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Zorah Fung to join UW CSE faculty

ZorahZorah Fung took UW’s introductory computer science course, CSE142, as an incoming freshman in the fall of 2010. She was surprised to find how much she enjoyed the course. According to Zorah, “CS wasn’t even something on my radar for me to consider until I took the course.” She only signed up for it because she couldn’t get into a psychology class that was full.

Five years later she has received Bachelors and Masters degrees from CSE. Along the way she was deeply involved in the undergraduate TA program for the 14X classes, and she was the summer instructor for CSE142 in 2014 – receiving teaching evaluations that were higher than some faculty in the department have ever achieved. She also completed two internships at Google and another at Sift Science (a fraud detection startup founded by UW CSE alums).

Most recently Zorah taught this spring’s CSE142 to nearly 1,000 students, mentored by CSE Principal Lecturer Stuart Reges, who reports hearing from many students in the course who have been inspired by Zorah in the same way that the course inspired her five years ago. “She’s a great role model and her high energy level is infectious,” Reges said. He mentioned that he had particularly heard from young women taking the class who said that having a confident, successful woman teaching the course encourages them to consider computer science as a possible major.

And the best news of all? Zorah has just joined the CSE faculty as a Lecturer. (She plans to work for Sift Science for six months before returning to Seattle in January to teach.)

Welcome Zorah!

(We had previously announced the recruiting this year of Ras Bodik, Sham Kakade, Sergey Levine, Dan Ports, and Katharina Reinecke.) Read more →

UW CSE awards a record 364 degrees

CakeUW CSE awarded 364 degrees at our department graduation ceremony on Friday evening – an event that was moved this year to Hec Edmundson Pavilion (UW’s basketball stadium) because our students, families, friends, and faculty no longer fit in 1200-seat Meany Theater, UW’s largest auditorium.

234 Bachelors degrees were awarded in Computer Science and Computer Engineering. One third of the Computer Science Bachelors recipients were women – still not nearly at parity, but substantially more than double the national average for our peers.

105 Masters degrees were awarded: 51 in our part-time evening/distance Professional Masters Program, and 54 to full-time students.

Brad Smith at UW CSE graduation25 Ph.D. degrees were awarded.

At the ceremony:

Congratulations one and all!

Check out the program here. Check out coverage from our friends at GeekWire here.

  Read more →

Tim Paterson, Kevin Jeffay receive 2015 UW CSE Alumni Achievement Awards

At UW CSE’s graduation ceremony on Friday evening, 1978 Bachelors alum Tim Paterson and 1989 Ph.D. alum Kevin Jeffay will be recognized as the recipients of UW CSE’s 2015 Alumni Achievement Awards.

We inaugurated this award for two purposes: first, to recognize some of our most accomplished alumni; second, to make it clear to each year’s new graduates that they are joining a long line of men and women who have built upon their UW CSE education to change the world.

Tim Paterson

Tim PatersonTim’s email address is DosMan. In the most succinct possible way, this tells his story.

Tim was among the first UW undergraduate alums in Computer Science – he received his Bachelors degree in 1978. He joined a tiny company called Seattle Computer Products as its only engineer. Tim designed a single-board computer based on Intel’s new 8086 processor, which SCP started shipping in 1979. The computer needed an operating system, so Tim designed a system called 86-DOS, which SCP started shipping in 1980. Microsoft came knocking around that time; Microsoft first licensed and then purchased 86-DOS from Seattle Computer Products. When the first IBM PC shipped in 1981, it was running that system – re-branded by IBM as PC DOS. Tim worked on several additional releases of the system, both at Seattle Computer Products and at Microsoft. His life has taken many interesting turns since that time – from 8 years on the Visual Basic team to 5 years of competing in BattleBot tournaments.

We’re proud to recognize Tim with a UW Computer Science & Engineering Alumni Achievement Award, as the original author of what was the world’s most widely used operating system – more than that, the most widely used computer program – for two decades.

Kevin Jeffay

Kevin JeffayKevin has spent his entire 26-year post-CSE career at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where he is now the Gillian T. Cell Distinguished Professor of Computer Science, and Chair of the Department of Computer Science – the nation’s second-oldest computer science department.

As a graduate student at UW, Kevin worked with Professor Alan Shaw in the area of real-time operating systems. At UNC, his work has included real-time systems, multimedia systems, and computer network architecture. He’s made important contributions in all of those areas. An additional point of pride for those of us in UW CSE is that Kevin has always been deeply engaged with students – he’s won multiple awards for his teaching, and for many years he’s coached UNC’s team in the ACM International Collegiate Programming Contest, including two trips to the World Finals.

