Skip to main content

Clustrix Talk: Wednesday, 2/10, 5:30-7 in the Atrium

Graduating? Looking for a job?

Come to this one time event and hear UW alum Paul Mikesell speak about a future with Clustrix.

Free dinner! will be served!

Who?

Clustrix is developing a next generation clustered, scalable, fault-tolerant, relational database solution. Founded by a UW CSE alum and Isilon co-founder, Paul Mikesell.

What?

Clustrix, Inc. is looking for Software Engineers who enjoy design as well as development. We have a focused engineering team with little management overhead.

Where?

Atrium in Computer Science & Engineering Building

When?

Wednesday, Feb. 10, 2010

5:30-7:00 pm

For more information, please visit our website www.clustrix.com

February 8, 2010

Reminder: Google Tech Talk Tonight!

Come hear more about the different roles at Google, and how employees have applied their education and experiences to work on interesting challenges today at 5:30 PM in EE 105.

Please sign up for this event by RSVP’ing here<https://spreadsheets.google.com/viewform?formkey=dG0yOUZCbWUwZ1ltbERxNXNaX2pxeUE6MA>. RSVPing helps us know how many people to order food for, but everyone is welcome!

February 3, 2010

Google Tech Talk: Wednesday, 2/3

Come join Google in EEB 105 tomorrow, 2/3, from 5:30-7:30

February 2, 2010

Upcoming Google Info Session

Interested in hearing more about the different roles at Google, and how employees have applied their education and experiences to work on interesting challenges that impact millions of people around the world? We’d love to see you at our Info Session and answer your questions about our work and our company.

When: Wednesday, February 3 at 5:30 PM
Where: EE 105

Please sign up for this event by RSVP’ing here<https://spreadsheets.google.com/viewform?formkey=dG0yOUZCbWUwZ1ltbERxNXNaX2pxeUE6MA>. RSVPing helps us know how many people to order food for, but everyone is welcome!

We look forward to meeting you!

January 28, 2010

Lecture: Logic Synthesis Demystified

From Carl Ebeling:

There will be a slower-paced, low-octane version of this talk in my PMP class Tuesday night (Feb. 2, 6:30, EE045) that you are welcome to attend.

Title: “Logic Synthesis Demystified”
Speaker: Ramine Roane  (Abound Logic)

Abstract:
This talk will be a quick tour through logic synthesis techniques from High Level and RTL synthesis, to Boolean optimization and mapping.
It will discuss RTL optimization techniques (which are similar to compiler optimizations), as well as the evolution of Boolean optimization methods from truth-tables to S.O.P. and Boolean Networks (used in SIS), to BDDs (used in VIS), to AND-Inverter-Graphs and the use of SAT solvers (used in ABC), using examples to illustrate the concepts.

January 27, 2010

Amazon Tech Talk: Thursday, 1/28, 6-7:15pm

Amazon Personalization:  Item to Item Collaborative Filtering

By Frank Kane, Sr. Manager Personalization and Content Platform at Amazon

Frank Manages Amazon’s Personalization and Content Platform organization, and has been developing and managing the technology behind Amazon’s recommender systems applying data mining and machine learning.

Win a $100 Amazon Gift Certificate!  Plus we’re giving away free food and cool swag.

January 27, 2010

Lecture: Logic Synthesis Demystified

—–Original Message—–
From: cs-ugrads-admin@cs.washington.edu [mailto:cs-ugrads-admin@cs.washington.edu] On Behalf Of Carl Ebeling
Sent: Wednesday, January 27, 2010 10:31 AM
To: cs-ugrads – Mailing List; cs-grads – Mailing List
Cc: Scott Hauck – hauck@cs
Subject: [cs-ugrads] Lecture: Logic Synthesis Demystified

There will be a slower-paced, low-octane version of this talk in my
PMP class Tuesday night (Feb. 2, 6:30, EE045) that you are welcome to
attend.

Title: “Logic Synthesis Demystified”
Speaker: Ramine Roane  (Abound Logic)

Abstract:
This talk will be a quick tour through logic synthesis techniques from
High Level and RTL synthesis, to Boolean optimization and mapping.
It will discuss RTL optimization techniques (which are similar to
compiler optimizations), as well as the evolution of Boolean
optimization methods from truth-tables to S.O.P. and Boolean Networks
(used in SIS), to BDDs (used in VIS), to AND-Inverter-Graphs and the
use of SAT solvers (used in ABC), using examples to illustrate the
concepts.
_______________________________________________
Cs-ugrads mailing list
Cs-ugrads@cs.washington.edu
https://mailman.cs.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/cs-ugrads

January 27, 2010

Upcoming Mathmatica Session at UW

From: Craig Bauling
Date: January 25, 2010 7:06:39 AM PST
Subject: Mathematica seminar at University of Washington at Seattle

To support the Mathematica site license at University of
Washington at Seattle, Wolfram Research will be on campus to give
a technical talk on Mathematica 7 at 9:30am on Monday, February
8. The talk will be held in Savery Hall, room 410.

This seminar will be given 100% in Mathematica and will show
useful teaching and research examples for mathematics, the
physical sciences, engineering, and business/economics. Ideas for
creating universal examples in Mathematica that can be used by
colleagues or students with no prior Mathematica experience will
be a central theme.

The content will help attendees with no prior experience get
started with the Mathematica language and workflow. Since there
is a large amount of new functionality in Version 7, most
intermediate and advanced users who attend these talks report
learning quite a bit as well. All attendees will receive an
electronic copy of the examples, which can be adapted to
individual projects.

Students are also welcome; please invite any graduate students or
students in your courses.

To make sure we have enough space, please let me know if you plan
to attend or if your students are likely to attend. I look
forward to meeting you!

Best regards,

Craig Bauling
Wolfram Research, Inc.
1-800-965-3726 ext. 3498
fax: 217-398-1108
craig_bauling@wolfram.com
http://www.wolfram.com
Wolfram Products:
http://www.wolfram.com/products

January 26, 2010

Amazon Ninja Coder – Wednesday, 1/27, 11-1:30

Do you have what it takes to be a Ninja Coder?

Come find out!

Solve a series of coding puzzles using Java and C++. We’ll have a different puzzle every hour.

Wednesday, January 27th

Gates Auditorium

11am – 1:30PM

Solve coding puzzles and win prizes

Enter to win a Flip Video recorder.

Free pizza at 12PM

January 26, 2010

Facebook Trivia Night Tonight – 1/20, 5:30-7:30 in Atrium

Are you a self-proclaimed Facebook junkie?

Know all there is to know about the University of Washington?

Do you know CS trivia like the back of your hand?

Join the Facebook team in the Paul Allen Center at 530p for a fun and interactive night of trivia. We’ll test your knowledge of Facebook, Washington and computer science facts. Awesome prizes will be given out to the team that scores the most following each round.

You don’t need to have a team formed as we’ll be putting teams together right before the event. However, if you have a team of 4 in mind, go ahead and make one up.

We are interested in computer scientists looking for full time and internship opportunities to join our engineering team.

Email your resume to washington@facebook.com or come see us at the CS Spring Career Fair on January 21 in the Allen Atrium from 130p – 430p.

January 20, 2010

« Newer PostsOlder Posts »