Next week I'll be at SWAT for an invited talk. When I gave them a choice of topics, they went with: A Survey of Results for Deletion Channels and Related Synchronization Channels. I've actually given this talk a few other places, but there's been some new stuff, so it's been updated a bit. (I'll put the latest version of the slides up on my talks page after the talk...)
The invitation gave me an excuse to buckle down and finish something I started over a year ago -- a survey article on results for the capacity of the deletion channel (and related problems) to go with the talk. I must be out of practice writing, because it's taken me most of the month to get this thing done. (Well, OK, there was that whole "baby incident" that took up some time, but still, I've clearly been doing far too much administration this last year, and I need to shake off the rust.) It's probably still a bit rough so anyone interested enough to read it, please feel free to mail corrections/suggestions directly.
Apparently, based on some mild teasing from a colleague and friend, I'm known as someone who writes survey articles. (The teasing was perhaps I'm known only as someone who writes survey articles...) I don't know why I end up writing them -- I can't really say it's a fun exercise to write a survey, though it is often educational -- but somehow I feel it's valuable. In this case, there's definitely the motivation that I've done a lot of work in this area, and I want to both promote the area and my work. The survey has a couple of dozen open problems spelled out right there, so let that be motivation for some of you to read it...
Also, I'm open on suggestions on where to publish it. My last few surveys have nicely been able to go to Internet Mathematics (see here for Bloom filters and here for power laws/lognormal distributions-- although the "uncensored" version of the power law survey from my publications page is more fun) so that they've had a worthwhile permanent home. This survey won't quite fit there, and I think it's good for such things to have a visible outlet (besides, say, arxiv). Ostensibly Transactions on Information Theory will take surveys, although I haven't seen that much in practice; and this survey doesn't really fit in the Foundations and Trends model. (I like the Foundations and Trends model, but it seems to me their surveys are like "mini-textbooks" -- and cost accordingly -- while my surveys are more like "here's some background, big ideas, and pointers to papers" -- and I'd like them to be essentially free.)
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2 comments:
How about SIGACT news as a venue?
I wrote a survey last year which
appeared in one of the issues.
The same issue also had a survey
by Salil Vadhan on aspects of
pseudo randomness.
Prof, thanks very much for your good surveys. I read several of your surveys, and I think they are quite simple, clear and helpful.
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