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Seattle Give Camp

Mike Roshak <micros@microshak.com>

Attachments9:41 PM (14 hours ago)
Hello,

I am an organizer with the Seattle Give Camp. Seattle Give Camp is a weekend event where software developers, PMs, and designers come together to help charities. I was hoping that you could mention it during your meeting or post our flyer in your common area. Here is the website where you can sign up: http://www.seattlegivecamp.org.

Seattle Give Camp could be good for your members. It allows them to give back to the community and also gives them a chance to work with experienced professionals, network, and have something to put on their resume. Also there will be some classes on real world topics such as Salesforce, CMS, and SEO.

Food will be provided. Let me know if you have any questions.
Hope to see you there,

Mike Roshak MCDBA, MCAD, PhD

micros@microshak.com  |  twitter   |  linkedin

Code it forward
:Join me and give back at GiveCamp
September 18, 2014

Robotics research group needs your help witha 20 minute survey

Dan Butler

2:06 PM (2 hours ago)
to faculty, cs-grads, cs-staff, researchers, cs-ugrads
Hello!

We are developing robots that can be tele-operated over the internet, so you can have your house cleaned, plants watered, and meals prepared while you are at work. We are conducting a survey to understand issues such robots might cause and to get your input about requirements for these robots and the people who will teleoperate them. The survey takes about 20 minutes and participants will have the opportunity to enter a raffle for a $25 Amazon gift card. 

You can complete the survey at this link:
https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1q89kDeAVAr_H22JuaOcEzRCasnswx4YkUvIY0ud20gI/viewform?usp=send_form

Your participation would be very much appreciated! Please feel free to distribute the survey to others who might be interested in participating.

Thank you,
Dan Butler, Franzi Roesner, Maya Cakmak

______________________________

September 5, 2014

Re: Seeking participants for research study on weight tracking!

 

———- Forwarded message ———-
From: Hanchuan Li <hanchuan@cs.washington.edu>

We are conducting a user study to evaluate ways of understanding and reinventing the scale interface. The study will span over 3 weeks (from late August to mid September), during which we will be asking you to weigh yourself once a day on Fitbit Aria smart scale in CSE building (weekday required, weekend optional) After each weigh-in, you will be asked to look at your measurement using one of our novel smartphone interfaces. In appreciation for your participation, we will reward participants with a $30 gift card. We ask that participants meet the following 3 criteria:
1.18 years or older
2.Comfortable with using a smartphone
3.Trying to achieve a weight goal (gain, lose, or maintain)
 
Please reply with your name, age, gender and weight goal to hanchuan@cs.washington.edu if you are interested in participating. Please also notify if you own Fitbit Aria yourself.
Thank you very much!
August 20, 2014

Johnny Lee is our DUB speaker this week

James Fogarty

10:00 AM (40 minutes ago)
to faculty, cs-grads, cs-ugrads

Reminder that Johnny Lee is our DUB speaker this week, to please join
for MHCI+D capstone presentations, and to please RSVP for food.

https://catalyst.uw.edu/webq/survey/mglarson/242192

If you don’t get to RSVP, please still join us. But don’t eat until
after I do.  😉

James


James A. Fogarty, Associate Professor
Computer Science & Engineering, University of Washington

