Third Workshop on Disruptive Memory Systems

Event Dates

Oct 18, 2025 - Oct 18, 2025

Location

SOSP'25 Co-Located @ Seoul, Republic of

Submission Deadline

Jul 18, 2025

Third Workshop on Disruptive Memory Systems (DIMES)

Co-located with the 31st ACM Symposium on Operating Systems Principles (SOSP 2025)

Seoul, Republic of Korea, October 13th, 2025

==== Important Dates ====

** Extended deadline: July 25, 2025 **

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Paper/demo submission deadline: July 25, 2025

Acceptance notification: August 25, 2025

Final camera-ready paper due: September 12, 2025

Workshop presentations: October 13, 2025

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==== Call for Contributions ====

New system software is essential for using emerging memory technologies

effectively. Novel memory types, interfaces, and capabilities are

challenging long-held assumptions underlying both hard- and software.

Instead of just the traditional volatile, passive, and largely

homogeneous DDR DRAM, future systems will increasingly include

integrated HBM, disaggregated far memory, and perhaps NVM. “In-memory”

and “near-memory” processing promise low-power parallel processing that

will scale with the amount of active data. New memory interconnects such

as UALink and CXL will enable heterogeneous pooling and sharing of

memory first at rack level and eventually at global fabric level.

Beyond lower energy consumption and higher processing power, these

memory innovations also promise to disrupt with lower cost, higher

capacity, or higher reliability. The Workshop on Disruptive Memory

Systems (DIMES) is intended to be a platform to discuss new

architectures, abstractions, and interfaces for system software to

enable and exploit these new memory technologies in future software. The

scope of DIMES covers system software for all computing domains:

embedded, mobile, desktop/laptop, edge, cloud, and HPC systems.

==== Topics of Interest ====

DIMES focuses on the system software aspects for disruptive memory

technologies. Suggested topics for submissions include all aspects of

system software that are affected by emerging memory technologies like

– disaggregated memory

– in-/near-memory computing

– high-bandwidth memory

– cache-coherent device memory

in embedded, mobile, desktop/laptop, edge, cloud, and HPC systems, and

related domains.

The topics include, but are not limited to:

– operating system concepts

– application interfaces

– programming models

– energy-aware computing

– distributed computing

– resource placement and allocation

– combined use of different emerging memories

We encourage authors to submit papers on concepts, early-stage work, and

demos of prototype systems.

==== Submissions ====

The workshop allows two types of submissions: papers & demos.

Submitted papers must represent original material that is not currently

under review in any other conference or journal, and has not been

previously published. All paper submissions should be written in English

and follow the two-column ACM SIGPLAN article style

(https://www.sigplan.org/Resources/Author/, e.g. acmart LaTeX style with

options sigplan,anonymous,10pt). The CCS Concepts, Keywords, and ACM

Reference Format sections are not required in submissions. Papers must

not exceed the length of six (6) printed pages plus references using a

10-point font.

All demo submissions come in form of an extended abstract with a maximum

length of two (2) printed pages plus references with the same format as

paper submissions. In addition to giving a live demo at the workshop,

demo presenters are required to produce a video. We also encourage the

paper authors to optionally present a demo. This does not require a

separate submission of an extended abstract but is covered by the paper

submission.

Papers and demo abstracts must be submitted in PDF format via the

workshop website. They will be reviewed by the program committee and

evaluated based on technical quality, originality, relevance, and

presentation. Submissions are double-blind, please make sure that your

submissions are properly anonymized.

Accepted submissions will be published in the ACM Digital Library. The

authors of accepted submissions will be required to sign ACM copyright

release forms.

Please submit your papers and demos using our HotCRP site:

https://dimes25.hotcrp.com

==== Organization and Contact ====

Kimberly Keeton (Google, US)

Christian Dietrich (Technische Universität Braunschweig, DE)

Marcel Köppen (Osnabrück University, DE)

Mail: organizers@dimes.ws

Web: https://dimes.ws

==== Program Committee ====

Oana Balmau, McGill University, CA

Antonio Barbalace, University of Edinburgh, GB

Frank Bellosa, Karlsruhe Insitute of Technology, DE

Daniel Berger, Microsoft Azure & University of Washington, US

Jeronimo Castrillon, TU Dresden, DE

Christian Dietrich, Technische Universität Braunschweig, DE

Alexandra Fedorova, University of British Columbia, CA

Ada Gavrilovska, Georgia Institute of Technology, US

Kimberly Keeton, Google, US

Marcel Köppen, Osnabrück University, DE

Wolfgang Lehner, Technische Universität Dresden, DE

Alberto Lerner, University of Fribourg, CH

Stanko Novakovic, Google, US

Ivy Peng, KTH, SE

Tilmann Rabl, Hasso Plattner Institut, University of Potsdam, DE

Michael Swift, University of Wisconsin-Madison, US

Thomas Willhalm, Intel Deutschland, DE

Kan Wu, xAI, US

Suli Yang, Google, US

Willy Zwaenepoel, University of Sydney, AU