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In 2003....
- UW
CSE and Allen Center featured in Washington CEO
(pdf) (December 2003)
"The University of Washington continues to expand its
commitment to research and its relationship with the
business community while preparing for the next wave in
learning." CSE and the Allen Center are prominently
featured in this
Washington CEO
supplement on the University of Washington.
- Allen Center featured in
Seattle Times annual tech wrapup (December 2003)
"If anything, 2003 will be remembered as the year the
technology empire struck back ... The University of
Washington in October opened the $72 million Paul G. Allen
Center for Computer Science and Engineering ..."
- AnHai
Doan Wins 2003 ACM Doctoral Dissertation
Award (December 2003)
2002 UW CSE Ph.D. alumnus AnHai Doan -- now an Assistant
Professor of Computer Science at the University of Illinois -- has
been named the recipient of the 2003 ACM
Doctoral Dissertation Award, which recognizes the top
doctoral dissertation
in the nation in computer science and computer engineering.
- "Paul
Allen Unplugged" (Columns) (December 2003)
"I think it's so important to give young people the opportunity to
explore their passions -- whether it's computers and software, or
music, or studying entrepreneurial skills -- whatever makes them
excited about life and learning. I hope that my support of the
new Allen Center will help create those opportunities for students ..."
A cover story in Columns, the
University of Washington alumni magazine.
- "Allen
Center Wins Rave Reviews at Dedication" (pdf) (December 2003)
"The doors officially opened on October 9, the visitors streamed
in, their eyes widened, and many exclaimed 'Wow!' No words of
praise meant more, however, than the one from Paul G. Allen --
'Stunning!'"
(Special Allen Center dedication issue of Most Significant Bits
(department newsletter).)
- "How
Seattle remade itself" (The Straits Times) (November 2003)
One of Asia's leading newspapers profiles Austin, Boston,
and Seattle as "brain magnet" cities.
"The emergence of winner-takes-all cities is usually linked
to the presence of a dominating research university.
Seattle is no exception. The University of Washington,
which is in the city, has doubled its research budget
in the past decade and is the country's leading public
university as measured by federal funding."
- Isabell
Notkin, 1917-2003 (November 2003)
Isabell Notkin, mother of CSE chair David Notkin and close friend
to many of us in CSE, passed away on November 23, 2003.
- UW CSE
startup Hamlet noted in Seattle PI (November 2003)
"[Madrona] invested ... in Hamlet, a Seattle
online search company led by UW computer scientist
Oren Etzioni ..."
- "UW
Allen Center fosters a culture of research -- Building
designed to stimulate interaction" (Daily
Journal of Commerce) (November 2003)
"There can be any number of ways to envision a building
which responds to a specific program of objectives.
In the case of the Paul G. Allen Center for Computer Science &
Engineering, the project has attained success in architecturally
capturing the spirit of team-learning centered on the personal
interactive relationships between faculty, students and their
physical environment."
- "Corporate
Classrooms" (c|net News.Com) (November 2003)
A c|net article on the relationship of academia and industry includes
a feature on the
Paul G. Allen
Center for Computer Science & Engineering.
- "Urban
Warfare: The Fight for Talent Among American Cities -- Brain-Gain
Cities Attract Educated Young" (Washington Post) (November 2003)
The Washington Post features CSE graduate student and entrepreneur
Ashutosh Tiwary, CSE spinoff Performant, and CSE friend and
venture capitalist Sam Long.
- "'Fare'
Factor: To Buy Or Not To Buy?" (KOMO 1000 News) (November 2003)
"On a recent flight from Seattle to New York, we asked some
passengers how much they paid for their tickets to find out
just how much of a difference there can be in prices on the
same flight.
The responses ranged from about $155 to around $350.
But a University of Washington professor believes he's come up
with a better way to buy."
- "Opening
Doors: New Center a Community Affair -- Tech community digs deep
to open Paul G. Allen Center for Computer Science & Engineering"
(Washington Engineer) (November 2003)
[Article concerning the dedication of the Paul G. Allen Center
for Computer Science & Engineering]
"When one walks through the Paul G. Allen Center for Computer
Science & Engineering, it quickly becomes clear that the local
technology community wanted this building to be built.
The signs are everywhere."
- Trick
or treat! (October 2003)
[Jack-O-Lanterns concerning the dedication of the Paul G. Allen Center
for Computer Science & Engineering]
 Hank Levy |
 Ed Lazowska |
 Hank & Ed |
- "Community
support evident in new people-friendly CSE building" (University
Week) (October 2003)
[Article concerning the dedication of the Paul G. Allen Center
for Computer Science & Engineering]
"Notkin and Lazowska realize that expectations are even
higher for the program now. Based on past performance,
they're confident that the technology sector's faith
is well placed. 'Our program has a long record of
committing to excellence and delivering on our
commitments,' Lazowska said. 'If it had been just hot air,
we would still be in Sieg Hall.'"
