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Important Employment Event for all CSE Majors

All CSE undergraduates who plan on pursuing an internship or full-time employment in 2011-12 should attend our CSE sponsored Employer Panel next Wednesday, October 5 from 5:30-6:30 pm in EE125.  The Employer Panel will be the  first in a series of highly recommended CSE career events designed to prepare our CSE undergraduates for the recruiting process.

Next Wednesday’s event will feature a panel of HR reps and recent CSE graduates from local software companies who will provide details on what to expect from employers in the coming months so you can take the right steps to land the job of your dreams.  Attendee questions are very much encouraged.  You should leave this event with a better understanding of the timing and direction of your upcoming job search.

Additional upcoming CSE sponsored Autumn career events include:

Resume Review Roundtable Workshop — Tuesday, October 11 (CSE Atrium)

Technical Interview Coaching — Monday, October 24 (CSE Atrium)

Mock Technical Interviews — Tuesday, November 1 (CSE Building)

Watch for future announcements or contact CSE Advisor, Dave Rispoli at rispoli@cs for additional details of these events.

September 29, 2011

Fun Internal Events

Frisbee Sept 30

We’re going to have a frisbee event tomorrow. Probably sometime after 4:00pm. More spam to come once the details are hammered out.

Facebook Hackathon on Oct 14 4:00pm – Oct 15 5:00PM.

I highly recommend going to this. Stay up all night with your friends to hack on a random project, pick up some skills, and present.

Fall Fest Nov 18

This is our quarterly undergrad celebration. Come and get ready for thanksgiving with all sorts of games, food, and fun. There will also be a beer garden for 21+.

 

September 29, 2011

Research Night

Research night is on the horizon with a tentative date of Nov30. If you’re at all interested in grad school or just research, then stop by and see some of the cool projects that you can work on.

September 29, 2011

Start-Up Weekend EDU | Sept. 30 – Oct. 2 in Paccar Hall

———- Forwarded message ———-
From: Ed Lazowska <lazowska@cs.washington.edu>
Date: Wed, Aug 31, 2011 at 9:35 PM
Subject: Start-Up Weekend EDU | Sept. 30 – Oct. 2 in Paccar Hall
To: Cs-Grads <cs-grads@cs.washington.edu>, Cs-Ugrads <cs-ugrads@cs.washington.edu>, Faculty <faculty@cs.washington.edu>
———- Forwarded message ———-

Kick Off the Year Right by Participating in Startup Weekend Seattle EDU

TeachStreet will be leading the Seattle Startup Weekend EDU event held on Sept. 30 – Oct 2. If you are unfamiliar with Startup Weekend EDU’s, they’re 54 hour cram session where we gather designers, engineers and business people to build ideas over the weekend, and all projects will be focused on innovating in the education space. Feel free to check out the previous Startup Weekend recap video here.  We’re convening ~125-150 Seattle-area technologists and entrepreneurs (ranging from undergrads, to VC-backed/experienced entrepreneurs).  In addition, a who’s who of Seattle’s tech community will be serving as mentors and advisors, including local VCs, CTOs, CEOs, and more.  AND Mitch Kapor will be keynoting the event.  He is a pioneer in personal computing and has shown his extreme passion for education through his continuous efforts to invest in companies that create social value.

 

A few quick notes:

1. Date: Friday, September 30 – Sunday, October 2.

2. Time: Event kicks off on Friday at 6:30 PM in Dempsey Gallery (3rd Floor) of Paccar Hall.  See the full event schedule: http://seattleedu.startupweekend.org/event/

3. Location: Paccar Hall at the University of Washington. (Trust us, it’s a perfect location to build a startup.)

4. Registration: http://seattleedu.startupweekend.org/tickets/ | Tickets are $49 for students.  Use code “STUDENT” to get the discount.

5. “Join the EDU discussion”: There are so many problems (err… opportunities to innovate) within the EDU space, that we didn’t want to wait until the 30th to start developing game-changing ideas. We’ve created a UserVoice tab which we will use as a forum where you can voice your opinions on problems areas, ideas and vote up ideas you think we should build over the weekend. All you have to do is click the green “Join the EDU discussion” tab at the bottom right of our event page here: http://seattleedu.startupweekend.org/

6. Please follow us @SWSEAedu and help spread the word 🙂

 

You aren’t going to want to miss out on this one. It’s going to be HUGE, not only for the Seattle startup ecosystem, but we believe with the talent Seattle has, ideas can be built to revolutionize the education system all around the world. Join us as we dedicate a weekend to change the future!

