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ACM Weekly Events Digest Oct 24 – Oct 28

Isilon: Locking and cache coherency in a distributed file system; Tue, Oct 25, 6:00pm – 7:30pm; EE125
Isilon, a division of EMC, is a company that is developing combined software/hardware solutions to some of the world’s toughest enterprises data management challenges. Look forward to a real systems tech talk.

Redfin: How To Suck the Marrow Out Of Your First Job and Start Your Own Company Before Turning 25; Thu, Oct 27, 6:00pm – 7:30pm; EEB125
Finally, a talk for the startup/entrepeneur crowd. Come see Glenn Kalman, Redfin CEO, do stand-up comedy for an hour and a half.

October 24, 2011

Margaret Wright, Friday at 2:30 in Kane 210 “Fast Times in Linear Programming:”

———- Forwarded message ———-
From: Ed Lazowska <lazowska@cs.washington.edu>
Date: Sun, Oct 16, 2011 at 9:42 PM
Subject: Margaret Wright, Friday at 2:30 in Kane 210
To: Faculty <faculty@cs.washington.edu>, Cs-Grads <cs-grads@cs.washington.edu>, Cs-Ugrads <cs-ugrads@cs.washington.edu>, cycotic@u.washington.edu, eScience team <escience-team@u.washington.edu>, Escience_bbl <Escience_bbl@u.washington.edu>

Margaret is superb – worth an hour of your time for sure.

=====

MathAcrossCampus Lecture:    October 21, 2:30-3:30pm
Kane Hall 210

Reception to follow

Title:              Fast Times in Linear Programming:
Early Success, Revolutions, and Mysteries

Speaker: Margaret Wright, Courant Institute, New York University

Abstract:

Linear programming (LP), which isn’t really about programming, is a
simple-to-state mathematical problem of enormous practical importance. The
dramatic saga of LP solution methods began immediately after World War II
with unexpected practical success that continued for more than 30 years
despite theoretical reservations; next came two sweeping revolutions whose
effects are still widely misunderstood. This talk will describe
mathematical and computational issues from the history of LP, enlivened by
controversy and international politics, as well as some fascinating
remaining mysteries.

Short Bio of speaker:

Margaret H. Wright is Silver Professor of Computer Science and Mathematics
in the Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences, New York University.
She received her B.S. (Mathematics) and M.S. and Ph.D. (Computer Science)
from Stanford University. Her research interests include optimization,
scientific computing, and real-world applications. Prior to joining NYU,
she worked at Bell Laboratories. She is a member of the National Academy
of Engineering, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and the
National Academy of Sciences. During 1995-1996 she served as president of
the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics (SIAM).

October 17, 2011

Talk reminder from our Applied Math friends; Life beyond ACMS: conversations with Myspace, I/O Ventures and MindJolt co-founder Aber Whitcomb”

All ugrads welcome.
When:  Friday, October 14, 3:30 – 4:15, Guggenheim 220 with reception following in Gug 415.
Host:  Applied Mathematics
Title:  Life beyond ACMS:  conversations with Myspace, I/O Ventures and MindJolt co-founder Aber Whitcomb”
Speaker:  Aber Whitcomb
Bio:  Aber Whitcomb is the CTO of MindJolt, a social gaming platform, and is a co-founder of i/o Ventures. Aber joined MindJolt in March 2010. Prior to founding i/o Ventures, Aber Whitcomb was most recently CTO and a co-founder of MySpace where he was responsible for the engineering and technical operations groups of one of the world’s most successful social networking sites.

Aber is a recognized expert in large scale computing, networking and storage and frequently speaks about these matters. Aber left MySpace in September 2009.

He graduated from the University of Washington and was born and raised in Bellingham.

 

October 13, 2011

ASIFA animation screening – October 16

———- Forwarded message ———-
From: Kay Beck-Benton <kbeck@cs.washington.edu>
Date: Wed, Oct 12, 2011 at 7:29 AM
Subject: ASIFA animation screening – October 16
To: faculty – Mailing List <faculty@cs.washington.edu>, cs-grads – Mailing List <cs-grads@cs.washington.edu>, cs-ugrads – Mailing List <cs-ugrads@cs.washington.edu>

The 13th annual Animation Show of Shows

Ron Diamond brings his fabulous screening of award winning animation shorts from festivals around the world.  Don’t miss these independent animation gems that you may not have a chance to see anywhere else!  And better yet: It’s free! Be sure to be at the Gates Commons on October 16th from 4-6  pm. 

 

 

October 12, 2011

ACM Weekly Events Digest

CodeSprint started yesterday at noon and runs until Wed Oct 12. Apply to 50 companies simultaneously by solving a single set of technical challenge.
http://codesprint.interviewstreet.com/recruit/challenges/

Microsoft Info Session today 6p-7p EEB125. Come learn about technical opportunities at Microsoft, grab free food, and enter yourself for a chance to win a XBOX 360 Kinect Bundle and other prizes.

