![]() |
BUCAN Newsletter for Spring 2002In this issue...
From the Chair...
Dear Alumni
and Friends of the CS Dept at Boston University:
First, I would like to
thank you all for your enthusiastic support of our BUCAN
initiative as evidenced by the number of alumni who have registered with
the BUCAN database either on-line or by regular mail.
Please encourage your friends and members of your graduating class to
"re-connect" by registering on-line at
http://www.cs.bu.edu/CAN. I
also thank all of you who have indicated your willingness to volunteer for
various BUCAN activities.
This is the first of what we
hope will become a regular quarterly newsletter to keep members of BUCAN
informed of the various on-going activities and initiatives within the
department. More importantly, we hope that this newsletter will become a
venue for communication between all of you alumni and friends of CS at BU.
Please don't hesitate to send us news and/or announcements that you
feel are appropriate to share with the BUCAN community, either in future newsletters
or on the BUCAN web site at
http://www.cs.bu.edu/CAN. You can do so via email to:
I hope you will find this
infrequent communication useful in keeping you informed and in keeping you
connected.
IAP Research Day to be held on February 22, 2002
Mark your calendars! This
year's Industrial Affiliate Program (IAP) Research Day will be held on
Friday February 22, 2002. The day
will start with an overview of the department, followed by
demonstrations and posters by our students in our Graduate Research
Laboratory. Lunch will be provided.
You can find abstracts of
posters and demonstrations submitted (so far) by students at
http://www.cs.bu.edu/IAP/abstracts.html.
This event is open to
members of BUCAN. If you are planning to attend, please RSVP to
Prof. Matta (matta@cs.bu.edu).
Industry Talk Series off to a Great Start!
Last fall, we launched the new
Industry Talk Series (ITS) as part of our IAP program. ITS brings industry
experience to the Boston University CS community. It enables industry to
talk directly to students through its leading experts, who discuss the
real issues and current challenges faced by the technologists working in
computer-related fields. ITS talks focus on the real-life industrial
development projects and experiences, rather than academic research. Thus,
ITS complements the BU-CS
Colloquium Series, which is a traditional
academic colloquium. The ITS has so far
featured speakers from IBM, GeoTrust, The Privacy Foundation, and VeriSign.
You are invited to check
(and of course attend) the upcoming talks scheduled for this semester at
http://www.cs.bu.edu/ITS. For more information or to suggest speakers (or better
yet, to volunteer as a speaker), please contact Prof. Itkis (itkis@cs.bu.edu).
Professor Shanghua Teng Joins the CS Department Faculty
Starting on January
2002, Shanghua Teng (PhD'1991, CMU) has started as a Full Professor of
Computer Science in our Department. Prior to joining our faculty, Shanghua
held appointments as a Full Professor at the University of Illinois,
Urbana Champaign (UIUC) and as a senior research scientist at Akamai
Technologies Inc.
Shanghua's research interests
include smoothed analysis of algorithms and heuristics, internet
algorithms and software, large scale information processing and
organization, combinatorial optimization, linear programming, parallel
scientific computing, mesh generation, eigenvalues and eigenvectors,
computational geometry, graph partitioning and data mining, VLSI and
circuit simulation, probabilistic analysis, and cryptography.
This semester, Shanghua
is teaching a new course on Computational Geometry and Scientific
Computing.
Professor George Kollios Secures a Prestigious NSF Award
Assistant Professor, George Kollios,
who joined our department in Fall 2000 has been awarded a National Science
Foundation (NSF) CAREER Award to support his research on Efficient
Indexing and Data Mining in Spatio-Temporal Databases. This prestigious
award will support George and his students for five years. This is a big
accomplishment for George and I am sure that you will join me in
congratulating him on this important achievement.
George is the tenth faculty member on
our faculty to secure a NSF Career (formerly RIA) award. This is a record
of which our department is very proud.
CAIDA Equipment Award Adds to Systems Sandbox Teaching Laboratory
A
generous equipment award from CAIDA (Cooperative Association for
Internet Data Analysis) to Assistant Professor Ibrahim Matta
will provide our undergraduate and graduate students with hands-on
experience related to the operation and use of state-of-the-art Internet
routing technologies. The four Cisco 7000-series routers will be
integrated in the newly-established Systems Sandbox--a teaching
laboratory that caters to a number of our systems and networking
courses, including CS-470 (Performance Evaluation), CS-553 (Experimental
Operating Systems), and CS-556 (Advanced Networking).
Event Planning for Groundbreaking of the New CS Building
We are at the initial
stages of planning a CS Departmental event in Summer or early Fall of 2002 to
coincide with the groundbreaking
of the new CS Building. In this event, we hope to involve members of our
alumni body. If you would like to help plan for this event, please contact
us at bucan-admin@cs.bu.edu.
Email Forwarding for Life!
Many of our BUCAN
members have inquired about the availability of mail forwarding services
to alumni of Boston University. The answer is yes! You can obtain a
lifetime email alias from Boston University Alumni Web. Check the
description of this service at
http://www.bu.edu/alumni/link/efl/index.html.
You are receiving this quarterly
newsletter because you have recently registered to become a member of BUCAN.
If you prefer not to receive such a newsletter in the future, please
let us know by contacting us at
bucan-admin@cs.bu.edu.
|