 

Startup Weekends are specifically designed for entrepreneurs interested in receiving feedback on an idea, looking for a co-founder, or who want to learn a new skill. We also welcome anyone looking to test the entrepreneurial waters. Startup Weekends are risk-free environments where everyone is expected to roll up their sleeves and dive into the exhilarating world of startups.  Sign up today!

 

Best,

Sarah

 

P.S. Need more convincing?  Watch this video: http://blog.teachstreet.com/community-events/startup-weekend-promo-video/

 

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Sarah Massey, Assistant Director

Center for Innovation & Entrepreneurship

Michael G. Foster School of Business

University of Washington
P:  206.685.9868 | masses@uw.edu
Lewis Hall 327, Box 353200
Seattle, WA 98195-3200
www.startup.washington.edu

 

September 7, 2011

Graduating seniors, register for UW commencement now!

Today starts the registration period (May 2 – 22, 2011) for UW Commencement.  CSE students may attend both the UW Commencement ceremony and the CSE Graduation Celebration (or just one, whatever you prefer).

Registration is now open for ordering graduation regalia, parking, tickets for the UW Graduation Ceremony in Husky Stadium. You can also register for the CSE Graduation Celebration on the same form.

Go here to register:  http://www.washington.edu/graduation/

If you do not wish to order regalia, you can still participate in the CSE Graduation Celebration, but not the UW one.
Dress code for the CSE Graduation Celebration is business casual.

Meany Hall now requires that we distribute tickets for admission to the CSE event.  You can order them here:
https://catalyst.uw.edu/webq/survey/pim/132351

We will distribute tickets during finals week at the front office desk between 1:00-3:30pm. Shortly before Graduation on June 11, we will send you instructions about where to sit in Meany Hall and what to do.  🙂

Please let us know if you have any questions!

May 20, 2011

Week of CSE: Research Night, BBQ, Canoeing

Hey all,

No more tech talks!  But this is probably the best week ever to be a CSE major! Here are the lowdown of events this week.

1.) Ugrad Research Night — Thursday May 19th — 430-730pm — EEB037/Atrium

This quarterly event is a great time to pick up a research position for the summer if you are still looking for something to do, pick up a project to work on next year, or start preparing for graduate school. 430-530pm will be a graduate school and research panel in EEB 037, while 530-730 will be a research poster session in the Atrium.  Light refreshments will be provided.

2.) CSE Spring BBQ — Friday May 20th — 400-730pm — Sylvan Grove

It’s the Department-Wide BBQ! It should be an awesome time with Music, Food, Drinks, Inflatables, Frisbee, Prof Pieing, and tons of Socializing.  Come celebrate the end of the year!  The alternate location will be the CSE Atrium and surrounding area if the torrential monsoons return (let’s hope not).

3.) ACMW Canoe Day — Saturday May 21st — 10:30am — Atrium —> Lake Washington!

If that wasn’t enough, then there is canoeing.  Possibly the funnest event of the year.  Meet at 1030am to walk over to the WAC, or meet us at the WAC at 1045am.  Bring a lunch, Frisbee, waterproof camera, and cash for the canoe rental! (~5-10$)  This should be a really great event to hang out with CSE people before we all head off for the summer.

 

Enjoy the sunshine!  =D

UW ACM

May 17, 2011

AMD Developer Summit – limited number of free passes for Computer Science and Engineering students

AMD is allocating a limited number of free passes (200 to be exact) for Seattle-area Computer Science and Engineering students. I’ve provided some background on the upcoming AMD Fusion Developer Summit below for your review. Also please see the special student registration code (see highlighted section).


AMD Delivers New Era of Computing at AMD Fusion Developer Summit.

AMD Accelerated Processing Unit (APU) technology is rapidly redefining what is possible at every level of the computing experience. APUs give software developers the power to unleash their imaginations and access new revenue opportunities by creating futuristic, visually rich applications with no-compromise performance even on the small form factor devices users want.

