From: "Cliff Lynch cliff@cni.org" Sender: To: CNI-ANNOUNCE Date: Fri, 16 Feb 2018 14:20:01 -0500 Message-ID: X-Original-Return-Path: Received: from [73.193.181.76] (account clifford@cni.org HELO [192.168.1.20]) by cni.org (CommuniGate Pro SMTP 6.2.1) with ESMTPSA id 33875480 for cni-announce@cni.org; Fri, 16 Feb 2018 10:42:51 -0500 X-Original-Date: Fri, 16 Feb 2018 10:42:51 -0500 X-Original-To: cni-announce@cni.org X-Original-Message-ID: <20180216104251331743.7fc9d23a@cni.org> Subject: Keynote speakers for CNI Spring Meeting, San Diego, April 12-13, 2018 MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit X-Mailer: GyazMail version 1.5.19 II am absolutely delighted to announce the opening and closing keynote speakers for the CNI Spring 2018 Meeting. There will be more formal biographies of these keynote speakers on the meeting website soon, but I wanted to share this wonderful news with you now, and here I want to give you some sense of why I think these speakers are important and some of the insights that you might gain from their presentations. Our opening speaker is Dr. Joan Lippincott, CNI's associate director. Joan has been with CNI since the earliest days and in the last decade or so has been doing a range of unique, innovative work on issues such as how to support technology-intensive scholarship at scale within our higher education institutions, the issues involved with assessment of programs and services to support teaching and research, and the very complex relationships among space, organizations, and services with the campus community. While many within the CNI community will certainly be familiar with her in-depth work, particularly those with specific interests in one or another of these areas, in her keynote, she's going to try to offer a synthesis of developments and future prospects and priorities that I believe will be tremendously valuable to the broader community. Our closing speaker will be Professor Larry Smarr from the University of California, San Diego, and the director of the California Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technology (Calit2). I've followed Larry's work for some 30 years; one claim to fame is that, while at the National Center for Supercomputing Applications in the 1990s, he hired a young graduate student named Marc Andreessen who built the first graphical web browser (and the rest is history). But perhaps more profoundly, he has been one of the great drivers behind the development of high performance computing and communications networks and cyberinfrastructure to support research for three decades. He has an uncanny ability to identify important developments on the horizon and also to place them in historical context. Most recently he has been spending a great deal of time on the Pacific Research Platform, which offers a look into the next-generation computational environment that will yet again transfigure science and scholarship. Larry is also stunningly versatile, with an amazing range of interests. Check out the current issue of The Atlantic for a discussion of his work in taking control of his personal health using cutting-edge technology (medically squeamish readers are cautioned): https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2018/03/larry-smarr-the-man-who-saw-inside-himself/550883/ We will also be announcing the list of accepted breakout sessions on our website shortly. I hope to see many of you in San Diego in April. Clifford Lynch Director, CNI