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CSE’s Shyam Gollakota: “Wherefore go the networks?”

ShyamConnectorMIT EECS Connector features 2012 MIT EECS Ph.D. alum and UW CSE professor Shyam Gollakota, whose research on backscatter communication, gesture recognition, and other areas has received wide acclaim.  “My goal is to change our fundamental understanding of what is possible, by designing and building novel systems that challenge conventional wisdom.”

Read the MIT EECS Connector article here.

Learn about the work of Shyam and his collaborators in UW CSE’s Networks and Wireless Lab here. Read more →

UW CSE 2014 Scholarship/Fellowship Recognition Luncheon

IMG_0399UW CSE’s annual Scholarship/Fellowship Recognition Luncheon brings together the generous individuals and corporations whose gifts make scholarships and fellowships available to our students, and the outstanding students who are the beneficiaries of this generosity.

At yesterday’s event, graduate student Laurel Orr and undergraduate student Karolina Pyszkiewicz spoke, representing their peers.

Scholarships enable great students to attend UW CSE regardless of means, allowing us to fulfill the traditional role of the nation’s great public universities as tuition rises to offset dramatic reductions in public support.  Fellowships help attract the very best graduate students to UW CSE, and provide flexibility during their first year as they discover the research area that excites them the most.

Thanks to our donors, and congratulations to our students!

To learn more about our endowed scholarships and fellowships, the donors, and the recipients, check out the booklet here. Read more →

“A study in UW geometry”

2023435406Seattle Times photographer Ellen Banner captures the Microsoft Atrium from above … here. Read more →

IEEE Milestone plaque honoring UW CSE Ph.D. alum Gary Kildall: Photos of the ceremony

UW EE alum Tom Rolander displays his DRI employee badge #1. (Gary was badge #0)

UW EE alum Tom Rolander displays his DRI employee badge #1. (Gary was badge #0)

On Friday, IEEE dedicated a “Milestones in Electrical Engineering and Computing” plaque honoring 1972 UW CSE Ph.D. alum Gary Kildall at the site of his company Digital Research Inc. (DRI) in Pacific Grove, CA. Hundreds attended the event – including an amazing number of former DRI employees.

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David Laws, Tom Rolander, and Gordon Eubanks reminisce about Gary and DRI at a ceremony at Pacific Grove City Hall

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The IEEE Milestone plaque honoring UW CSE Ph.D. alum Gary Kildall for the creation of CP/M

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Unveiling of the Milestone plaque – secured with punched paper tape and a floppy disk

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801 Lighthouse Avenue, former DRI Headquarters Office and site of the Milestone plaque

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Tom Rolander, UW EE alum and DRI badge #1, speaks outside 801 Lighthouse Avenue, former DRI Headquarters Office and site of the Milestone plaque

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UW EE alum Tom Rolander, DRI badge #1, flanked by Gary’s son Scott and daughter Kristin

DRI’s CP/M was the dominant microcomputer operating system throughout the 1970s and early 1980s, until Microsoft purchased QDOS (a CP/M lookalike) from UW CSE bachelors alum Tim Paterson and licensed it to IBM as MS-DOS.  Gary was an innovator: CP/M was the first microcomputer disk operating system (previous systems used only sequential media such as paper and magnetic tape), and introduced the BIOS layer (which allowed easy porting of the OS across a wide range of microprocessor and system architectures).

(In remarks at the event, several speakers also commented on the breakthroughs in programming language compiler technology embodied in Gary’s Ph.D. thesis, supervised by UW CSE’s Hellmut Golde.)

IEEE program for the event here.

Wonderful tribute in IProgrammer, with many linked resources, here.

Excellent GeekWire article here.

Computer History Museum article “Gary Kildall and the 40th Anniversary of the Birth of the PC Operating System” here.

KAZU (Monterey Bay NPR) pre-dedication interview here.

California Report post-dedication interview here.

Seattle Times article here.

Monterey Herald article here.

Previous CSE News post with additional information here.

On Friday, 1972 UW CSE Ph.D. alum Gary Kildall will be honored by IEEE with a “Milestones in Electrical Engineering and Computing” plaque at the site of his company Digital Research Inc. in Pacific Grove, CA.

Kildall’s CP/M was the first microcomputer operating system, and the dominant OS throughout the 1970s and early 1980s, until Microsoft purchased QDOS (a CP/M lookalike) from UW CSE bachelors alum Tim Paterson and licensed it to IBM as MS-DOS.

– See more at: http://news.cs.washington.edu/#sthash.0wg2K9ii.dpuf

On Friday, 1972 UW CSE Ph.D. alum Gary Kildall will be honored by IEEE with a “Milestones in Electrical Engineering and Computing” plaque at the site of his company Digital Research Inc. in Pacific Grove, CA.

Kildall’s CP/M was the first microcomputer operating system, and the dominant OS throughout the 1970s and early 1980s, until Microsoft purchased QDOS (a CP/M lookalike) from UW CSE bachelors alum Tim Paterson and licensed it to IBM as MS-DOS.

– See more at: http://news.cs.washington.edu/#sthash.0wg2K9ii.dpuf

On Friday, 1972 UW CSE Ph.D. alum Gary Kildall will be honored by IEEE with a “Milestones in Electrical Engineering and Computing” plaque at the site of his company Digital Research Inc. in Pacific Grove, CA.

Kildall’s CP/M was the first microcomputer operating system, and the dominant OS throughout the 1970s and early 1980s, until Microsoft purchased QDOS (a CP/M lookalike) from UW CSE bachelors alum Tim Paterson and licensed it to IBM as MS-DOS.

