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UW CSE Industry Affiliates: Startup Recruiting Day

photoToday is UW CSE’s fall recruiting day for startup companies – held in conjunction with UW CSE’s annual Industry Affiliates meeting. Hundreds of UW CSE undergraduate and graduate students are mingling with representatives of 50 startups (our space limit, unfortunately). It’s a wonderful madhouse!

Wednesday is devoted to research interactions, a luncheon keynote by newly-arrived faculty member Jeff Heer, and an evening open house (posters, demos, food, drink) for Industry participants and regional alumni, capped by the presentation of the Madrona Prize (thank you Madrona Venture Group!) for the student research with the greatest potential for commercialization.

Thursday is our fall recruiting day for established companies.

  • See the startup companies recruiting today here.
  • See the established companies recruiting on Thursday here.
  • See an agenda for the 3-day meeting, with links to breakout session topics, here.

Many thanks to our Industry Affiliates for your phenomenal support of UW CSE and our students! Read more →

D3.js (Data-Driven Documents) wins Gannett Foundation journalism award

show-reelD3.js (Data-Driven Documents), a framework for web-based data visualization, has received the 2013 Gannett Foundation Award for Technical Innovation in the Service of Digital Journalism, from the Online News Association (ONA).

 D3.js was created by UW CSE professor Jeff Heer, his former Stanford Ph.D. student Mike Bostock (now at the New York Times), and external contributor Jason Davies.

Check out D3.js here.

Read more →

CNN: “Cheney’s defibrillator was modified to prevent hacking”

cheneymgnCNN includes a discussion of Yoshi Kohno’s research on the privacy and security of implantable pacemaker/defibrillators in an article about former Vice President Dick Cheney’s recent interview with CNN’s Sanjay Gupta, in which Cheney revealed that when he needed his implanted defibrillator replaced in 2007, his cardiologist ordered the manufacturer to disable the wireless feature, thus preventing anyone from hacking the device.

Kohno and his collaborators began working on just this topic in 2006. The TV show Homeland – referenced in the CNN article – got the idea of compromising medical devices from the New York Times article that first reported Kohno’s work. Read more →

The geography of tech

CARR3-popupThe  October 21 story in New York TimesTech Wealth and Ideas Are Heading Into News” includes Jeff Bezos among “Silicon Valley and its various power brokers.”

News flash:  Amazon.com is not located in Silicon Valley.

Nor is the company that pioneered PC software (Microsoft).

Nor the company that invented desktop publishing (Aldus, now part of Adobe).

Nor the company that pioneered streaming media (RealNetworks).

Nor the companies that drove the revolution in electronic retailing in areas such as travel (Expedia), real estate (Zillow, Redfin), imagery (Getty Images, Corbis), personal care items (Drugstore.com), baby/mom goods (Zulily), etc.

Nor many key gaming industry players (Bungie, Valve, etc., not to mention Nintendo of America, Sony Online Entertainment, Microsoft Studios (and of course Xbox)).

Nor Tableau Software, a thriving Stanford startup whose CEO Christian Chabot recently remarked at a GeekWire event that “Moving the company from Silicon Valley to Seattle [when it was only 3 people] turned out to be one of the best decisions we ever made. We are really grateful to be in the Seattle technology ecosystem, and we hope to be there for many years to come.”

Nor, we should add – hoping to forestall a future article – many of the nation’s most distinctive and admired traditional retailers such as Nordstrom, REI, Costco, and of course Starbucks – companies with which Amazon shares its relentless focus on customers, quality, and culture.

Then, of course, there are the biomedical innovations such as ultrasound imaging, automated external defibrillators, bone marrow transplantation, renal dialysis, Embrel and Rituxan, Medic One – even your Sonicare toothbrush. And the organizations that launched global health initiatives 30 years ago such as PATH and Seattle BioMed. These didn’t come from Silicon Valley. The Gates Foundation, the Allen Institute for Brain Science, and the Allen Institute for Artificial Intelligence also turn out not to be in Silicon Valley.

And where would we be without Macklemore and Nirvana?

Get a map, guys!

[Thanks to GeekWire for picking up this post!] Read more →

UW CSE’s Kyle Rector innovates with “Eyes-Free Yoga”

yoga_measurementsPeople who are blind or low vision may have a harder time participating in exercise classes due to inaccessibility, travel difficulties, or lack of experience. Exergames can encourage exercise at home and help lower the barrier to trying new activities, but there are often accessibility issues since they rely on visual feedback to help align body positions. To address this, a team led by UW CSE Ph.D. student Kyle Rector created Eyes-Free Yoga, an exergame using the Microsoft Kinect that acts as a yoga instructor, teaches six yoga poses, and has customized auditory-only feedback based on skeletal tracking.

Read a UW News post here.  Learn more about the project here.  Kyle’s home page here. Read more →

UW/MSR Machine Learning Day 2013

IMG_0291Nearly 300 researchers from Microsoft and across the University of Washington participated in today’s UW/MSR Machine Learning Day, co-organized by Ofer Dekel (MSR), Emily Fox (UW Statistics), and Ben Taskar (UW Computer Science & Engineering).

An overview and the program are linked here.IMG_0282
Read more →

2013 Counselors for Computing @ UW CSE

c4c-binaryOn October 11th, 60 middle school and high school counselors joined UW CSE to learn about computing as part of the National Center for Women & Information Technology’s Counselors for Computing program. Counselors heard from faculty and industry professionals, participated in hands-on activities, and mingled with their university counterparts.

See event program and pictures.

The organizers were Jane Krauss from NCWIT, Hélène Martin from UW CSE, and Chris Kelly from WSCA.

Resources

K-12 counselors and teachers: Computer Science is a phenomenal field!  Send us your best students! Read more →

Timelapse is UIST Best Paper Honorable Mention

timelapse_thumbThe paper “Interactive Record/Replay for Debugging Web Applications” by CSE’s Brian Burg, Jake Bailey, Amy Ko, and Michael Ernst has received a Best Paper Honorable Mention from UIST 2013.

The paper describes Timelapse, an extension to the WebKit browser engine that can cheaply capture and exactly replay a user’s session with a web application. This capability is being used to create powerful new tools for debugging, testing, bug reporting, and program visualization.

Read the paper here. Timelapse GitHub here. Read more →

UW/MSR Machine Learning Day 2013

globe2_dark_smThis Friday – October 18 – is “Machine Learning Day 2013,” jointly organized by the University of Washington and Microsoft Research (Emily Fox, Ben Taskar, and Ofer Dekel).

An overview, the program, and registration materials are here.

240 people are already registered!  It’s going to be huge! Read more →

NY Times: “The Rapid Advance of Artificial Intelligence”

15iht-1largeart-articleLargeA terrific John Markoff article discusses advances in artificial intelligence, robotics, intelligent transportation, and emotional computing:

“‘During the next decade we’re going to see smarts put into everything,’ said Ed Lazowska, a computer scientist at the University of Washington who is a specialist in Big Data. ‘Smart homes, smart cars, smart health, smart robots, smart science, smart crowds and smart computer-human interactions.’

“The enormous amount of data being generated by inexpensive sensors has been a significant factor in altering the center of gravity of the computing world, he said, making it possible to use centralized computers in data centers — referred to as the cloud — to take artificial intelligence technologies like machine-learning and spread computer intelligence far beyond desktop computers.”

Read more here. Read more →

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