programming
|
||
Languages'', Ph.D. Thesis, MIT, Dept. of EECS, September, 1984.
|
||
--------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Meeting time for the first five weeks is Tue., Fri., 3:30-5:00, and Tue.
|
||
3:30-5:00 thereafter. Reading course credit can be arranged.
|
||
|
||
**************************************************************************
|
||
|
||
From WALTER%MIT-OZ@MIT-MC.ARPA Tue Sep 11 15:00:02 1984
|
||
Received: from mit-oz by mit-htvax with CHAOS; 11 Sep 1984 14:55:31-EDT
|
||
Received: from MIT-MC by MIT-OZ via Chaosnet; 11 Sep 84 14:54-EDT
|
||
Date: 11 Sep 1984 14:52 EDT (Tue)
|
||
Message-ID: <WALTER.12046771541.BABYL@MIT-OZ>
|
||
From: Walter Hamscher <WALTER%MIT-OZ@MIT-MC.ARPA>
|
||
To: *mac@MIT-MC
|
||
Subject: Seminar on Types in Lunches
|
||
|
||
SEMINAR ANNOUNCEMENT:
|
||
|
||
GENERALIZED TYPES IN GRADUATE STUDENT LUNCHES
|
||
|
||
FIRST MEETING: Friday, Sept. 14, 1984, 12:00 noon
|
||
|
||
PLACE: MIT AI Lab Playroom, 545 Tech. Sq., Cambridge, MA, USA
|
||
|
||
ORGANIZER: Walter Hamscher, (walter@oz)
|
||
|
||
FIRST WEEK
|
||
VOLUNTEERS: Bonnie Dorr and Dave Braunegg
|
||
|
||
SUCCEEDING WEEKS
|
||
VOLUNTEERS: To Be Announced
|
||
|
||
An eating seminar about generalized cold cuts and spread-recognition;
|
||
gluttonism, leftovers, and indigestion; related notions appearing
|
||
in current and proposed lunches, such as volunteers, menus, and
|
||
The Roosevelt Paradox ("There is no such thing as a free lunch")
|
||
will be discussed. The slant will be toward identifying the
|
||
underlying digestional problems raised by the desired menu features.
|
||
For the first five minutes (during the visit of Prof. Gustav Fleischbrot,
|
||
Univ. of Essen) we will present and discuss the papers below starting
|
||
with the first two and concluding with the final two:
|
||
|
||
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
1. Burger, Chip N., ``The Nutritional Value of Pixels'',
|
||
PROC. INT'L. CONF. 5TH GENERATION INGESTION SYSTEMS, Tokyo, to
|
||
appear. Manuscript from Dept. of Computer Science, Univ. of Sandwich, 1984.
|
||
|
||
2. Burger, Chip N. and Gelly Muffin, ``A Kernel language for abstract
|
||
feta cheese and noodles'', SEMANTICS OF FETA CHEESE: PROCEEDINGS, (eds.)
|
||
Cream, MacFried and Potstick, Springer-Verlag, Lect. Notes in Comp. Sci.
|
||
173, 1-50, 1984.
|
||
|
||
3. MacDonald, Ronald, ``Noodles for standard ML'', ACM SYMP. ON LINGUICA
|
||
AND LINGUINI, 1984.
|
||
|
||
4. Munchem, J. C., ``Lamb, D-Calories, Noodles, and Ripe Fruit'',
|
||
Ph.D. Thesis, MIT, Dept. of EECS, September, 1984.
|
||
--------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Meeting time for the first five minutes is Fri. 12:00-12:05, and
|
||
Friday 12:00-12:05 thereafter. Aerobics course credit can be arranged.
|
||
|