UW Study Abroad Scholarship Applications

The Global Opportunities Scholarship provides funding for Husky Promise
& Pell Grant eligible students to study abroad.   The Fritz Scholarship
supports Social Sciences & Humanities majors to globalize their education.  Last academic year, we awarded scholarships ranging from $2,000-$5,000 to 150 UW undergraduates, many of whom had never traveled internationally before.

http://www.goglobal.washington.edu/

Students can apply directly through the website listed above.
The DEADLINE for winter & spring quarter programs is November 5, 2009.

Global Opportunities Advisers are also available to answer questions and provide support with the application process.  Please contact us for individual support and refer students to our regular drop-in hours at the IP&E office.

GO! ADVISERS weekly drop-in hours:
WEDNESDAYS 10-1pm
IP&E office, Schmitz Hall 4th Floor

This program is a partnership between:
Center for Experiential Learning
International Programs & Exchanges
Office of Minority Affairs & Diversity

Amy HyunAh Pak
amypak@uw.edu

Eric Baldwin
ericdean@u.washington.edu

Catherine Rizos
crizos@u.washington.edu

Posted in category Scholarships Study Abroad by Megan on October 30, 2009

CMU – Silicon Valley Grad School Info Session Tuesday, lunch provided

Carnegie Mellon Silicon Valley Info Session
Tuesday, November 3, 2009
EEB 303
11:30 – 12:30 •
Master of Software Engineering
Ph.D., Electrical Engineering and Computer Engineering
(CyLab Mobility Research Center)

Join us for lunch and find out about the exciting graduate
programs available at Carnegie Mellon’s Silicon Valley campus,
in the epicenter of the software engineering industry. For more information, contact chris.zeise@sv.cmu.edu: 650‐335‐2810 http://sv.cmu.edu

Posted in category Grad School by Crystal Eney on October 30, 2009

Friday: Affiliates recruiting day

From: cs-ugrads-admin@cs.washington.edu [mailto:cs-ugrads-admin@cs.washington.edu] On Behalf Of Ed Lazowska
Sent: Tuesday, October 27, 2009 11:32 PM
To: cs-ugrads – Mailing List; cse451 – Mailing List
Cc: Ed Lazowska; Kay Beck-Benton
Subject: [cs-ugrads] FRIDAY — Affiliates recruiting day

Please be sure to turn out for the CSE Industrial Affiliates recruiting day, Friday in the Atrium beginning at 9 a.m.

There will be more than 30 top tech companies present.

Even if you’re not currently seeking an internship or a permanent position, this is a great chance to see what’s out there.

Additionally, a strong turnout of great students does a lot to enhance our reputation with these companies, which translates into jobs for you and others, and financial support for our programs.

So, PLEASE, plan to spend an hour walking the floor and talking to folks.

Thanks!
_______________________________________________
Cs-ugrads mailing list
Cs-ugrads@cs.washington.edu
https://mailman.cs.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/cs-ugrads

Posted in category Uncategorized by Crystal Eney on October 28, 2009

RIM (Research In Motion) Tech Talk – 10/28 5:30pm EEB125

This is the experience you’ve been looking for.

What kind of career have you imagined for yourself?  Whatever it is, we think you’ll find it at Research In Motion (RIM).  It’s time to discover how the company that created the BlackBerry (R) smartphone can engage you.

Want to learn more?  Come to our Information Session and find out.

We’re currently looking to hire students from UW.

Posted in category Uncategorized by ngarrett on October 28, 2009

Facebook Tech Talk Tonight!

Facebook will be on campus tonight for a tech talk.  It’s in EEB105 and starts at 5:30pm.

Posted in category Uncategorized by ngarrett on October 27, 2009

Ivan Sutherland talk today at 3:30


From: faculty-admin@cs.washington.edu [mailto:faculty-admin@cs.washington.edu] On Behalf Of Carl Ebeling
Sent: Tuesday, October 27, 2009 10:49 AM
To: cs-grads – Mailing List; faculty – Mailing List; cs-ugrads – Mailing List
Subject: Reminder – Ivan Sutherland today at 3:30

This is your chance to hear one of the great figures in computer science.  Ivan is a Turing Award winner who pioneered interactive graphics and constraint systems with Sketchpad. but in recent years has worked in asynchronous circuits and systems.  Today he is going to talk about FLEET, a fine-grained parallel computer architecture he developed recently while visiting at Berkeley.

