250 Hutchison Rd, Rochester, NY 14620

Title: Programming Distributed Systems

Abstract: Our interconnected world is increasingly reliant on distributed systems of unprecedented scale, serving applications which must share state across the globe. And, despite decades of research, we’re still not sure how to program them!  In this talk, I'll show how to use ideas from programming languages to make programming at scale feasible, without sacrificing performance, correctness, or expressive power in the process.  We'll see how slight tweaks to modern imperative programming languages can provably eliminate common errors due to replication or concurrency---with almost no programmer effort.  We'll see how new language designs can unlock new systems designs, yielding both more comprehensible protocols and better performance.  And we'll imagine together the role that a new cloud-centric programming language could play in the next generation of distributed programs.

Bio: Mae Milano is a postdoctoral scholar at UC Berkeley working at the intersection of Programming Languages, Distributed Systems, and Databases.  Her work has appeared at top-tier venues including PLDI, OOPSLA, POPL, VLDB, and TOCS, and has attracted the attention of the Swift language team. She is a recipient of the NDSEG Fellowship, and is a founding member of the Computing Connections Fellowship.

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  • Jiakun Fan
  • Krish Jain

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