http://homes.cs.washington.edu/~jfogarty/

On Thu, Aug 14, 2014 at 11:58 AM, James Fogarty
<jfogarty@cs.washington.edu> wrote:
> We have two special events Wednesday 8/20 that will interest many in CSE.
>
> Johnny Lee will be our DUB speaker. He’s done many things, but is
> currently the lead for Google’s Project Tango. He’ll be giving a talk
> on “Conceive, Choose, Create, Communicate” and bringing a Project
> Tango demo. Additional info below, including a request to RSVP for
> help in coordinating our food order.
>
> Immediately following, we will have poster sessions and presentations
> for capstone projects from this year’s MHCI+D students. These 30
> interdisciplinary students have been doing great stuff, and these
> group capstones are the culmination of their degrees. Please join us.
>
> == RSVP plus Location ==
>
> Please RSVP:
> https://catalyst.uw.edu/webq/survey/mglarson/242192
>
> Location: Alder Commons, 1315 NE Campus Parkway
> (note: Please enter at the Alder commons entrance on the corner of
> Brooklyn Avenue and 40th Street)
>
> == DUB Talk ==
>
> Speaker: Johnny Lee, Google
> Title: Conceive, Choose, Create, Communicate
>
> Abstract:
> Over the past 10 years, I have been fortunate enough to witness the
> life cycle of successful projects on multiple occasions at vastly
> different scales, from personal research to large scale commercial
> products. I would like to share my observations of the skills of the
> individuals that helped make these efforts successful. It is my hope
> that this talk may be helpful to students who have not yet figured out
> their own identity as researchers, engineers, designers, or artists as
> you decide how to invest your time in the coming years.
>
> Bio:
> Johnny Lee is a Technical Project Lead at Google’s Advanced
> Technologies and Projects group, where he leads Project Tango – a
> focused effort to give mobile devices a human-scale understanding of
> space and motion.  He graduated from Carnegie Mellon University with a
> PhD in Human-Computer Interaction in 2008 and recognized in the MIT’s
> TR35.  He was a core contributor to Microsoft Xbox Kinect, and his
> work with the Wii Remote has accumulated over 15 million views on
> YouTube as well as a top rated TED talk. His motto: Have fun and make
> new things.
>
> == MHCI+D Capstone ==
>
> Students from the first graduating class of the new MHCI+D
> Interdisciplinary Program will present an overview of their capstone
> team projects with time for questions and discussion.
>
> 1:30 – 2:00: Early Poster Session
> 2:00 – 3:45: Team Presentations
> 3:45 – 4:30: Poster Session and Mingling
>
> James
>
> —
> James A. Fogarty, Associate Professor
> Computer Science & Engineering, University of Washington
>
> http://homes.cs.washington.edu/~jfogarty/

August 18, 2014

UW EcoCar3 Team accepting applications

UW EcoCAR 3 Engineering Application

 

From Kate Kitto <kkitto3@gmail.com>

I am the communications manager for the UW EcoCAR 3 team. As you may have heard, EcoCAR is a collegiate automotive engineering competition sponsored by GM and the Department of Energy that gives undergraduate and graduate students the opportunity to produce a hybrid vehicle.

Our team recently completed the 3-year long EcoCAR 2 cycle and finished second place out of 15 competing universities. We are now beginning the first year of a 4-year EcoCAR 3 cycle and looking to recruit undergrad and grad engineering students to join our team. The hands-on experience this gives engineering students has been extremely valuable to our engineers.  There is also opportunity to get credit and travel to EcoCAR workshops and competitions all around the US. I think most of our team members would agree with me in saying that EcoCAR has been one of the most valuable experiences in my time at UW.

I have attached our application. Students from all grades are welcomed, and no prior experience is necessary. We would really appreciate it if you would be able to help us get the word out to your students about our team.

 

Here’s our website if you want more information: http://www.uwecocar2.com

 

Please let me know if you have any questions. Our faculty advisor, Prof. Brian Fabien (Fabien@uw.edu) can also answer any questions.  Thank you!

 

Kate Kitto

July 23, 2014

Survey on CSE robot

Mike Chung

Jul 8 (2 days ago)
to faculty, cs-grads, cs-staff, researchers, cs-ugrads, Andrzej, Dieter, Maya, Rajesh
Hello!
We are developing an information service that employs our indoor robot, DUB-E, to answer questions you might have about your local environment, such as “Is my boss in his office?” or “Is the coffee shop still open?”
We are conducting a survey to understand the types of information that might be useful to residents of the Paul G. Allen Center and gather requirements on how this information should be provided. Your input will be greatly appreciated and will help us develop robots that better serve you! By participating, you will also get the opportunity to enter a raffle for a surprise gift.
You can complete the survey here (takes about 10 minutes): https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1IADiIbVZC4YOUvWe9n2PGHqrBoVXOOZmkFErqJ4RxpM/
WARNING: be careful using “back” button from your browser. It will take you to the first page of the survey without saving your previous answers! Please use “<< Back” button located in bottom of each page to move back.
Thank you,
Michael Jae-Yoon Chung