The AMD Fusion Developer Summit (Fusion 11), June 13-16 at the Meydenbauer Center in Bellevue, Washington, is the must-attend event in 2011 for expert hands-on training and l informative sessions for professional developers like you need to capitalize on the full capabilities of APU technology takes place at. Space is limited.

AMD’s next-generation APU technology delivers benefits that enable developers to push their innovations to never before possible levels of performance outside the world of supercomputers and data centers, while delivering new levels of efficiency.

APU technology offers technologists:

4x faster performance than the competition

500 gigaflop performance at never experienced before efficiency levels

Supercomputer-like performance never before possible on smaller form factors

True all-day battery life of up to 11 hours1

Video and graphics that are more life-like than ever

A dramatic reduction of up to 40 percent in total carbon emissions over the life of the APU2

The ability to preserve your expensive source code investment and is easier to code when combined with OpenCL™

 

“There is a sizable opportunity for programmers who can exploit heterogeneous architectures that perform a mix of parallel and serial computation. Such architectures make use of readily available industry languages to unleash the power of tightly linked CPUs and GPUs in blended designs like AMD’s accelerated processing unit (APU),” said Roger Kay, Founder and President, Endpoint Technologies.

Industry leaders from AMD, ARM, Corel, and Microsoft are coming to the AMD Fusion Developer Summit to share their latest innovations during the AFDS Keynotes.

In his keynote “Heterogeneous Parallelism at Microsoft” Herb Sutter, Microsoft Principal Architect of Native Languages, showcases upcoming innovations to bring access to increasingly heterogeneous compute resources directly into the world’s most popular native languages.

Jem Davies, ARM Fellow and Vice President of Technology, Media Processing Division, delivers a keynote about ARM’s long history of heterogeneous computing, its future strategy, and ARM’s support of standards.

The Summit opens and closes with keynotes by senior AMD tech leaders. AMD Corporate Fellow Phil Rogers explores the programmer’s guide to APUs, and Eric Demers, AMD Corporate Vice President and Chief Technology Officer, Graphics, will deliver a keynote that chronicles the evolution of AMD’s graphics cores and discuss next-generation AMD graphics technology.

Training at AFDS includes more than 90 technical sessions, covering such topics as mitigation of legacy applications to heterogeneous architectures, simplified CPU-GPU logical data sharing, OpenCL™, multicore, and GPU accelerated databases.

Technology topics at AFDS include:

Developer Tools: This topic covers development tools ranging from compilers and debuggers to performance visualization tools. Sessions cover the state of the art in compiler technology (CPU and GPU), debugging and profiling OpenCL™, and automatic data movement.

Enterprise Computing: This topic features sessions that discuss using multicore technology to handle large data, showcase software being developed today utilizing multicore CPUs, and show early work of applying the data parallel capabilities of GPUs to databases.

High Performance Computing: This topic presents a sampling of portable and standards based heterogeneous computing. Come see innovative uses of GPUs, extreme optimizations, power efficient implementations, benchmarks, libraries, and real world applications in physics, chemistry, finance, and rendering.

Multimedia Processing: This topic features sessions on image processing, audio processing, video processing, telepresence, video quality enhancement, computer vision, transcoding, content recognition, image retrieval, multimedia algorithm optimization for parallel processing, codecs.

Professional Graphics & Visual Computing: This topic provides sessions focused on various areas of visual computing, including mixed-mode OpenGL/DX/OpenCL™ interoperability, and advanced rendering and compute techniques.

Programming Models: This topic showcases the state of the art in parallel programming models and techniques for heterogeneous platforms. Topics covered include: programming models for next generation GPU architectures and techniques for building domain specific languages on heterogeneous platforms.

Security: This track features sessions on password recovery and audit, encryption, and steganography detection.

User Interface and Media Experiences: This topic features sessions on gesture recognition, touch recognition, face recognition, UIs for new user experiences, video management, video playback, and Web user experiences.

In addition to the technical sessions there are seven Pre-Summit Tutorials (Monday, June 12, 2011) and hands-on labs.

For more information about AMD Fusion Developer Summit and to register, visit amd.com/afds. The first 200 students to register using the SDC200 code will be able to attend the event for free.

May 6, 2011

Google Games Seattle

Think you got game? Compete for victory in challenges that test your creative and mental mettle at Google Games Seattle! Teams of five will go head to head in rigorous events: Geek Trivia, Lego Building, Puzzles, Coding Competition, and Game Blitz.