- "Allen's,
Gates' funds transform UW computer building" (Seattle Times)
(October 2003)
[Article concerning the dedication of the Paul G. Allen Center
for Computer Science & Engineering]
"Bill Gates and Paul Allen met at Lakeside School, but they got serious
about computers at the University of Washington.
Like Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn in their cave, Gates and Allen
prowled the UW's basement computer lab in the early 1970s to
tinker with its big and rare machines. They don't have to sneak
around anymore.
Last night, in a private dinner with UW leaders, Allen and
Gates were given electronic entry cards giving them permanent
access to the new $72 million Paul G. Allen Center for Computer
Science & Engineering."
- "Computer
center now in play at UW" (Seattle Post-Intelligencer) (October
2003)
[Article concerning the dedication of the Paul G. Allen Center
for Computer Science & Engineering]
"'We have a history of pushing the boundaries here,' [CSE department
chair David Notkin] said. 'Our secret sauce is having great people
and no boundaries.' [Paul] Allen agreed, noting it was that very
openness that led him, as a high school student, to sneak onto campus
and use the UW computers in the graduate lab in the basement of
Roberts Hall without permission. He contended it was not technically
unauthorized use. 'The door was unlocked,' Allen said."
- "UW
dedicates new Paul Allen computer center" (Associated Press)
(October 2003)
[Article concerning the dedication of the Paul G. Allen Center
for Computer Science & Engineering]
"Paul Allen and Bill Gates wore out their welcome at the
University of Washington while they were still in high school.
They'd spend their free time there, fooling around with
unoccupied computers until they learned enough to help
launch the PC revolution.
Nowadays, their welcome at the UW is pretty well assured ...
Both Gates and Allen have said they wanted to give back to
the university that was so important to their formative years,
and where they spent so much time."
- "$72M
UW building is complete" and
"Paul
G. Allen Center for Computer Science & Engineering"
(Seattle Daily Journal of Commerce) (October 2003)
[Article concerning the dedication of the Paul G. Allen Center
for Computer Science & Engineering]
"Soccer-playing robot dogs will welcome visitors at Thursday's
dedication and open house for the Paul G. Allen Center
for Computer Science & Engineering on the University
of Washington campus ... It was designed to offer hands-on
learning, and was funded mostly by private donations."
- "UW
Dedicates Allen Center for Computer Science & Engineering"
(Northwest Science & Technology) (September 2003)
[Article concerning the dedication of the Paul G. Allen Center
for Computer Science & Engineering]
"The Allen Center is the new home for a program that recently
celebrated its thirty-fifth anniversary. UW CSE has come a
long way since the early days. Born as an inter-college
graduate program in 1967, CSE has become known for its close-knit
culture, spirit of innovation, and a generous helping of quirky humor.
It's a program with a constellation of honors and awards that
can only be described as stellar ..."
- "New
CSE building doubles space, opportunities" (UW Daily)
(September 2003)
[Article concerning the dedication of the Paul G. Allen Center
for Computer Science & Engineering]
"After nearly 30 years in Sieg Hall, the Department of Computer Science
& Engineering began the academic year today in a new building.
The Paul G. Allen Center for Computer Science & Engineering,
completed on time and under budget, provides 85,000 assignable
square feet, more than doubling CSE's total space and tripling
its laboratory area ...
"'It's worth noting that this building truly is mostly privately
funded,' said Lazowska ...
The high level of private support did not come as a surprise to
Notkin. 'Our mission resonates with people in the region, including
alums, venture capitalists, and leaders of high-tech business in
the area.'
According to Lazowska, another reason for the campaign's
success is that, even before the Allen Center, CSE was truly
a top program ... 'We deliver.
We produce unbelievably wonderful students.
We create companies and transfer technologies.
We provide leadership.
People have seen this, and they have seen the impact.
They want more of it.'"
- CSE
professor David Salesin delivers UW Freshman Convocation
(September 2003)
"So what are the implications of all this exponential growth
in so many areas of technology? I think they are huge! Unimaginably
huge! In the next 20-25 years, we will see a whole century of
progress at today's rate. But that's just the beginning. Because
the very rate of progress is itself an example of exponential
growth. By the end of the century, we'll see 20,000 years of
progress at today's rate. That corresponds to a thousand times
more change than the last century -- which was already pretty dramatic!"
See full talk, "College and the Art of Life,"
here.
