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UW wins Hawaiian “Big Splash” Cyber Defense Competition

splashBatman’s Kitchen, an interdisciplinary team involving students from CSE, the iSchool, EE, and pre-engineering, won the Hawaiian “Big Splash” Cyber Defense Competition held 8-10 March 2013.  The competition is designed to bring practitioners in industry and government together with students in a competition environment.  Teams were given a scenario of critical infrastructure in a business setting to defend against attacks by hackers (the red team) while also completing injects (e.g., setup a database, block certain websites, database audits, etc.) throughout the three-day competition.

On Day 2 of the competition, the head of the red team initiated a full-on attack against the UW team – beyond the scope of the regular competition.  The team successfully protected their network for several hours while under attack.  By 5pm on the final day of the competition, it was announced that the UW team had won by hundreds of points over the military teams entered in the competition.

The trophy for the competition will be awarded in Seattle next week.

UW participants:

  • Melody Kadenko (team advisor and competition judge), CSE
  • Bryan Eastes, CSE
  • Atanas Kirilov, CSE
  • Karl Koscher, CSE
  • David Mah, CSE
  • Michael McKeirnan, pre-engineering
  • Aasav Prakash, CSE
  • Jordan Puryear, iSchool
  • Ed Samson, CSE
  • Omar Sandoval, CSE
  • Ian Smith, CSE
  • Andrew Sorensen, UW Tacoma
  • Carlo Valentin, iSchool
  • Tim Vega, CSE
  • Rafael Vertido, CSE
  • Cullen Walsh, CSE alum
  • Thomas Winegarden, iSchool
  • Tariq Yusuf, CSE
  • Lars Zornes, CSE

Go team! Read more →

Open Information Extraction: The Movie

openieUW CSE’s Oren Etzioni and collaborators describe their work on Open Information Extraction in this excellent short video.

How can a computer accumulate a massive body of knowledge? What will Web search engines look like in ten years? To address these questions, UW CSE’s Open IE project has been developing a Web-scale information extraction system that reads arbitrary text from any domain on the Web, extracts meaningful information and stores in a unified knowledge base for efficient querying.

Watch the video here.  Learn more about Open IE here. Read more →

Wrestle Brania!

2020491546At UW’s Brain Awareness Week festivities, Kennedy Catholic High School students Thane Maudslein and Nick Correa use muscle activity to play Wrestle Brainia – an electronically powered device getting its signals through a computer hooked to the wrestlers’ arms.  Wrestle Brainia was developed by Jeremiah Wander and Dev Sarma – graduate students in CSE’s Neural Systems Lab, and undergraduate student Vivek Paramasivam, with support from UW’s Center for Sensorimotor Neural Engineering. Read more →

“Changing the Face of Computing”

sigcseThe opening keynote of the 2013 SIGCSE (Computer Science Education) conference on March 7 in Denver featured 7 5-minute “flash talks” on “Changing the Face of Computing.”  The first – “Why Broadening Participation Matters” – was presented by UW CSE’s Ed Lazowska.  See Ed’s slides here.  Read more about UW CSE’s motivations and activities here.  Learn about DawgBytes, UW CSE’s K-12 outreach program, here. Read more →

“Kate Starbird, former basketball star, chooses a different route — as usual”

2020491305A lovely Seattle Times article on Kate Starbird, a faculty member in Human Centered Design & Engineering and an adjunct professor in CSE.

“Kate Starbird does what she can to brighten her dreary fourth-floor office at Sieg Hall. A picture of her newborn nephew is above her desk. A cluster of succulent plants sits below a window looking out onto the University of Washington campus.

“Starbird, 37, is a first-year assistant professor in UW’s Department of Human Centered Design and Engineering and director of the Emerging Capacities of Mass Participation laboratory. In English, that means she teaches how social media is used in crisis situations and how to design better applications for digital volunteers.”

Read more here. Read more →

UW CSE undergraduate teaching assistants

TAsWhy do CSE 142/143 ROCK (more than 2,000 students per year in 142; more than 1,300 per year in 143; off-the-scale student evaluations)?????

Great faculty, yes!  But also, 60 PHENOMENAL undergraduate teaching assistants!

Go team! Read more →

UW CSE alum Ben Hindman profiled in Wired

benStar UW CSE bachelors alum Ben Hindman headed off to graduate school at Berkeley, then bailed for Twitter when the company adopted his Mesos system for efficiently parceling work across massive numbers of servers. Wired describes the work in “Return of the Borg: How Twitter Rebuilt Google’s Secret Weapon.” Read it here. Read more →

CSE’s Dan Grossman on MOOCs

grossman2013_smallUW CSE professor Dan Grossman is profiled in a UW Provost’s report on enhancing teaching with technology.

Grossman is teaching one of the UW CSE Coursera MOOCs this quarter:  Programming Languages.  (Arvind Krishnamurthy, David Wetherall, and John Zahorjan are teaching Introduction to Computer Networks.)

Says Grossman: “For me, it is largely about being passionate about the course material and how to present it. Given this passion, why would I not want the largest rooftop I can find from which to shout? … With so many students, some will have a transformative educational experience, others will learn very little, and most who express some interest will not end up participating. To compare it to a conventional course where students get personal attention, have significant financial investments, and have shared background as part of a coherent curriculum, is difficult. I instead prefer to compare it to writing a textbook. Just as many people touching a book do not read it and those who read it have a wide range of understanding as a result, the learning in MOOCs defies description.”

Read the profile here. Read more →

“Google Launches Sign Language Interpreter App For Hangouts, Adds Accessibility Features To Gmail, Drive And Chrome”

sli-app-hangoutsTechCrunch reports on a new Google accessibility initiative, complete with a photo of UW CSE Ph.D. alum Anna Cavender, who works on accessibility at Google’s Seattle engineering office.

“Google announced that it has added a number of accessibility to Chrome, Chrome OS, Gmail and Google Drive that should make using Google suites of web apps a bit easier to use for blind and low-vision users. In addition, Google also launched a new sign language interpreter app and keyboard shortcuts for Hangouts for the deaf and hard of hearing, as well as those who can’t or don’t want to use a mouse while using Hangouts.”

Read more here. Read more →

The world’s most admired companies

5companiesJust a small bit of regional crowing:  5 of the top 25 companies on Fortune’s list of the world’s “most admired” companies are Seattle born and raised:  Amazon.com (#3), Starbucks (#5), Nordstrom (#16), Microsoft (#17), and Costco Wholesale (#23).  Go team!  See the list here. Read more →

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