– See more at: http://news.cs.washington.edu/#sthash.0wg2K9ii.dpuf

On Friday, 1972 UW CSE Ph.D. alum Gary Kildall will be honored by IEEE with a “Milestones in Electrical Engineering and Computing” plaque at the site of his company Digital Research Inc. in Pacific Grove, CA.

Kildall’s CP/M was the first microcomputer operating system, and the dominant OS throughout the 1970s and early 1980s, until Microsoft purchased QDOS (a CP/M lookalike) from UW CSE bachelors alum Tim Paterson and licensed it to IBM as MS-DOS.

– See more at: http://news.cs.washington.edu/#sthash.0wg2K9ii.dpuf

Read more →

“Astonishing age progression software” from UW CSE

iraSeattle’s KOMO4 News and KING5 Evening Magazine feature what KOMO calls “astonishing age progression software” from UW CSE, interviewing professor Ira Kemelmacher-Shlizerman.

KOMO4 News here.

KING5 Evening Magazine here.

Information on the research here. Read more →

UW CSE’s Richard Ladner wins SIGCHI Social Impact Award

ladner_smUW CSE professor Richard Ladner has been recognized far and wide for his extraordinary work on accessible computing.

Richard’s most recent honor comes from the ACM Special Interest Group on human-computer interaction, SIGCHI, which will present Richard with its Social Impact Award at CHI 2014 in Toronto later this month – given “to individuals who promote the application of human-computer interaction research to pressing social needs.”

Read the citation here.  Learn more about Richard and his work here.

Congratulations once again, Richard! Read more →

UW CSE’s Center for Game Science in NY Times

CGS-logoThe New York Times article “Not Just Playing Around Anymore” features, among other initiatives, work by UW CSE’s Zoran Popovic and the Center for Game Science:

“One speaker at this year’s festival is Zoran Popovic, the director of the Center for Game Science at the University of Washington, in Seattle. He led the team of researchers responsible for the puzzle game Foldit, which sought to crowdsource a solution to a scientific problem. Foldit asked players to take on the role of a biochemist and map out how proteins might be folded in nature. The game provided scores based on how well they performed. Three papers in the journal Nature have been published, based on Foldit discoveries, since the game’s release in 2008; the most famous, in 2011, explained how Foldit players had helped to decipher the structure of an AIDS-related enzyme, a problem that scientists had been trying to solve for years.

“Mr. Popovic plans to unveil a new project this week, a synthetic-biology game called NanoCrafter, whose goal is to discover molecular structures that could benefit vaccine and cancer research.”

Read more here. Read more →

Vote for SNUPI as GeekWire’s “Gadget of the Year”

Awards0GWA_banners_300x250-02-300x249Balloting for the GeekWire Awards continues, with UW startup SNUPI (Gabe Cohn, Jeremy Jaech, Shwetak Patel, Matt Reynolds) one of five finalists for “Gadget of the Year.”

Vote for SNUPI as “Gadget of the Year” here!

And while you’re at it …

UW’s Ambient Backscatter is a finalist for “Innovation of the Year,” here.

Long-time UW CSE professor Oren Etzioni, who recently left to lead Paul Allen’s Allen Institute for Artificial Intelligence, is a finalist for “Hire of the Year,” here.

Rover.com, founded by Madrona’s Greg Gottesman, who taught our Entrepreneurship course during Winter Quarter, is a finalist for “Startup of the Year,” here.

“Geek of the Year” is a tough choice: finalists include Code.org’s Hadi Partovi, Madrona’s Julie Sandler, and frequent CSE guest lecturer Dan Shapiro.  Let your conscience be your guide, here.

Sarah Bird of Moz, who appeared in a recent UW CSE promotional video, is a finalist for “CEO of the Year,” here.

Adina Mangubat, who founded Spiral Genetics while a UW student, is a finalist for “Young Entrepreneur of the Year,” here.

Madrona company Redfin, led by Glenn Kelman – frequent UW CSE guest lecturer and, along with Sarah Bird, a participant in UW CSE’s recent promotional video – is a finalist for “Next Tech Titan,” here.

Vote early and often!  One vote in each category per IP address, but don’t let that be a barrier! Read more →

UW CSE Ph.D. alum Gary Kildall to be honored by IEEE on Friday

GK_ONeal-542x761-213x300On Friday, 1972 UW CSE Ph.D. alum Gary Kildall will be honored by IEEE with a “Milestones in Electrical Engineering and Computing” plaque at the site of his company Digital Research Inc. in Pacific Grove, CA.

Kildall’s CP/M was the first microcomputer operating system, and the dominant OS throughout the 1970s and early 1980s, until Microsoft purchased QDOS (a CP/M lookalike) from UW CSE bachelors alum Tim Paterson and licensed it to IBM as MS-DOS.

Seattle Times article here.  UW CSE News post with multiple links to background material here. Read more →

CSE’s Brandon Lucia, David Balatero are netcat: “Cycles Per Instruction”

a2518472733_2UW CSE Ph.D. alum Brandon Lucia and bachelors alum David Balatero are 2/3’s of the band netcat.  Brandon writes:

“We use lots of computers in our band so we released our album as a working Linux kernel module (as well as digital and cassette).  Various social media + Internet personalities (Hacker News, Reddit, jwz.org, twitter, Greg Kroah-Hartman, Dan Kaminski, etc.) all nodded to it.   In fact gregkh, the maintainer of Linux-stable, has contributed 2 patches!  It’s still on pg 1 of Hacker News this evening and we’ve gotten thousands of new people listening as a result!”

Read more →
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