- "Coming
Online: Paul G. Allen Center for Computer Science & Engineering"
(Columns) (September 2003)
[Article concerning the dedication of the Paul G. Allen Center
for Computer Science & Engineering]
"The UW Department of Computer Science amp; Engineering finally has a
new home worthy of its reputation as a leader in 21st century computer
science ... it will transform the nature of education in the department
and the University."
- CSE Professor David Salesin's Bhutan photographs
(August 2003)
Down to Earth, Close to Heaven: The People of Bhutan, an
exhibit of the Bhutan photographs of CSE Professor David Salesin,
will be on display from September 6 through November 1 at
Fugio, 1507 Belmont Ave., between Pike and Pine.
- James
Hewitt, 1974-2003 (August 2003)
James Hewitt, Windows systems architect for UW CSE, died in a
motorcycle accident on August 9 2003. He was 29.
James had been involved in tech support positions since he was in
high school, working directly or as a contractor for UW, the
Pacific Science Center, Microsoft, Attachmate, Providence Medical
Center, Boeing, and CSE, among others. He also was the founder of
Techwolf Networks, an enterprise technology consulting firm.
- Burton
Smith featured in New York Times (August 2003)
"After a period of neglect, the intellectual legacy of Seymour Cray,
the father of the modern supercomputer, is being revived ...
This design philosophy is being revitalized by Burton J. Smith,
a founder and the chief scientist of the Seattle-based Tera ..."
- Richard Anderson's "Classroom Presenter" featured in Microsoft
Faculty Summit coverage (July 2003)
Addressing 350 faculty members from more than 100 universities,
Microsoft's Bill Gates notes: "The excitement in the last decade
was great, it got us a lot of connectivity, moved some things
forward. But the really tough problems are the ones that we'll
solve this decade."
- UW
CSE startup Nimble Technology acquired by Actuate (July 2003)
"Actuate Corporation, the world leader in scalable Business
Intelligence Applications, today announced that it has completed
the acquisition of Nimble Technology, a privately held Enterprise
Information Integration company, founded in 1999 as a result of
a five year research program in the Department of Computer
Science & Engineering at the University of Washington."
- Fundraising
complete for new CSE building (July 2003)
July 3 marks the successful completion of the fundraising campaign
for UW's new Paul G. Allen Center for Computer Science & Engineering.
More than 250 donors have committed a total of
$42 million in private funds, complementing $30
million in University of Washington and State funds.
The project is on-time and on-budget. A phased movein
will take place between early July and early September.
Classes start September 29, and the formal dedication
will take place October 9.
Seattle
Times article here.
- UW CSE startup Teranode licenses Labscape (July 2003)
Teranode, co-founded by Larry Arnstein from UW CSE, provides software
technology for biotech laboratories.
"People think of universities as places where you develop technologies,
but we also develop people and relationships," said Charles Williams,
director of the UW Office of Software & Copyright Ventures.
"It's very telling that Teranode was formed from faculty
and students of the University. UW is a great place to meet
other talented people with a broad range of interests,
and find others who share your vision for the future."
- CSE senior Erin Earl featured in Seattle Times (June 2003)
Erin, a June 2003 UW graduate at age 18, is a triple
major in Computer Science, Music Theory, and Applied Music (piano).
She received the 2003
Arts & Sciences Dean's Medal for the Arts, and will
pursue graduate work in music at Indiana University in the fall -- computer
science is her backup plan!
- Jean-Loup
Baer, Wen-Hann Wang win first annual "ISCA Influential Paper Award"
(June 2003)
The ISCA Influential Paper Award will be presented annually by
ACM SIGARCH and IEEE-CS TCCA at the jointly-sponsored International
Symposium on Computer Architecture, to recognize the paper
from the ISCA symposium 15 years earlier that has had the
greatest impact on the field of computer architecture in the
intervening years in terms of research, development, products or ideas.
The inaugural ISCA Influential Paper Award was presented at the 2003
ISCA symposium to CSE professor Jean-Loup Baer and his then-graduate-student
(now Intel architect) Wen-Hann Wang, for their 1988
ISCA paper "On the Inclusion Properties for Multi-Level Cache Hierarchies."
- "Hamlet" technology
featured on MSNBC, NBC Nightly News (May 2003)
NBC Nightly News anchor Tom Brokaw and reporter George Lewis interview
UW CSE professor Oren Etzioni concerning his "Hamlet" technology for
finding bargain air fares.
Windows Media Player version
here.
- UW
CSE startup Performant acquired by Mercury Interactive (May 2003)
Mercury Interactive has acquired UW CSE startup Performant, Inc.