Qualcomm Info Session Wed Oct 12 6pm EEB125. Learn about internship and new grad positions, snag some grub, and stay for the giveaways and raffle.

October 10, 2011

Life beyond ACMS: conversations with Myspace, I/O Ventures and MindJolt co-founder Aber Whitcomb”

CSE Majors invited to attend.
When:  Friday, October 14, 3:30 – 4:15 with reception following in Gug 415.
Host:  Applied Mathematics
Title:  Life beyond ACMS:  conversations with Myspace, I/O Ventures and MindJolt co-founder Aber Whitcomb”
Speaker:  Aber Whitcomb
Bio:  Aber Whitcomb is the CTO of MindJolt, a social gaming platform, and is a co-founder of i/o Ventures. Aber joined MindJolt in March 2010. Prior to founding i/o Ventures, Aber Whitcomb was most recently CTO and a co-founder of MySpace where he was responsible for the engineering and technical operations groups of one of the world’s most successful social networking sites.

Aber is a recognized expert in large scale computing, networking and storage and frequently speaks about these matters. Aber left MySpace in September 2009.

He graduated from the University of Washington and was born and raised in Bellingham.

October 4, 2011

Upcoming Career Events

Amazon Info Session, 10/4, 6:00pm – 7:30 pm, EEB105 or EEB125

Interested in working at Amazon this summer? Networking? Want free food/stuff? Come to this event!

Google Tech Talk, 10/6,  6:00pm – 7:30 pm, EEB125

Come hear about google’s front end and back end projects and learn about some of the interesting problems they are solving.

September 29, 2011

Recommended: “Computation and the Transformation of Practically Everything”

The Computing Community Consortium has arranged the talks from the MIT150th Anniversary symposium in an easily digestible format.  Many ofthese are really excellent  Begin with Eric Lander’s, as I suggestedpreviously, but look at some of the others as well:
http://www.cra.org/ccc/mitvids.php

– Ed Lazowska

May 31, 2011

Today’s colloquium

———- Forwarded message ———-
From: Ed Lazowska <lazowska@cs.washington.edu>
Date: Tue, May 17, 2011 at 10:51 AM
Subject: [cs-ugrads] Today’s colloquium
To: Faculty <faculty@cs.washington.edu>, Cs-Grads <cs-grads@cs.washington.edu>, Cs-Ugrads <cs-ugrads@cs.washington.edu>, csl-staff@cs.washington.edu

Please remember George Dyson, 3:30 today, on the IAS computer:

https://www.cs.washington.edu/htbin-post/mvis/mvis?ID=1040

Learn where it all came from …

May 17, 2011

UW CSE Colloquium by Landon Cox (Duke) on Thursday, 5/19 in EEB 105

——— Forwarded message ———-
From: Gaetano Borriello <gaetano@cs.washington.edu>
Date: Mon, May 16, 2011 at 2:26 PM
Subject: [cs-ugrads] UW CSE Colloquium by Landon Cox (Duke) on Thursday, 5/19 in EEB 105
To: faculty – Mailing List <faculty@cs.washington.edu>, Mailing List – cs-grads <cs-grads@cs.washington.edu>, Cs-Ugrads <cs-ugrads@cs.washington.edu>, cs-staff@cs.washington.edu

Landon Cox from Duke University will be visiting on Thursday.  He’ll
be giving a talk in the regular colloquium slot on Thursday (details
below).  Landon is a rising young star in the mobile systems community
and has collaborated with several people in the department.  He is a
great speaker and has lots of great ideas.  Please sign up to meet
with him and join us for lunch and/or dinner at:

https://reserve.cs.washington.edu/visitor/week.php?year=2011&month=05&day=19&room=1716

Title: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Trust Mobile Systems
Speaker: Landon Cox, Duke University

Abstract:

Mobile phones have become the eyes and ears of the Internet by placing
digital communication, computation, and sensing at the center of
nearly all human activity. The next generation of Internet services
promises to support applications like citizen journalism, mobile
social networking, and traffic monitoring by pairing the ubiquitous
sensing provided by mobile phones with the large-scale data collection
and distribution capacity of the cloud.

However, due to the need for user anonymity and privacy, establishing
bases for trust in these systems is difficult and remains a critical
obstacle to phone-based mobile sensing. This talk will discuss two
systems that address different aspects of this challenge. The first is
SMILE, an encounter-based messaging service for anonymous mobile
users. The second is YouProve, a partnership between a device’s
trustworthy hardware and system software that allows mobile clients to
control the fidelity of the data they share while allowing services to
verify the authenticity of the data they receive.

Bio:

Landon Cox is an Assistant Professor of Computer Science at Duke
University and a recipient of an NSF CAREER award and an IBM Faculty
Award. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Michigan in 2005.
Landon’s current research interests include operating systems,
distributed systems, and mobile computing.
http://www.cs.duke.edu/~lpcox/
_____________________________

May 16, 2011

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