USENIX Annual Technical Conference (USENIX ATC) 2021
Event submitted on Monday, October 12th 2020, approved by Charles Villanueva ✓

87 Days Until The Event
July 14th, 2021
- July 16th, 2021
United States
»
West, USA
»
California
» Santa Clara
Event Website
This event has been tagged as follows:
Our Review
USENIX covers a lot of ground from virtualization to system administration and network management, cloud security as well as edge computing. As ever with the authoritative and highly respected USENIX organization, security, privacy, and trust will all be baked into research and discussions.
- Review written by Henry Dalziel on Monday, October 12th 2020.
- If you would like to edit or ammend facts in my review please either send us a message or connect with me via LinkedIn.
Conference Event Summary
The following description was either submitted by the Conference Organizer on Monday, October 12th 2020, or created by us.
The 2021 USENIX Annual Technical Conference will take place on July 14–16, 2021, at the Hyatt Regency Santa Clara in Santa Clara, CA, USA.
USENIX ATC brings together leading systems researchers for the presentation of cutting-edge systems research and the opportunity to gain insight into a wealth of must-know topics, including virtualization, system and network management and troubleshooting, cloud and edge computing, security, privacy, and trust, mobile and wireless, and more.
The 2021 USENIX Annual Technical Conference (USENIX ATC ’21) seeks original, high-quality submissions that improve and further the knowledge of computing systems, with an emphasis on implementations and experimental results. We are interested in systems of all scales, from small embedded mobile devices to data centers and clouds. The scope of USENIX ATC covers all practical aspects related to systems software, including but not limited to: operating systems; runtime systems; parallel and distributed systems; storage; networking; security and privacy; virtualization; software-hardware interactions; performance evaluation and workload characterization; reliability, availability, and scalability; energy and power management; and bug-finding, tracing, analyzing, and troubleshooting.
The organizers also welcome “experience” submissions that clearly articulate lessons learned, as well as submissions that refute prior published results. We value submissions more highly if they are accompanied by clearly defined artifacts not previously available, including traces, original data, source code, or tools developed as part of the submitted work. We particularly encourage new ideas and approaches.