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It’s nuts at the UW CSE startup recruiting fair

Startup Recruiting Fair Crowd(1)Today’s the first day of the 2015 UW CSE Industry Affiliates meeting – an afternoon of recruiting by startups and small companies, followed by a “startup pitch gong show.” And it’s nuts!

Tomorrow: research interactions and our annual evening Open House, concluding with the awarding of the Madrona Prize.

Wednesday: recruiting by established companies.

A million thanks to all of our supporters in the tech community! You play a big role in making what we do possible, and in making it worthwhile! Read more →

Tom Alberg, Amazon, and Seattle’s tech scene

On the 20th anniversary of Madrona Venture Group, and the day before the annual awarding of the Madrona Prize at our Industry Affiliates meeting, a lovely Seattle Times profile of its co-founder and our friend Tom Alberg.

“As one of the first investors in Amazon.com, Tom Alberg has been an active participant in the Seattle area’s tech industry for decades. He talks about those years, Amazon and investing in risky startups.”

Related: A post by Amazon’s Jay Carney, “What The New York Times Didn’t Tell You,” presenting a number of un-reported facts related to the recent New York Times article on Amazon’s workplace practices.

“The next time you see a sensationalistic quote in the Times like “nearly every person I worked with, I saw cry at their desk,” you might wonder whether there’s a crucial piece of context or backstory missing — like admission of fraud — and whether the Times somehow decided it just wasn’t important to check.” Read more →

Grace and Magda

A terrific crew of UW CSE students returned from the Grace Hopper Celebration of Women in Computing just in time for a brunch for CSE’s women graduate students hosted by Magda Balazinska.

We are proud to have received, last spring, the inaugural annual award from the National Center for Women & Information Technology for Excellence in Promoting Women in Undergraduate Computing.

Hopper
Magda Read more →

UW CSE Ph.D. alum Karl Koscher named runner-up for SIGSAC Doctoral Dissertation Award

Karl Koscher at CCS 2015

Karl Koscher (left) accepts his award at CCS

UW CSE Ph.D. alum Karl Koscher has been named runner-up for the second annual SIGSAC Doctoral Dissertation Award for Outstanding Ph.D. Thesis in Computer and Information Security for his UW Ph.D. thesis, “Securing Embedded Systems: Analyses of Modern Automotive Systems and Enabling Near-Real Time Dynamic Analysis.” The award was announced at the Conference on Computer and Communications Security, the flagship annual conference of the ACM Special Interest Group on Security, Audit and Control (SIGSAC), held this week in Denver, Colorado.

Karl, who worked with UW CSE professor Yoshi Kohno in the Security and Privacy Research Lab, is now a postdoctoral researcher at UCSD. He was part of the team that hacked a car driven by correspondent Lesley Stahl for an episode of CBS News’ 60 Minutes, a dramatic illustration of his research assessing the security vulnerabilities of the connected systems found in today’s automobiles.

To learn more about Karl’s work, read his dissertation here, and see our previous blog posts on UW’s and UCSD’s car hacking research here, here and here.

Way to go, Karl! Read more →

UW and Microsoft Research develop camera that reveals what we can’t see

HyperCam imagesUW faculty and students worked with Microsoft Research on the development of a new, affordable hyperspectral camera called HyperCam that is capable of capturing details unseen by the naked eye – including those beneath the surface of an object. The system, which has many potential applications, was created by UW CSE+EE professor Shwetak Patel; UW CSE professor Gaetano Borriello; CSE graduate students Mayank GoelEric Whitmire and Alex Mariakakis; and Scott Saponas, Neel Joshi, Dan Morris, Brian Guenter and Marcel Gavriliu of Microsoft Research.

From the UW media release:

“Hyperspectral imaging is used today in everything from satellite imaging and energy monitoring to infrastructure and food safety inspections, but the technology’s high cost has limited its use to industrial or commercial purposes. The UW and Microsoft Research team wanted to see if they could make a relatively simple and affordable hyperspectral camera for consumer uses….

“HyperCam, which uses the visible and near-infrared parts of the electromagnetic spectrum, illuminates a scene with 17 different wavelengths and generates an image for each.

“One challenge in hyperspectral imaging is sorting through the sheer volume of frames produced. The UW software analyzes the images and finds ones that are most different from what the naked eye sees, essentially zeroing in on ones that the user is likely to find most revealing.”

While existing hyperspectral imaging systems can cost tens of thousands of dollars, HyperCam comes in at around $800 – and could cost as little as $50 to incorporate into a mobile phone camera. The team envisions several potential uses for HyperCam, including food quality monitoring, biometric security, gaming, and health sensing. In one demonstration, the researchers were able to predict the ripeness of fruit with 94 percent accuracy using hyperspectral images of the flesh beneath the skin. In another, HyperCam was shown to be able to differentiate between different users’ hands with 99 percent accuracy.

According to Patel, “‘It’s not there yet, but the way this hardware was built you can probably imagine putting it in a mobile phone…With this kind of camera, you could go to the grocery store and know what produce to pick by looking underneath the skin and seeing if there’s anything wrong inside. It’s like having a food safety app in your pocket.”