Read more about Tim and Kevin in MSB here. Read about previous recipients of the UW CSE Alumni Achievement Award here. Read more →

Microsoft commits $10 million to a second building for UW CSE

MSFT_logoAt this evening’s UW CSE graduation ceremony, Microsoft Executive Vice President and General Counsel Brad Smith will announce a commitment from the company of $10 million to kick-start a campaign to build a second Computer Science & Engineering building on the UW campus.

CSElogo2text_500Microsoft’s gift represents the first corporate commitment to a public-private partnership to assemble $110 million in funding to construct a new 130,000-square-foot CSE building. The new facility will provide the capacity needed to double the number of degrees we award annually.

“This is an investment in students who will become the innovators and creators of tomorrow,” Smith said. “We hope this first corporate commitment to a new UW CSE building inspires others – individual donors, companies and those in state government — to support a project vital to the future of our state.”

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Conceptual drawing of CSE2 interior

“Kids who grow up in the state of Washington deserve the opportunity to be educated for jobs at the forefront of our region’s innovation economy,” said Ed Lazowska, UW’s Bill & Melinda Gates Chair in Computer Science & Engineering. “That’s what we do in UW CSE. It’s incredibly painful to have to turn away highly qualified students from our program due to lack of space and lack of enrollment funding. Microsoft provided the first corporate gift to the Allen Center – a building that has transformed our capabilities. We can’t thank them enough for once again leading the way.”

Thank you, Microsoft!

See coverage by UW News, MicrosoftSeattle Times, GeekWire, XconomyKIRO7 TV News, KOMO4 TV News.

Join Microsoft in supporting the CSE2 campaign – information here! Read more →

Scott Hauck named to Gaetano Borriello Professorship for Educational Excellence

On Thursday, in the run-up to this year’s graduation ceremonies, EE professor (and CSE Ph.D. alum) Scott Hauck was named to the newly-created Gaetano Borriello Professorship for Educational Excellence – a professorship created jointly by EE and CSE to commemorate Gaetano’s enormous contributions.

In nominating Scott to this position, EE chair Radha Poovendran and CSE chair Hank Levy wrote:

Gaetano_FP-copy copy“Gaetano joined the University of Washington faculty in 1988, and passed away decades before his time in 2015, following an extended battle with cancer. At the time of his death he was the Jerre D. Noe Professor of Computer Science & Engineering, and Adjunct Professor of Electrical Engineering, Human Centered Design and Engineering, and Information …

“Gaetano was an extraordinary faculty member in every respect. While his research had tremendous impact, his focus was first and foremost on his students, on our educational programs in EE and CSE, and on continually strengthening the bridges between our two departments. He exemplified our mission at the University of Washington: to provide an extraordinary educational experience for our students, in which they discover, pursue, and achieve their potential; to conduct leading-edge research, but in the context of education rather than purely for its own sake; ultimately, to make the world a better place through the impact of our teaching, research, and mentoring.

hauck_158x210“Given this context, it is not difficult to identify the most appropriate person to be the inaugural holder of the Gaetano Borriello Professorship for Educational Excellence: Professor Scott Hauck of the Department of Electrical Engineering. It is our honor and pleasure to recommend, with great confidence and enthusiasm, that Scott Hauck be awarded the Borriello Professorship …

“This is a clear case of the apple (Scott) not falling far from the tree (Gaetano, his mentor):

“Scott is a strong researcher: an NSF CAREER Award, an Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellowship, multiple ‘Best Paper’ awards, etc.

“Scott is dedicated to his students, and more broadly to educational excellence. He is a recipient, like Gaetano, of the University of Washington Distinguished Teaching Award. He also is a recipient of the UW College of Engineering Faculty Innovator Award for Teaching & Learning, the UW Electrical Engineering Outstanding Research Advisor Award, and the Northwestern University Electrical and Computer Engineering Best Teacher Award. His own students have followed in his footsteps, receiving strong recognition for their accomplishments.

