Skip to main content
Confused about how the University of Washington fared in the 2009-11 biennial budget? There can be room for honest debate about whether the decisions that were made were smart in terms of the future of the state. But there should not be any confusion concerning the facts. Here they are!… Read more →
December 12, 2009
While it will be long time before “one laptop per child” is true everywhere in the world, UW CSE undergraduates have developed a system that lets up to four students share a single computer to do interactive math problems.
UW undergraduate students Clint Tseng, Heather Underwood, and Sunil Garg, who participated in Joyojeet Pal‘s computer science project course, decided to try building a system for a numeric keypad similar to Microsoft MultiPoint platform, which connects multiple mice to… Read more →
December 10, 2009
Even though James Cameron’s movie Avatar is still a few weeks away from opening, there already exist real-life systems for controlling another body remotely. UW CSE’s Raj Rao has developed an elegant mind-controlled robot that takes care of the boring, low-level stuff so the controller can concentrate on more interesting, higher level goals. The little humanoid bot is controlled by the human brain. By measuring electric signals through the surface of the skull (no surgery required), you can command the… Read more →
December 7, 2009
A research collaboration between UW CSE’s James Landay and graduate student Scott Saponas, Microsoft Research, and the University of Toronto is developing a muscle-controlled interface enabling gesture-driven interaction with computers. “It’s perhaps the most promising of the billion or so Minority-Report-aspiring prototype interfaces,” says Popular Science.
“The new muscle-sensing project is ‘going after healthy consumers who want richer input modalities,’ says Desney Tan, a researcher at Microsoft and UW CSE affiliate faculty. As a result, he and his… Read more →
December 7, 2009
December 6-12 is Computer Science Education Week. Learn more here!… Read more →
December 5, 2009
Columns, the University of Washington’s alumni magazine, writes on UW CSE’s Vanish project:
“The Vanish program encrypts a message, breaks the encryption key into many tiny pieces, and then sprinkles these pieces throughout a large peer-to-peer network that consists of more than a million computers all over the world. As individual computers leave the network and those that remain purge their memories, pieces of the key are gradually lost. Once a certain number of pieces are lost, the key can… Read more →
December 5, 2009
On Thursday December 3, UW CSE hosted more than 100 women in technology from the Seattle area for the Seattle Girl Geek Dinner. CSE’s Magda Balazinska and Yoky Matsuoka provided the technical content. CSE’s Susan Eggers and Justine Sherry coordinated the event.
A terrific brochure prepared for the event is here.… Read more →
December 5, 2009
“12:42 a.m. Having had one too many margaritas to drive, you open OneBusAway, created by UW students Brian Ferris and Kari Watkins, to find the closest bus route, nearby stops and exactly what time it will arrive to whisk you safely home.”
(Why else would you take the bus?)
Read the article here.… Read more →
December 4, 2009
More than 100 women are members of the UW Computer Science & Engineering student and faculty community. This brochure was prepared for a meeting of the Seattle Girl Geek Dinner group that we’re hosting tonight.… Read more →
December 3, 2009
TechFlash reports on the Xconomy-sponsored “Future of Search” event held at the University of Washington on November 30. UW CSE’s Ed Lazowska moderated a panel of four experts: Google Seattle site director (and UW CSE affiliate professor) Brian Bershad, UW CSE professor (and Farecast founder) Oren Etzioni, Vulcan investment manager Steve Hall, and Microsoft Bing engineering director Harry Shum.
” … the primary challenge facing any company thinking about getting into the business was summarized succinctly in a zinger from… Read more →
December 1, 2009
« Newer Posts — Older Posts »