Find four friends (Computer Science background strongly recommended) and register here. Can’t find a team? Sign up as an individual and we’ll put you in a team with others. In addition to the thrill of victory and the agony of defeat, Google will also be supplying free refreshments to all participants and prizes to our top competitors. Bring it on!

Google Games Seattle
Date: Saturday, May 14
Time: 10:00am to approximately 4:00pm
Location: Google Seattle (651 N. 34th Street, Seattle, 98103)

Registration Form:
https://spreadsheets7.google.com/viewform?hl=en&hl=en&formkey=dGNuSDNhODBjZUlIUFBNN1ZKTE0tUXc6MA#gid=0

Deadline to register: FRIDAY, MAY 6

FAQ
Q.Can we have less than five members on our team?
A. We strongly recommend having the maximum number of members – any less and you’ll lose your competitive edge.

Q. Do you have to be a current student to participate?
A. Yes, you must be currently enrolled at the University of Washington to participate.

Q. Can we replace a member before the start of the event?
A. Sure. Just let us know (googlegames@google.com) about the new team member and who is being replaced.

Q. Should our team wear uniforms?
A. Show your team’s spirit however you choose: uniforms, team dance, team flag or poster, cheer, fight song, etc. A prize will be awarded to the team with the most spirit. Check out past Google Games here and here for inspiration.

Q. Will transportation be provided?
A. No, you will have to provide your own transportation. Use Metro Transit’s TripPlanner (bus #31 runs from the U District to Fremont) or drive – parking information to come!

Q. Will food be provided?
A. We will be providing lunch, snacks and drinks. If you have any dietary restrictions, please note this in the form and we will be sure to accommodate you.

Please direct other questions to googlegames@google.com.

April 26, 2011

Seeking interested students for new student group: Students for the Exploration and Development of Space

From: Kristina Wang <wangkl@aa.washington.edu>

Are you interested in promoting space exploration amongst your peers, K-12 students, and the global community?  Are you looking to network and make connections for your dream job in the space industry?  Students for the Exploration and Development of Space (SEDS) is an international organization that sounds up your alley! SEDS pursues this mission by educating people about the benefits of space, by supporting a network of interested students, by providing an opportunity for members to develop their leadership skills, and inspiring people through our involvement in space-related projects.

SEDS provides an excellent environment in which to obtain access to many sources of information including speakers, tours, films, discussion groups & NASA updates.  It is also a community in which people of common interests can relax and freely discuss issues important to them.

I am planning on reviving the SEDS chapter at UW, and I’m looking for people to help me with this venture in starting and sustaining it!  If you are interested in being a part of the group and/or being an officer, please email me at wangkl@uw.edu.
Additionally, the annual conference this year will be held at University of Colorado at Boulder over the last weekend of October, and I would like to send some students to go.  This will be a great time to network, learn, and have fun, as well as enjoy the tales of Bill Nye, the keynote speaker!
Please contact me with any questions or interest!

Thanks,

Kristina Wang
Dept. of Aeronautics and Astronautics

April 21, 2011

Reminder: Vote and Smoothie Day!!! (Putnam Seminar)

Hey All!!!

IT’S SUNNY!!!!!

0.) VOTE

If you have not voted for ACM Chair/Vice Chair please do so NOW! (or by Midnight today, just do it now so you don’t forget)

Positions, Candidates, Bios: http://flatline.cs.washington.edu/orgs/acm/officer-elections/

Chair: https://catalyst.uw.edu/webq/survey/jtmasaki/130341

Vice Chair: https://catalyst.uw.edu/webq/survey/jtmasaki/130343

1.) Smoothies

Smoothie Day will happen 330-5pm in the Atrium Today, come grab an inexpensive 2$smoothie on your way out to the Quad, Balcony, or other outdoor destination.

2.) Putnam Seminar!

It’s been requested we advertise the Putnam Mathematical Problem Solving Seminar!!! They meet every Friday 330-420.  You don’t have to be a math major or have any  math completion problem solving experience to begin prepping for the contest.   The competition is the first Saturday of December, so seniors can’t really do it.  It’s a great opportunity to do some serious problem solving.  Check out their message board here https://catalyst.uw.edu/gopost/board/shaoc/20955/.

Enjoy the sunshine,

Chris–SPAMalot

April 8, 2011

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