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- Career Path of A CIO
- Dr. Fred Siff, Vice President and CIO at the University of Cincinnati discussed the career path of a Chief Information Officer with students.
- PhD Graduate Mike Helmick moving to Seattle
- Mike T. Helmick received his PhD in Computer Science this year after defending his thesis "Efficient Group Communication and the Degree-bounded Shortest Path Problem." Mike has accepted a position with Amazon.com in the Amazon Web Services area (http://aws.amazon.com/ ). He is excited that he will have the opportunity to work on "cutting edge technologies and truly large scale distributed systems." We wish Mike luck in his new Seattle digs.
- CS Faculty Welcome Professor Ernie Hall
- Professor Ernie Hall has accepted a joint appointment with the Computer Science Department. Computer science students will now have significant research and coursework opportunities in the robotics area.
- New Accend Program Empowers Students
- The Computer Science Department now offers a 5-year Accend program that will enable students to obtain a BS. in CS and an M.S. in CS in five years and two quarters.
- CS Faculty High on Google Scholar
- CS faculty have publications with high citation scores on Google Scholar
- Cincinnati hosts AI Conference
- The MAICS conference will be held April 12 & 13 in Cincinnati.
- Dr Berman Has "A Fine" Embedding
- The recent issue of SIAM Journal of Discrete Math has an article by Dr Ken Berman that describes a new technique using algebraic graph theory that solves the problem of locating Internet servers to achieve optimal fault tolerance.
- "Deep Blue and AI" Discussion on NPR
- Dr Raj Bhatnagar discusses the significance of the twelfth anniversary of "Deep Blue's" triumph over chess champion Gary Kasparov. The interview was broadcast on NPR's Cincinnati Edition.
- 3rd Annual ECE & CS Poster Competition - Call for abstracts
- The Poster Competition organized by the GSA and IEEE is an annual feature on the calendars of ECE and CS students.
- Prof Hall Creates Comic Books To Help Students
- The Cincinnati Enquirer reports that Professor Ernie Hall has discovered the joys of using comic books in the classroom.
- PhD Student Wins Prestigious Appointment
- Congratulations to Amit Sinha, the most recent Ph.D. student to graduate from the Department of Computer Science, and who has joined the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, an affiliate of Harvard Medical School in Boston, as a Computational Biologist. He will be working with a research team studying Leukemia. Amit's primary advisor was Raj Bhatnagar and his co-advisors were Jarek Meller and Anil Jegga from the Bioinformatics Division of the Children's Hospital Medical Center.
- Undergraduate Students Roll Out Disaster-Resistant File System
- Computer Science undergraduates Ryan McGovern and Chris Siebert have written and released a distributed, disaster-resistant file system they call 'Mimir'. Mimir, named for a primal god of Norse mythology, is based on the recent algorithmic breakthrough of rateless, erasure codes developed by Michael Luby. Their system is running currently on several dozen machines, and creates a dynamic multi-terabyte storage cluster that is immune to failure rates of over 50%-a remarkable achievement. Ryan and Chris maintain a blog site with more information about Mimir at www.lerao.com.
- UC's PlanetLab Contribution Upgraded Thanks to Major Equipment Donation from HP
- The Department of Computer Science has participated in the PlanetLab project for over four years, and has now carried out a significant hardware and software upgrade thanks to a significant donation of new machines from Hewlett-Packard. One of PlanetLab's main purposes is to serve as a testbed for overlay networks, and research groups at UC and other collaborating institutions are able to request a PlanetLab slice in which they can experiment with a variety of planetary-scale services, including file sharing and network-embedded storage, content distribution networks, routing and multicast overlays, QoS overlays, scalable object location, scalable event propagation, anomaly detection mechanisms, and network measurement tools. There are currently over 800 computing nodes and 600 active research projects running on PlanetLab. Thanks goes to recent Computer Science PhD student, Chad Yoshikawa, who has maintained UC's nodes and carried out the recent upgrade. Chad used PlanetLab to validate his PhD work on distributed load balancing algorithms. If you are interested in getting involved in PlanetLab please contact Prof. Fred Annexstein or Prof. Ken Berman.
- Open Source Seminar - Monday May 18th, 2009 (Northern Kentucky University, from 2009-05-08 07:00 to 2009-05-09 15:15)
- On Monday May 18th, 2009 there will be a Seminar on Risk Management in Open Source Code and Licensing at Northern Kentucky University - Ballroom in the Student Union Center. The scheduled speakers include: Bruce Perens, Kate Spelman, and David Marr. The cost is free to all registrants. Registration at : http://www.cincyip.org
- Prof. Bhattacharya: New Department Head for CS
- 2010 CS Summer Camp for High School Students (Rhodes Hall, UC campus., from 2009-06-14 09:00 to 2009-06-25 16:00)
- The CS Department at UC will be offering a summer camp for high school students from June 14th to 25th. More information can be found on the camp web site.
- Brad Kuhn from Software Freedom Law Center (644 Baldwin, from 2007-02-28 18:00 to 2007-02-28 19:30)
- Brad Kuhn, Chief Technology Officer, Software Freedom Law Center speaks on "Software Freedom, Digital Restriction, and the Age of the Personal Terabyte"
- CS Team takes 2nd Place in CMU Invitational Programming Contest
- CS teams do will at CMU
- Prof. Bhattacharya is Keynote Speaker at Canadian IEEE Annual Conference
- Seminar by Dr. Larry O'Gorman, Bell Labs (427 ERC, from 2010-05-24 14:00 to 2010-05-24 15:00)
- Dr. Larry O'Gorman will speak on Monday, May 24th on the topic "Multimedia Signal Processing and Media Security: From Digital Libraries to Biometrics to Telepresence"
- SIGCSE 2007, Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education (Northern Kentucky Convention Center and Cincinnati Marriott at RiverCenter, from 2007-03-07 00:00 to 2007-03-10 00:00)
- The 38th ACM Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education provides a diverse selection of technical sessions and opportunities for learning and interaction.
- UC hosts ACM International Collegiate Programming Contest - East Central North American Region (Rhodes Hall, UC Main Campus, from 2009-10-30 11:30 to 2009-10-31 11:30)
- ACM programming contest on October 30-31st.