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“There are talented, hard-working, young people doing good work all over the planet.
“And then there are the MIT Technology Review’s 35 innovators under the age of 35 that are simply on another level.
“Julie Kientz [UW HCDE professor and CSE adjunct professor, and wife of UW CSE and EE professor Shwetak Patel] is one of those visionaries.”
Read more here.… Read more →
August 24, 2013
Julie Kientz, a faculty member in UW Human Centered Design & Engineering and an adjunct faculty member in CSE, has won a TR35 Award from MIT Technology Review, which annually recognizes the top 35 innovators under the age of 35. Julie was honored for her work in computer software. Her research looks at how technology can be used to support health and education. In particular, she has developed prototype applications to monitor sleep disorders, assist parents in tracking… Read more →
August 21, 2013
UW CSE’s OneBusAway transit app goes national! Tampa (and several other cities) are rolling it out with great fanfare and commitment!
Here’s a news story from Tampa’s WTSP Channel 10, which credits UW.… Read more →
August 20, 2013
Slate has a nice video describing UW CSE’s Ambient Backscatter technology. Watch the video here. Learn more about Ambient Backscatter here.… Read more →
August 20, 2013
MIT Technology Review reports on UW CSE’s “Ambient Backscatter” innovation:
“A novel type of wireless device sends and receives data without a battery or other conventional power source. Instead, the devices harvest the energy they need from the radio waves that are all around us from TV, radio, and Wi-Fi broadcasts.
“These seemingly impossible devices could lead to a slew of new uses of computing, from better contactless payments to the spread of small, cheap sensors just about everywhere.
“‘Traditionally… Read more →
August 14, 2013
UW CSE Ph.D. alum Ed Felten – Director of Princeton University’s Center for Information Technology Policy, and Professor of Computer Science and of Public Affairs there, recently returned to Princeton after 18 months as the first Chief Technologist of the U.S. Federal Trade Commission.
Today Ed delivered the keynote at the 22nd USENIX Security Symposium: “Dr. Felten Goes To Washington: Lessons from 18 Months in Government.”
One of these days, the video will be online, presumably here. Meanwhile, you’ll… Read more →
August 14, 2013
As a UW CSE Ph.D. student more than a decade ago, Doug Zongker (now a Google engineer) first delivered his now-famous parody of unintelligible scientific presentations: “Chicken Chicken Chicken: Chicken Chicken.” (No video of the presentation exists, but the 2002 slides are still on the web here, as is the companion paper here.)
Attention increased in 2007, when Doug presented the work at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Fortunately, cameras were… Read more →
August 14, 2013
The 2003 research paper “Inferring High-Level Behavior from Low-Level Sensors” by UW CSE’s Don Patterson, Lin Liao, Dieter Fox, and Henry Kautz has been recognized with the “10 Year Impact Award” from Ubicomp 2013, the 2013 ACM International Joint Conference on Pervasive and Ubiquitous Computing.
The award committee concluded that “The paper … is an excellent example of how one can learn very useful context information from simple GPS traces and it formed the basis for today’s thriving… Read more →
August 13, 2013
“UW CSE researchers have created a new wireless communication system that allows devices to interact with each other without relying on batteries or wires for power.
“The new communication technique, which the researchers call “ambient backscatter,” takes advantage of the TV and cellular transmissions that already surround us around the clock. Two devices communicate with each other by reflecting the existing signals to exchange information. The researchers built small, battery-free devices with antennas that can detect, harness and… Read more →
August 13, 2013
Somehow UW CSE’s advancement officer Karen Howard Leikin managed to wangle a 2-hour tour of UW’s power plant and steam tunnels for CSE alums Kirk Glerum and Don Hacherl. Karen accompanied, along with UW CSE’s Ed Lazowska.
There’s no way to describe how cool this was! (Well, truth be told, it was actually pretty hot …)
The central power plant supplies steam heat, chilled water air conditioning, compressed air, and emergency power to 174 buildings on the the 643-acre UW… Read more →
August 13, 2013
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