Read the full media release and watch a video demonstration here, and read the research paper here. Read about HyperCam in GeekWire here. Read more →

UW CSE’s Yoshi Kohno and students featured in NOVA episode on cybersecurity

NOVA CyberWar ThreatUW CSE professor and cybersecurity expert Yoshi Kohno and two teams of graduate students from the Security and Privacy Research Lab were featured in this week’s episode of NOVA, “CyberWar Threat,” that aired on PBS.

The first part of the segment revisited the now-famous car hacking research done in conjunction with UCSD. Yoshi and his team – which included former CSE Ph.D. students Karl Koscher, now a postdoc at UCSD, and Franzi Roesner, now a professor at UW CSE – remotely take over the brakes of a car in a dramatic illustration of how vulnerable embedded systems in automobiles are to attack.

In the second segment, EE Ph.D. student Tope Oluwafemi and CSE bachelor’s student Tariq Yusuf (both now alumni) required nothing more than a laptop and their own wireless hotspot in order to hack into CSE Ph.D. student Alex Takakuwa’s laptop as he sat in a local coffee shop. By directing his laptop to an “evil twin” network rather than the coffee shop’s own WiFi, the hackers were able to discover his home security login, and subsequently figure out where he lives. NOVA follows Tope and Tariq as they later break into Alex’s house, demonstrating the potential vulnerability of home automation systems that enable remote control over the internet.

Watch the entire episode here (the segment featuring the UW team starts 29 minutes in). Read more →

Join us at UW CSE’s annual Open House!

affiliates_openhouseUW CSE’s annual Open House for friends, alumni, and industry affiliates will take place on Tuesday October 20 from 5-7 p.m. in the Paul G. Allen Center for Computer Science & Engineering. Food, drink, posters, demos, friends, and the awarding of the Madrona Prize.

Please join us!  Information here!affiliates_posters Read more →

Madhouse at UW CSE resume review workshop!

IMG_5749UW CSE’s annual Industry Affiliates Meeting takes place next Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday:

  • Monday: recruiting by startups and smaller companies, followed by a “startup pitch gong show” and a Q&A session
  • Tuesday: a day of research interactions, followed by an early evening Open House  with posters and demos for affiliate, alumni, and friend, including the awarding of the Madrona Prize
  • Wednesday: recruiting by established companies

In the run-up, 315 student resumes were reviewed on Tuesday by 15 exhausted industry volunteers!IMG_5750 Many thanks to Cynthia Claeys, Brittany Ruiz and Carolyn Balousek (Google), Greg Geiger and Kerri Keafer (Amazon), Jennifer List and John Schmid (Marchex), Liz Symes (Zillow), Ken Parker and Robert Noble (Indeed), Hilary Ayers and Anne Moergeli (Redfin), and Brooke Simpson, Chelsey Rooney, and Brandon Feicho (Microsoft)!

Next prep event: practice interviews on Thursday!

Learn more here! And please plan to attend Tuesday evening’s Open House, 5:00-7:00 p.m.! Read more →

Ana Mari Cauce named UW President!

Congratulations to us!

Ana Mari is one of us. She arrived here as a faculty member in 1986, and she’s made her career here, not just as a faculty member, but as Director of the Honors Program, Chair of Psychology, Dean of Arts & Sciences, Provost, and Interim President. She has risen through the ranks on her very considerable merits, and she is committed to the University of Washington’s missions of excellence and access.

Seattle Times, UW Today, Chair of the Board of Regents Bill Ayer’s statement, GeekWire Read more →

Gaetano Borriello Feet on the Ground Humanitarian Symposium

eric

Eric Brewer

IEEE award

Melissa Westbrook and Jim Jeffries

jkb

John Bennett

Lazowska

Ed Lazowska

panel

Richard Anderson, Carl Hartung, Sam Sudar, Waylon Brunette, and Nicola Dell

UNESCO award

Melissa Westbrook and Sheree Wen

Saturday marked the Gaetano Borriello Feet on the Ground Humanitarian Symposium, held in conjunction with the IEEE Global Humanitarian Technology Conference (GHTC 2015).

Following an introduction by Ed Lazowska, awards commemorating Gaetano’s achievements were presented to his wife Melissa by IEEE USA President Jim Jeffries and by UNESCO United States National Commissioner Sheree Wen. Eric Brewer (UC Berkeley) and John Bennett (University of Colorado), leaders in ICTD, presented keynotes. Richard Anderson, organizer of the symposium, chaired a panel that included Gaetano’s students Waylon Brunette, Nicola Dell, Carl Hartung, and Sam Sudar. The symposium concluded with technical presentations by Lorenzo Violante Ruiz (International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies), Kiersten Israel-Ballard (PATH), Roy Want (Google) Heather Underwood (University of Colorado), and David Thau (Google).

The symposium was a wonderful way to commemorate Gaetano’s extraordinary leadership in developing and deploying appropriate technologies to improve the lives of the under-served throughout the world.

Videos of the talks will be available soon. Read more →

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