 

July 10, 2014

Microsoft software for start-up companies

Ed Lazowska

8:53 PM (14 hours ago)
to Cs-Grads, cs-ugrads
———- Forwarded message ———-
From: Randy Guthrie (RANDY)
Date: Thu, Jun 26, 2014 at 8:24 PM
Subject: Microsoft Software & Services Grants for Student and Faculty Start-Ups
To: Ed Lazowska <lazowska@cs.washington.edu>

Microsoft has a grant program for “tech” start-ups called “BizSpark” (http://www.microsoft.com/bizspark).  The program provides free software and services, including Windows, Office, developer tools, servers, web-hosting, cloud services, and additional support for three years.  The value of the software and services exceeds $500K if licensed separately. To qualify, the business has to have some kind of programming/software development workload including web design and app development.  The business cannot be a public company.  The business has to be newer than five years, and making less than $1M in revenue annually. 

Currently, less than half of the businesses that apply get approved.  However, because of my relationship with your school, I have the ability to “vet” any student start-ups that you are aware of through you and guarantee the award.

Since it is our fiscal year end, and we aren’t certain how long this program will be offered, I wanted to let you know and hopefully give out some awards by month end.  I would appreciate it if you could forward this to any students or faculty that would be potentially interested and qualify.  They can contact me directly with a brief description of their business and how they will use the software and I can send a special enrollment link for them to sign up.

Thanks!

Randy Guthrie, PhD
Microsoft Technical Evangelist [US-West]
blog: http://blogs.msdn.com/MIS_Laboratory
Twitter: @randyguthrie

June 27, 2014

Photos from a PhD student taken during graduation

Mayank Goel <mayank@cs.washington.edu>

1:59 AM (8 hours ago)
to cs-grads, cs-ugrads, faculty
Hi all,
I ended up taking quite a few pics at the graduation ceremony this year. So I am sharing all those with you guys. Feel free to download the ones you like/want.
Thanks!


Mayank Goel
PhD Student, CSE, University of Washington
Twitter: @mynkgoel
June 17, 2014

White paper: Women Who Choose Computer Science

Ed Lazowska

11:55 AM (1 hour ago)
to Researchers, Cs-Grads, cs-ugrads, Staff

Worth reading

———- Forwarded message ———-
From: Marion Daly
Date: Tue, Jun 10, 2014 at 11:51 AM
Subject: White paper: Women Who Choose Computer Science
To:

Hi all,
I hope you’re having a great week.
On the heels of releasing our company demographics a few weeks ago, and as part of our commitment to expanding access and inclusion in CS education, we’re excited to announce that our research white paper Women Who Choose Computer Science, published by Google’s K-12 team is now available externally (though won’t be externally advertised until June 19th). It’s a pretty quick read so I thought it important to share with everyone here.

We know that there is a lot of work to do to improve inclusion and access to computer science education, and understanding the areas we can most influence is an important first step.

 

Please let me know if you have any questions and feel free to share with others in your department.


Thanks,

Marion

 

Summary of Findings:
The top four influencing factors are:
  1. Social Encouragement: Positive reinforcement of Computer Science pursuits from family and peers.
  2. Self Perception: An interest in puzzles and problem solving and a belief that those skills can be translated to a successful career.
  3. Academic Exposure: The availability of, and opportunity to participate in, structured (e.g., graded studies) and unstructured (e.g., after-school programs) Computer Science
  4. Career Perception: The familiarity with, and perception of, Computer Science as a career with diverse applications and a broad potential for positive societal impact.
June 10, 2014

need student testers for a research project – $10 starbucks card

I am a first year MSIM student researching on the Usefulness of a Touchscreen Laptop as part of my course. If you use a touchscreen laptop regularly, your feedback will be highly appreciated. It will only take about 5  minutes to complete the survey.

As a token of our appreciation for your time, you would be entered in a raffle where you will stand to win a $10 Starbucks gift card.
Also, kindly forward the survey to users of touchscreen laptops who can provide valuable input to the study.
Thank you very much!!!
Best regards,

Aloka Krishnan

May 29, 2014

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