I got the opportunity to attend ICFP ( International Conference on Functional Programming) that took place in Nara from 18th to 24th September 2016. I got the scholarship from ACM-Women and I also signed up to be a student volunteer, which meant I got free registration in exchange for helping out in some handy and administrative tasks. Registration costs $400 , so it is a great deal!
Fun fact: I was the only attendee from Africa.
Day One:
The first day was for workshops. There were four different workshops running in parallel, the Type-Driven Development workshop(TyDe), Scheme and Functional Programming workshop, Higher-Order Programming with Effects and Programming Languages Mentoring Workshop (PLMW). I attended TyDe to learn more about APL and PLMW. PLMW is geared to senior undergrad and graduate students and is perfect for beginners. I learnt not only about functional languages but also about research, how to write and present papers. At the end of the day we, student volunteers had Japanese style dinner.
Told you I was the only African ..;) |
Student volunteers dinner |
Day Two:
This was when the official conference began. We had a keynote address about Tensor flow by Martin Abadi from Google Research. I thoroughly enjoyed it due to my interest in Machine Learning. The rest of the talks were great, some of which were over my head. I mentioned this in a conversation with a proffesor and he assured me that I wasn't the only one. I enoyed the presentation on the Clojent, a new functional language for verification. At the end of the day we had the welcome reception and poster show for the ACM SRC competition.
Keynote |
Some form of rice and fish for lunch |
conference venue |
Conference venue |
Day Three: (Conference Report, Banquet)
Day Five: Workshops and Industry reception
Day seven: Functional Art Modelling and Design
The last day had workshops on Commercial use of functional programming, Haskell Implementors and Functional Art. I went to the functional art workshop (it sounded as cool as it sounds now). I saw demos of how functional languages are used to make music, paintings and are applied on the Arduino. Thereafter I went to the performance evening where performers played live music by coding it in functional languages. I'm still fascinated.
Being an undergrad , relatively new to programming languages in general and this being my first research conference I had a lot to learn. The people were very open and approachable. Nobody would laugh, if you admitted you don't know X,Y or Z, as a matter of fact they liked the opportunity to spread the word. Its probably because functional programming is unpopular and thus the community has one mission , to spread the word -egos aside.
Spending the week with academic superstars was definitely the highlight of the conference. The atmosphere was intellectually stimulating. Since I couldn't sleep, I worked on my thesis at night and I was surprisingly very productive. Being a final year student, it opened my eyes to the joys and reality of research. I'm still looking interesting topics and universities but post grad will definitely happen down the road.
I'm sad that there weren't many Africans. I now see why they say Africa is being left behind. I guess the reason could be that in Africa we have other problems where our research is focused on (like on ICT4D Information and Communication Technology for Development at UCT) that theoretical research (like Functional and Programming Languages) is not being done.
Otherwise it was a great conference. Thanks to ACM-W, I now see myself as a researcher.
PS: I also did some touring, read here for more details. Also if you are a women in tech, apply for the ACM-W scholarship, its worth it!
I attended most of the talks, not that I understood it all, but I got the terms to google. I particularly enjoyed the talk about Computational Geometry and Higher Order Ghost State.Being a student volunteer, I had a session assistant duty where my job was basically to hold the mike as people ( academic superstars like Jeremy Gibbons and John Hughes) asked questions. This will be definitely go on my CV.
Later we had report from the conference chairs and icfp contest. I am motivated to participate in the contest as it is open to everyone, not necessarily students. The winning team has been the winner three times in a row! #Goals. It was here that the conference chairs announced the demographics of the attendees. In previous years, attendees mainly came from Europe, America and Asia-Pacific. This year there is one attendee from Africa, you can guess who that is. I met two other Africans , from Egypt and Rwanda respectively, but they were affiliated with Universities in America, so yeah, I represented the whole continent.
The day was concluded by the banquet at Hotel Nikko where prizes were awarded to SIGPLAN (Special Interest Group on Programming Languages) members in various categories (service, most influential papers etc).
but first..selfies |
Banquet |
This was the final day of the conference. I enjoyed the sessions on Linear Functional Programming and Context-Free Session Types. It was winded by SRC awards and ICFP 2017 presentation. A friend I met won an SRC award, I was very inspired. It was also announced the next ICFP will take place in Oxford, having been there before, I can't help but hope to attend (or even present)it too.
Day Five: Workshops and Industry reception
There were a couple of workshops on Haskell, ML family and functional high performance computing and commercial users of FP. I attended a little bit of everything as they were all very interesting to me. I learnt of WebAssembly the functional language that is anticipated to replace JavaScript on the web and programming APL on the GPU.
This was a dinner prepared by the companies that sponsored the conference, these include Ahrefs, Jane Street, Mozilla, Ambiata, Facebook Galois among others. I was glad to learn that many companies were using functional languages (particularly Haskell and Oocaml) for their machine learning. Oh and the food was great.
Day Six:
yummy! |
Industry reception |
Day Six:
There was the Haskell Symposium, Erlang workshop and Oocaml workshop. I attended a few sessions and did some sightseeing of Nara. I also got to talk with graduate students and faculty who gave me useful advice on research.
Day seven: Functional Art Modelling and Design
The last day had workshops on Commercial use of functional programming, Haskell Implementors and Functional Art. I went to the functional art workshop (it sounded as cool as it sounds now). I saw demos of how functional languages are used to make music, paintings and are applied on the Arduino. Thereafter I went to the performance evening where performers played live music by coding it in functional languages. I'm still fascinated.
Making music with functional languages |
Being an undergrad , relatively new to programming languages in general and this being my first research conference I had a lot to learn. The people were very open and approachable. Nobody would laugh, if you admitted you don't know X,Y or Z, as a matter of fact they liked the opportunity to spread the word. Its probably because functional programming is unpopular and thus the community has one mission , to spread the word -egos aside.
Spending the week with academic superstars was definitely the highlight of the conference. The atmosphere was intellectually stimulating. Since I couldn't sleep, I worked on my thesis at night and I was surprisingly very productive. Being a final year student, it opened my eyes to the joys and reality of research. I'm still looking interesting topics and universities but post grad will definitely happen down the road.
I'm sad that there weren't many Africans. I now see why they say Africa is being left behind. I guess the reason could be that in Africa we have other problems where our research is focused on (like on ICT4D Information and Communication Technology for Development at UCT) that theoretical research (like Functional and Programming Languages) is not being done.
Otherwise it was a great conference. Thanks to ACM-W, I now see myself as a researcher.
PS: I also did some touring, read here for more details. Also if you are a women in tech, apply for the ACM-W scholarship, its worth it!
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