BUCAN Newsletter
for Spring 2003
In this issue...
-
Department wins a major NSF ITR award to investigate safe network
programming
- Department sends five female
graduate students to Grace-Hopper 2002 Conference
- IAP Research Day featuring
presentations from 40 students a great success!
- IAP Career Development Workshop
helps students refine their interview skills
- J Allard (BA'91) featured in the
Spring 2003 issue of Bostonia Magazine
- Start-up leverages department
research to streamline electronic data storage
- Department institutes new Graduate
Research Excellence Award
Department Wins a Major NSF ITR award on Safe Network Programming
Professors Azer Bestavros and Assaf Kfoury, led a team of
faculty members, including Professors John Byers, Ibrahim Matta, and Richard
West, in proposing and securing funding for a major National Science
Foundation (NSF) Information Technology Research (ITR) award, which seeks to
investigate novel paradigms that enhance the safety and robustness of
networked applications. The award, totaling almost $1.8M, will support a
number of faculty members, a postdoctoral fellow, and five PhD
students over a five-year period. In early 2003, this project got off
the ground with the pursuit of a number of projects under the umbrella of
the iBench initiative. The Internet Programming WorkBench (iBench)
Initiative has as its central goal the development of a rigorous discipline
for the specification, programming, and maintenance of distributed
applications and services over the Internet. Quoting from the web page of
that initiative
The recent
metamorphosis of the Internet---from a mere best-effort transport
medium to an open communication and computation
infrastructure---necessitates the development of robust abstractions
that facilitate its use to support a constantly increasing number of
applications, in compliance with widely-accepted correctness
standards that ensure a verifiably safe, fair, secure, and efficient
access of Internet resources. Today, and to a large extent,
programming distributed applications over the Internet suffers from
the same lack of organizing principles as did programming of
stand-alone computers some thirty years ago. Primeval programming
languages were expressive but unwieldy; software engineering
technology improved not only through better understanding of useful
abstractions, but also by automating the process of verification of
safety properties both at compile time (e.g., type checking) and run
times (e.g., memory bound checks). We believe that the same kinds of
improvements could find their way into the programming of
distributed Internet services. iBench takes the position that
recognizing network flows as the central abstraction around which to
develop a programming system for the Internet is perhaps the most
important organizing principle. Specifically, to rapidly experiment
with and deploy a wide range of new services within the existing
constraints of the Internet infrastructure, it is necessary to adopt
a more powerful model for the naming, creation, composition,
sharing, and processing of Internet flows.
The BU Bridge Newspaper dedicated a
front-page article on this effort, which you can read on-line at
http://www.bu.edu/bridge/archive/2002/09-27/scientists.htm. For
more information on
the goals, projects, and activities of iBench, please
visit the initiative's web page at
www.cs.bu.edu/groups/ibench.
Department Sends Five Female Students to Grace-Hopper
2002 Conference
With support from Microsoft through
the Department's IAP program, five female students from the department were
funded to attend the 2002 Grace Hopper Celebration of Women in Computing
Conference, held in Vancouver last fall. This conference is designed to
bring the research and career interests of women in computing to the
forefront.
In addition to special sessions that
focus on the role of women in today's technology fields,
presenters--who are leaders in their respective fields, representing
industrial, academic and government communities--present their current work.
Feedback from our students who have attended this event was quite positive.
"It gave me a whole new perspective and made me much more confident that
I am not alone in my ambitions of pursuing CS research, while also being a
mother" commented one of the graduate students who attended the
conference. For more information on the GHC'2002, check
http://www.gracehopper.org.
IAP Research Day: A Great Success!
With presentations from over 40
students, our 2003 IAP Research Day, held on March 6th, was a great success.
Participating companies included representatives from Microsoft, Motorola,
Milcord, Sun Microsystems, and Certeon, as well as representatives from
Boston University Community Technology Fund and companies they represent.
Dean Jeff Henderson and Associate Dean Scott Whitaker also visited the
event. Pictures from this event are available at
http://www.cs.bu.edu/misc/IAP2003.
This year, the department decided to
award prizes for best student presentations. A committee of faculty members
listened to all presentations and awarded prizes to those who were most
capable in communicating their ideas to the non-experts. This year's winners
were Vassilis Athitsos (for his work on Appearance-Based 3D Hand Pose
Estimation, supervised by: Stan Sclaroff), Scott W. Russell (for his work on
the High Cost of Universality in Provably Secure Steganography, supervised
by Leo Reyzin), and Anukool Lakhina (for his work on Sampling Biases in IP
Topology Measurements, co-supervised by John Byers, Mark Crovella).
For more information on our IAP program
and/or to attend our next such event,
please refer to the IAP Web pages at
http://www.cs.bu.edu/IAP, or contact the
coordinator of this program, Professor Ibrahim Matta
(matta@cs.bu.edu).
IAP Career Development Workshop Helps Students Refine
Their Interview Skills
On
March 27th, 2003, the department held its 2003 Career Development Workshop.
Over fifty undergraduate students participated in
this year's event, which featured a presentation by Janet Kendall of BU's
Office of Career Services on how to prepare a resume, and a presentation by
Holly Peterson of Microsoft on strategies for a successful interview.
In addition to the semi-annual Career
Development Workshop, the department makes available to its students and
alumni an on-line career management tool, which allows posting of job
opportunities and also of resume. For more information on this service (to
post jobs or resumes), please refer to he IAP Web pages at
http://www.cs.bu.edu/IAP, or contact the
coordinator of this program, Professor Ibrahim Matta
(matta@cs.bu.edu).
J Allard (BA'91) featured in
the Spring 2003 issue of Bostonia Magazine
J Allard (BU/CS Class
of 1991) was featured in an article published earlier this Spring by
Bostonia Magazine, the Boston University Alumni Quarterly Publication.
Quoting from this article:
Having
successfully launched Xbox Live in November, with its real-time online
gaming, J Allard (CAS’91) — known as James back in his college days — was
recently named vice president for Xbox. As a new kid at Microsoft, fresh out
of BU, he got Bill Gates’s attention by pushing the software behemoth into
the Internet Age — and finally got his mom to use e-mail. For the past two
years, mostly as general manager of Xbox, he’s led the charge in what he
calls the digital entertainment revolution. It’s not your older brother’s
Pac Man anymore.
You can read the
entire article on line at
http://www.bu.edu/alumni/bostonia/2003/spring/allard
Start-up Leverages Department
Research to Streamline Electronic Data Storage
The result of two years of work on transitioning
research ideas from the department laboratories is finally coming to
fruition. Professor Gene Itkis has designs that promise to increase
the amount of information that can be stored with existing hardware,
as well as protect data centers against hackers. These designs caught
the eyes of a former venture capitalist, who is now leading the
efforts to raise funds for UbqC--a company that will capitalize on
Itkis' ideas among others.
The BU Bridge Newspaper dedicated a front-page
article on this effort, which you can read on-line at
http://www.bu.edu/bridge/archive/2003/04-04/electronic.html
Department Institutes New Graduate Research Excellence Award
Earlier last fall, the department faculty
instituted an annual competition for Research Excellence Awards (REA)
to reward PhD students who have demonstrated excellence in research.
An REA award would complement the student's Research or Teaching
Fellowship stipend by $2,000 per semester (or $4,000 per academic
year). These awards will be funded through sponsored research
projects.
The department is also looking into the possibility
of instituting a similar award for its undergraduate students, once a
proper source of funding is identified.
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