Tue 4 Apr 2017 09:10 - 10:10 at D2.09 - Opening and Keynote
Abstract

A paradigm shift is taking place on the Web. Users spend less and less time using browsers and more and more time using instant messaging applications. While originally designed to facilitate communication among humans, these platforms now position themselves as “next-generation browsers” to interact with services and businesses. They do this by offering the ability to extend their platforms with chatbots: applications that interact with the user through chat.

This shift toward a dialoge-based mode of interaction will have a profound impact on the programming technologies that will be needed to effectively develop applications for the Conversational Web. While existing Web technology will continue to play an important role, new frameworks are emerging that facilitate dialogue-based interactions. There is also a growing need to extend explicitly programmed scripts with AI toolkits to bridge the gap between ambiguous humans and rigid APIs. We will discuss these trends, review today’s state-of-the-art bot SDKs and AI toolkits, and highlight new opportunities where programming abstractions and program analyses can help developers in this rapidly evolving domain.

Bio

Tom Van Cutsem leads a research team at Nokia Bell Labs in Antwerp, Belgium. His team works on next-generation communications software with topics ranging from new user interaction mechanisms and conversational bots to innovations at the networking layer based on software-defined networks. Tom is a computer scientist who loves to explore the bleeding edge of software development. Within Bell Labs he has worked on various research projects, focusing on the design, architecture and implementation of distributed systems, query languages and stream processing platforms. Prior to joining Bell Labs, Tom was a professor of computer science at the Vrije Universiteit Brussel and a Visiting Faculty at Google. Tom has a passion for programming languages and sat on the ECMA TC39 committee in charge of standardising JavaScript. He received his PhD in 2008 from Vrije Universiteit Brussel for his research on AmbientTalk, a distributed scripting language for mobile phones.

Tue 4 Apr

Displayed time zone: Amsterdam, Berlin, Bern, Rome, Stockholm, Vienna change

09:00 - 10:30
Opening and KeynoteProWeb at D2.09
09:00
10m
Talk
Welcome to ProWeb
ProWeb
Coen De Roover Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Anders Møller Aarhus University, Christophe Scholliers Universiteit Gent, Belgium
09:10
60m
Talk
From Documents to Dialogues: Programming Technology for the Conversational WebProWeb Keynote
ProWeb
Tom Van Cutsem Nokia Bell Labs
10:10
20m
Talk
Group discussion on common workshop goals
ProWeb