Be there!

UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON
Computer Science and Engineering
COLLOQUIUM

SPEAKER:        Ivan Sutherland, Portland State U, Sun Microsystems

TITLE:          Fleet, Infinity & Marina

DATE:           Tuesday, October 27, 2009

TIME:           3:30 pm

PLACE:          EEB-105

HOST:           Carl Ebeling

ABSTRACT:
This talk describes a radically different architecture for computing called Fleet.  Fleet accepts the limitations to computing imposed by physics: moving data costs more energy, more delay, and more chip area than the arithmetic and logical operations ordinarily called “computing.”   Fleet puts the programmer firmly in charge of the most costly resource: communication.  Fleet treats arithmetic and logical operations as side effects of where the programmer sends data.

Fleet achieves high performance through fine grain concurrency. Everything Fleet does is concurrent at the lowest level; programmers who wish sequential behavior must program it explicitly.  Fleet presents a stark contrast to today’s multi-core machines in which programmers seek concurrency in an inherently sequential environment.

The Fleet architecture uses a uniform switch fabric to simplify chip design.  A few thousand identical copies of a configurable interface will connect a thousand or so repetitions of basic arithmetic, logical, input-output, and storage units to the switch fabric. The uniform switch fabric and the identical configurable interfaces will simplify many of the hard parts of designing the computing elements themselves.

Both software and FPGA simulators of a Fleet system are available at UC Berkeley. Berkeley students have written a variety of Fleet programs; their work helped to define what the configurable interface between computing and communication must do.  A simple compiler configures both source and destination to provide flow-controlled communication.  We expect work on a higher-level language for Fleet to appear soon as a Berkeley PhD dissertation.

Last year we built a 90 nanometer TSMC test chip, called Infinity, at Sun Microsystems.  Infinity demonstrated the switch fabric running at about 4 GHz.  We now have a new test chip, called Marina, also in 90-nanometer TSMC sponsored by Sun.  Marina shows correct operation of the configurable switch fabric interface.  Together Infinity and Marina give us confidence to build a complete Fleet.  We seek participation from sponsors, computer scientists, and hardware designers.

This work done with Adam Megacz (UC Berkeley).

BIO
Ivan Sutherland is a Visiting Scientist at Portland State University where he and Marly Roncken have recently established the “Asynchronous Research Center” (ARC).  The ARC occupies both physical and intellectual space half way between the Computer Science (CS) and Electrical and Computer Engineering (ECE) departments at the university. The ARC seeks to free designers from the tyranny of the clock by developing better tools and teaching methods for design of self-timed systems.  Prior to moving to Portland, Ivan spent 25 years as a Fellow at Sun Microsystems.  A 1959 graduate of Carnegie Tech, Ivan got his PhD at MIT in 1963 and has taught at Harvard, The University of Utah, and Caltech.  Ivan is a member of the National Academy of Engineering and the National Academy of Sciences.

Posted in category Uncategorized by Crystal Eney on October 27, 2009

Today’s fire alarm

From: cs-ugrads-admin@cs.washington.edu [mailto:cs-ugrads-admin@cs.washington.edu] On Behalf Of Tracy Erbeck
Sent: Monday, October 26, 2009 2:16 PM
To: cs-staff – Mailing List; cs-grads – Mailing List; cs-ugrads – Mailing List; faculty – Mailing List; visitors – Mailing List
Subject: [cs-ugrads] Today’s fire alarm

