Difference between revisions of "EMSOFT 2020"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
m |
Tim Holzheim (talk | contribs) (Added page provenance(#264) and contribution type(#271)) |
||
Line 9: | Line 9: | ||
|City=Hamburg | |City=Hamburg | ||
|Country=Germany | |Country=Germany | ||
+ | |pageCreator=Soeren | ||
+ | |pageEditor=Soeren | ||
+ | |contributionType=1 | ||
}} | }} | ||
The ACM SIGBED '''International Conference on Embedded Software (EMSOFT)''' brings together researchers and developers from academia, industry, and government to advance the science, engineering, and technology of embedded software development. Since 2001, EMSOFT has been the premier venue for cutting-edge research in the design and analysis of software that interacts with physical processes, with a long-standing tradition for results on cyber-physical systems, which compose computation, networking, and physical dynamics. | The ACM SIGBED '''International Conference on Embedded Software (EMSOFT)''' brings together researchers and developers from academia, industry, and government to advance the science, engineering, and technology of embedded software development. Since 2001, EMSOFT has been the premier venue for cutting-edge research in the design and analysis of software that interacts with physical processes, with a long-standing tradition for results on cyber-physical systems, which compose computation, networking, and physical dynamics. |
Latest revision as of 19:43, 1 April 2022
EMSOFT 2020 | |
---|---|
ACM Conference on Embedded Software
| |
Event in series | EMSOFT |
Dates | 2020/09/20 (iCal) - 2020/09/25 |
Homepage: | https://esweek.org/ |
Location | |
Location: | Hamburg, Germany |
Table of Contents | |
The ACM SIGBED International Conference on Embedded Software (EMSOFT) brings together researchers and developers from academia, industry, and government to advance the science, engineering, and technology of embedded software development. Since 2001, EMSOFT has been the premier venue for cutting-edge research in the design and analysis of software that interacts with physical processes, with a long-standing tradition for results on cyber-physical systems, which compose computation, networking, and physical dynamics.