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Gaetano’s wife Melissa Westbrook and Scott Hauck with a plaque commemorating Scott’s appointment as the first holder of the Gaetano Borriello Professorship for Educational Excellence

“Scott has selflessly devoted enormous energy to the improving the interface between CSE and EE. He has been a leader of the ExCEL effort since its inception – ExCEL has led to the hiring of a set of truly extraordinary faculty members appointed jointly between EE and CSE. Scott’s contributions include helping to launch the effort, serving as Co-Chair of the joint CSE/EE Recruiting Committee for a number of years, and calming the waters on both sides when turbulence arises. More recently, he has led an effort to create a unified undergraduate Computer Engineering curriculum spanning EE and CSE, requiring significant flexibility and compromise on the part of both departments – flexibility and compromise that probably only Scott would have been able to negotiate. For these and other efforts, Scott received the UW Electrical Engineering Faculty Service Award.”

Congratulations Scott! Read more →

Tea time!

teatimeThis afternoon, UW CSE graduate student and faculty women took advantage of another ho-hum we’re-so-tired-of-this sunny 80 degree afternoon for a group tea / happy hour that filled the patio of the UW Club. Read more →

Katharina Reinecke joins UW CSE

katharinaKatharina Reinecke, currently Assistant Professor of Information and Computer Science at the University of Michigan, will be joining UW CSE next fall.

Katharina’s research focuses on Human-Computer Interaction, specifically on understanding the cultural implications of user interfaces and designing interfaces that are culturally adaptive. She is particularly known for developing LabInTheWild, an online virtual lab for conducting behavioral studies, which she has used to obtain data from over 2.5 million visitors from over 200 countries.  Before joining Michigan, Katharina received her Ph.D. in Computer Science from University of Zurich, Switzerland in 2010, followed by a three-year postdoc at Harvard.

Welcome, Katharina!

(We had previously announced the recruiting this year of Ras Bodik, Sham Kakade, Sergey Levine, and Dan Ports. More news to follow!) Read more →

Tom Alberg, Steve Singh on UW CSE

steveAt today’s annual “State of Technology” luncheon sponsored by the Tech Alliance and attended by 750+ regional leaders, Madrona Venture Group’s Tom Alberg interviewed Steve Singh of Seattle’s Concur Technologies, acquired by SAP in late 2014 for $8.3 billion.

UW CSE came up several times in the conversation:

Regarding funding for increased enrollment: “UW CSE could double its degree production and Concur would hire all of them!”

Regarding funding for a new building: “It’s a few tens of millions of dollars in a $40 billion annual budget. Give me a break!”

Thanks, Tom and Steve, for your tremendous support! Read more →

15th annual UW CSE Symposium on Potentially Computer Science (PoCSci ’15)

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Jeremy Stribling delivers the PoCSci ’15 keynote address

Today marked the 15th annual UW CSE Symposium on Potentially Computer Science (PoCSci ’15) “The Premier Sham Conference for Potentially Computer Science Research.”

PoCSci is the conference that in 2002 – its second year – revolutionized the field of Potentially Computer Science research through Doug Zongker’s work “Chicken Chicken Chicken: Chicken Chicken” (YouTube video of Zongker’s presentation at AAAS 2007 here). Fittingly, Zongker was honored this year with the PoCSci “Test of Time” award.

The keynote was delivered by Jeremy Stribling, the creator of the SciGen random paper generator. While SciGen has been featured in venues ranging from Nature to Reddit, Jeremy was, by his own admission, a mere shadow of last year’s PoCSci keynote speaker, Dr. James Mickens, recipient of the 2040 ACM A.M. Turing Award.

doug

Doug Zongker receives the PoCSci ’15 “Test of Time” award

Our thanks to the PoCSci organizing committee, Brandon Holt and Irene Zhang. Read more →

Seattle Times: “Legislature should fund UW computer science expansion”

d3154eb8-0a4c-11e5-938d-f2889198f979-780x1257The Seattle Times editorial board writes:

“WHILE computer science and engineering jobs boom in Washington, the state is graduating too few of its own residents in this field, which plays such a crucial role in the state’s fortunes.

“The University of Washington argues persuasively that it needs more space to address the demand both from students and employers.

“The state Legislature should appropriate funds this year to help pay for a new 130,000-square-foot computer science and engineering building.

“The university asked lawmakers for $40 million of the $105 million total, with plans to raise the remaining costs from private donors. So far, the Senate’s capital budget set aside $32 million, while the House budget appropriated only $6 million …

“Washington is fortunate to have a thriving technology industry. State lawmakers and educators must enable more homegrown students to prepare for and seize these opportunities.”

Read more here. Read more →

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