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CSE’s Stephen Spencer wins 2008 ACM SIGGRAPH Outstanding Service Award

Read the article here. “More than the content, deliverables and events, Stephen says he most enjoys working with the members of our community, from volunteers to contributors to contractors. With this award, we collectively and formally reciprocate by expressing how much we enjoy working with Stephen, and to give him the recognition he never expects but so clearly deserves.”… Read more →
August 1, 2008

“Best Reason to Drop Your Business Major for English”

Read the article here. Seattle Weekly profiles Anu Taranath, wife of CSE faculty member Raj Rao, in their annual “Best of Seattle” feature: “‘Brilliant and inspirational.’ ‘An incredible woman.’ ‘Amazing’: just a few of the things former students have written about the tiny, quiet, and very pregnant woman sitting at a Lake City bakery table. Dr. Anu Taranath is the highest-rated member of the University of Washington English faculty on ratemyprofessors.com – despite having one of the lower ‘easiness’… Read more →
August 1, 2008

“Envisioning the Future of Computing Research”

Read the article here. CSE’s Ed Lazowska writes: “How can we work together to establish, articulate, and pursue compelling visions for our field – visions that will shape the intellectual future of the field, that will catalyze research investment and public support, and that will attract the best and brightest minds of a new generation? The National Science Foundation asked the Computing Research Association to create the Computing Community Consortium (CCC) to address this challenge. The mechanics of the… Read more →
August 1, 2008

CSE’s Brett Newlin: Olympic oarsman (NY Times)

2005 UW Computer Engineering bachelors alumnus Brett Newlin will represent the United States in the Men’s Four at the Beijing Olympics. A four-time national team member and first-time Olympian, Brett was named USRowing’s Male Athlete of the Year in 2006. Brett was one of six US Olympic Team members featured in an August 3 NY Times spread, Bodies of Work: “‘In high school, I was kind of a beanpole. Then in college I started rowing, and muscles started popping… Read more →
July 31, 2008

“Google Forging Connections with University of Washington, but Still Has a Ways To Go”

Read the article here. “Lazowska’s department has 150-plus alumni working for Google – many based at the company’s headquarters in Mountain View, CA, but an increasing number in Kirkland and Seattle. ‘We have dozens of undergraduate students doing summer internships at Google, many graduate students carrying out their research at Google, and two faculty members spending the year there on sabbatical [Gaetano Borriello and Steve Gribble],’ says Lazowska. And Brian Bershad, director of Google’s Seattle site, is a UW… Read more →
July 1, 2008

“If You Have a Problem, Ask Everyone”

Read the article here. “This year, researchers at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute and the University of Washington began recruiting computer gamers to an online competition, named Foldit, aimed at unraveling one of the knottiest problems of biology: how proteins fold.”… Read more →
July 1, 2008

Mikhail Manyak: 1988-2008

Read the article here. Mikhail Manyak, 20, a University of Washington Computer Engineering student, died Sunday after suffering a massive allergic reaction to medications prescribed following oral surgery.… Read more →
July 1, 2008

“Computer Science Courses Attracting More Students”

Read the article here. CSE’s Ed Lazowska in the Chronicle of Higher Education.… Read more →
July 1, 2008

CSE’s Yoky Matsuoka profiled on PBS Nova

CSE’s Yoky Matsuoka is profiled by PBS’s Nova science series. “A former tennis prodigy aims to create advanced prosthetic limbs controlled by human thought. Learn how a self-described ‘airhead’ came to embrace her inner scientist, and what she’s doing to encourage young women to pursue scientific careers.” View the video at Nova.… Read more →
July 1, 2008

“Web-based program gives the blind Internet access” (Washington Post)

“Blind people generally use computers with the help of screen-reader software, but those products can cost more than $1,000, so they’re not exactly common on public PCs at libraries or Internet cafes. Now a free new Web-based program for the blind aims to improve the situation. It’s called WebAnywhere, and it was developed by a computer science graduate student at the University of Washington.” Read the article at The Washington Post.… Read more →
July 1, 2008

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