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UW Daily on UW CSE’s FoneAstra project

130128 BH Breast Milk WEB 2.full“The capabilities of mobile devices have been expanding to serve purposes far beyond communication. More recently, this trend has centered around creating smartphone applications for medical purposes.

“A project out of the UW uses new technology to monitor safe breast milk pasteurization with a mobile device. This app, called FoneAstra, was developed by UW computer science and engineering (CSE) graduate student Rohit Chaudhri in collaboration with the Seattle-based nongovernmental organization PATH and the UW Department of Human Centered Design & Engineering (HCDE).”

“With a portable receipt printer, an android phone, and a temperature probe, hospital staff are now able to track the milk and regulate the temperature during pasteurization for around $700 instead of costing between $10,000 and $50,000.”

Read more here.  Learn more about the project here. Read more →

Another CACM “Research Highlight” for UW CSE’s Hadi Esmaeilzadeh

HadiWhen University of Texas faculty stars Doug Burger and Kathryn McKinley moved to Microsoft Research, they brought with them graduate student Hadi Esmaeilzadeh, who transferred to UW CSE and added CSE’s Luis Ceze as an advisor.

Hadi has had an amazing streak of high-profile results recently:

And now, another:

Congratulations again, Hadi! Read more →

Seattle Weekly: “Ouch: Washington Among Top Ten States in Cuts to Higher Education”

Money for College… and the 4- years were cut much more deeply than the 2-years …

… and the research institutions were cut much more deeply than the other 4-years …

… and UW was hit worst of all.

Read the article here. Read more →

CSE’s “Rome in a Day” featured by National Science Foundation

i8-romeNSF’s bi-weekly “CS Bits & Bytes” featured UW CSE’s “Rome in a Day” project back in December.  (An email version went out then, but the web version only just became available due to a snafu.)

“The University of Washington team, with the help of NSF funding, has been able to create a computer program that includes a “parallel matching” system that can match massive collections of images very quickly to create 3D reconstructions. The team ran 150,000 images from Flicker.com associated with the tags “Rome” or “Roma” through their matching algorithm, and the images organized themselves into a number of groups that corresponded to major landmarks. In one example, the computer analysis was able to take 2,106 photos of the Colosseum in Rome, map nearly one million points on those images, and reconstruct a 3D image of the Colosseum. Other 3D images reconstructed included Trevi Fountain, the Pantheon, and St. Peter’s Basilica. This computer matching and reconstruction from Rome took a total of 21 computer hours and near 500 computer cores, or central processing units. In addition to Rome, the project reconstructed 3D models of landmarks in Venice, Italy and Dubrovnik, Croatia.”

Read the post and watch videos here. Read more →

Slate: “How [UW CSE Ph.D. alum] Google’s Jeff Dean became the Chuck Norris of the Internet”

jd“Jeff Dean facts aren’t, well, true. But the fact that someone went to the trouble to make up Chuck Norris-esque exploits about Dean is remarkable. That’s because Jeff Dean is a software engineer, and software engineers are not like Chuck Norris. For one thing, they’re not lone rangers—software development is an inherently collaborative enterprise. For another, they rarely shoot cowboys with an Uzi.

“Nevertheless, on April Fool’s Day 2007, some admiring young Google engineers saw fit to bestow upon Jeff Dean the honor of a website extolling his programming achievements. For instance:

  • Compilers don’t warn Jeff Dean. Jeff Dean warns compilers.
  • Jeff Dean writes directly in binary. He then writes the source code as documentation for other developers.
  • When Jeff Dean has an ergonomic evaluation, it is for the protection of his keyboard.
  • Jeff Dean was forced to invent asynchronous APIs one day when he optimized a function so that it returned before it was invoked.”

Read more here. Read more →

Success disaster: Google Self-Driving Car presentation

carHopefully the fire marshal is otherwise occupied …

IMPORTANT:  Babak Parviz’s Friday talk about Google Glass has been moved to EE125 to provide additional space.  Friday, 2:00-2:30, EE125. Read more →

Notkinfest! Please join us on Friday February 1

UW CSE invites you to join in celebrating the career of David Notkin at Notkinfest on the afternoon of Friday February 1.

  • 4:00-4:30 – Colloquium, EE 105: Michael Ernst, “Software evolution then and now: the research impact of David Notkin”
  • 4:30-6:00 – Reception, Microsoft Atrium, Paul G. Allen Center for Computer Science & Engineering
    • 5:00-5:20 – Brief remarks

Please join us!

Post-event information – photographs, videos, the establishment of the David Notkin Endowed Graduate Fellowship in Computer Science & Engineering – here.

Notkinfest_FF OP Read more →

UW Master of Human-Computer Interaction and Design program seeks Director

MHCI+DUW’s new Master of Human-Computer Interaction and Design (MHCI+D) is offered by leading UW faculty from four units:  Computer Science & Engineering, Human-Centered Design & Engineering, the Information School, and the Division of Design.

MHCI+D is seeking a Director.  Learn more here. Read more →

T.J. Vassar

2020216803We join all of Seattle in remembering an outstanding educator and an extraordinary human being.

Read a lovely Seattle Times article by Katherine Long here. Read more →

UW CSE big data startup Decide.com in NY Times … again …

18gw-decide-blog480“At the International Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas in early January, manufacturers tantalized consumers with new electronics soon to hit the shelves. But what does that do to the prices of current models that are being replaced? Is this a golden buying opportunity? …

Decide.com, which tracks the price of electronics, studied what happened to the cost of TVs and laptops in past years after C.E.S.”

Read more here.  Try Decide.com here. Read more →

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