The fire alarm in the building today was the result of a smoke detector in EE.  Elevator #253 had a part (shoe) beginning to wear and rub on another part.  The friction caused the smell of burning plastic and enough smoke to set off the detector.
Thank you to everybody for clearing the building in a timely fashion.  We are fortunate that the event was minor,  but as always, evacuation during an alarm is mandatory.
We weren’t without issues during the evacuation process and  the problem is being addressed.  If you have any feedback regarding today’s alarm and evacuation, please do send me an email.
Thank you.
Tracy Erbeck, Facilities Manager
Paul G Allen Center for CSE
Box 352350
Seattle, WA 98195
206.543.9264 (desk)
206.543.2969 (fax)

Posted in category Uncategorized by Crystal Eney on October 26, 2009

Career Fair and Resume Help

Hey everyone,

I hope you are all busy polishing your resumes for the upcoming career fair.  Keep in mind that companies like to look at resumes before and after the career fair, so please post them on the CSE resume database, the UW Husky Jobs site, and the Washington Technology Industry Association sits all linked here: http://www.cs.washington.edu/education/ugrad/current/careers/index.html

Additionally, if you’d like one on one appointments to look over your resume, the CSE professional masters program advisor is helping the ugrad team with career related events and he will be taking appointments over the next few weeks.  His name is Dave Rispoli, and you can email him directly for resume review appointments at rispoli@cs

We look forward to seeing you all at the Career Fair this week. Please note there are two. One is for the UW, but that will have different companies than you’ll see on Friday. Friday is just targeting CSE students and we need to make a BIG showing.  So please plan to attend whether you are looking for full time positions or summer internships.

SEBA sponsored Science & Engineering Fair is Thursday 12-5 in the HUB

http://www.uwseba.org/career-fair.html

CSE Affiliate Company Fair: Friday 9-3 in the atrium

List of companies attending Friday, a few more will be added as the week goes by.

Posted in category Events careers by Crystal Eney on October 26, 2009

ACM Programming Contest

From: cs-ugrads-admin@cs.washington.edu [mailto:cs-ugrads-admin@cs.washington.edu] On Behalf Of Stuart Reges
Sent: Monday, October 26, 2009 9:31 AM
To: faculty – Mailing List; cs-ugrads – Mailing List; cs-grads – Mailing List; vgrads – Mailing List; cs-staff – Mailing List
Subject: [cs-ugrads] ACM Programming Contest

On Saturday 23 teams competed in our local ACM programming contest.
Marty Stepp helped me to run the contest along with student helpers
Lisa Fiedler and Jared Jones and Google staffers Amanda Camp, Krista
Davis, Shen-Hui Lee, and Scott Shawcroft.  Google was our official
sponsor and provided yummy pizza and Rubik’s cubes.

The top three teams have won the honor of representing us at the
regional contest which will be held November 7th:

#1: Team Captcha: Jeff Booth, Michael Sloan, Will Johnson
#2: Firefighter Endorsed: Joshua Snyder, Kevin Wallace, Alyssa Harding
#3: Three Bytes Deficient: Steven Howard, Conrad Meyer, Tyler Smith

You can find more detailed results along with information about the
problems at this url:

http://www.cs.washington.edu/homes/reges/acm/results.html

Please join me in wishing our teams good luck in the regional contest.

–Stuart
_______________________________________________
Cs-ugrads mailing list

Posted in category Competition by Crystal Eney on October 26, 2009

Teach for America applications due next week

Unfortunately we did not get this posted in time for their information session earlier this week, but please take a few moments to consider applying for this program.   Some companies may give a deferral if you are accepted to this program and for a full time job.   Make sure to talk with your recruiters if you’re interested.

Teach For America is the national corps of outstanding recent college graduates and professionals – of all majors, backgrounds, and career interests – who commit to teach for two years in urban and rural public schools and become lifelong leaders in expanding educational opportunity. This year, 7,300 corps members are teaching in 35 regions across the country while 17,000 Teach For America alumni continue working from inside and outside the field of education for the fundamental changes necessary to ensure educational excellence and equity.

To learn more, visit www.teachforamerica.org or contact justin.yan@teachforamerica.org.

NEXT Application Deadline: Wednesday, October 28th, 2009

Full salary and benefits. All majors and professional experiences.

Posted in category Uncategorized by Crystal Eney on October 23, 2009
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