Performant, co-founded in 2000 by CSE graduate students
Ashutosh Tiwary and Przemek Pardyak and CSE faculty
member Hank Levy, builds software products focused
on performance problem solving and tuning, particularly
of Java 2 Enterprise Edition (J2EE) applications.
Performant has 30 employees, including
UW CSE Ph.D.s Ted Romer and Lauren Bricker.
Tiwary, CTO and Chairman of Performant, will become
VP of J2EE Diagnostics at Mercury Interactive.
Mercury Interactive press release
here.
Seattle Times article
here.
King County Journal article
here.
New York Times article
here.
- Lazowska
to co-chair President's Information Technology Advisory
Committee (May 2003)
Ed Lazowska, Bill & Melinda Gates Chair, has been appointed
by the White House as co-chair of the President's Information
Technology Advisory Committee (PITAC).
"PITAC will help guide the Administration's efforts to accelerate
the development and adoption of information technologies vital for
American prosperity in the 21st century," according to the
White
House press release.
- Lee
Hood wins 2003 Lemelson-MIT Prize (April 2003)
Affiliate Professor Leroy Hood, president and co-founder of Seattle's
Institute for Systems Biology, has received the annual $500,000
Lemeson-MIT Prize -- the world's largest single cash prize for
invention -- "for his vision and inventions, which have
permanently changed the course of biology, and revolutionized
the understanding of genetics, life, and human health."
- Oren
Etzioni's "Hamlet" software featured in Wired,
Seattle
Times (April 2003)
"Hamlet" uses datamining
to answer the question "to buy, or not to buy?"
by predicting when air fares will be at their cheapest.
"On a simulated run of the program, 607 would-be passengers
saved almost $300,000 based on advice on when to buy a ticket."
- Ph.D.
alumna Fran Berman named to endowed chair at UCSD (April 2003)
1979 Ph.D. alumna Fran Berman has been appointed first holder of the
Endowed Chair in High Performance Computing at the University
of California, San Diego.
Berman is a professor of Computer Science & Engineering and
directs the San Diego Supercomputer Center (SDSC) at UCSD.
"Fran Berman is a pioneer in grid computing and a leader in
the international effort to build a comprehensive information
infrastructure to support 21st century research in science
and engineering," said UCSD Jacobs School Dean Frieder Seible.
- Venkat Guruswami
wins ACM Doctoral Dissertation Award (March 2003)
CSE Assistant Professor
Venkat Guruswami
has been named the
winner of this year's ACM Doctoral Dissertation Award, for the
most outstanding dissertation in the field of computer
science. Venkat's
dissertation, "List Decoding of Error-Correcting Codes,"
was supervised by Madhu Sudan at MIT.
- UW
teams take top honors in Mathematical Contest in Modeling (March 2003)
Two University of Washington teams were among 11 awarded "Outstanding
Winner" status -- from among 638 total entries -- in this year's
Mathematical Contest in Modeling, an annual competition administered
by the Consortium for Mathematics and Its Applications.
Both of UW's 3-person teams included a Computer Science
undergraduate major: sophomore Simon Pai (whose team additionally
received special recognition from the Mathematical Association of America),
and senior Sam Coskey (whose
team additionally received special recognition from the
Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences).
Complete contest results available
here.
- Susan
Eggers profiled in ComputerSource (March 2003)
CSE Professor Susan Eggers was profiled in the March 2003
issue of ComputerSource magazine. "Most people
might not know of Eggers, but anyone who buys a computer in
the coming years will have been touched by her work."
Eggers' web page
here;
Simultaneous MultiThreading project web page
here.
- Oren
Etzioni on NPR Morning Edition (March 2003)
"Host Bob Edwards profiles the use, abuse and possible defenses
against the e-mail inbox phenomenon known as Spam. University of
Washington Computer Science Professor Oren Etzioni says the pesky
solicitation messages have reached 7 billion daily."
- Richard
Anderson's Tablet PC "Presenter" featured by Microsoft (February 2003)
"Anderson has been working in tandem with Microsoft researchers
to develop and deploy a Tablet PC-based lecture presentation
system that researchers hope will increase opportunities for
interaction with students."
- Bernstein, Smith
elected to National Academy of Engineering (February 2003)
UW CSE Affiliate Professors Phil Bernstein and Burton Smith have been elected to the "Class of 2003" of the National Academy of Engineering. Election to NAE is regarded as one of the highest professional distinctions accorded an engineer.
- Domingos,
Popović win CSE's 9th and 10th Sloan Research Fellowships (February 2003)
Assistant Professors
Pedro Domingos and
Zoran Popović
have been named to the 2003 class of Sloan Research Fellows.
The Sloan Research Fellowship program recognizes the nation's
most outstanding young faculty members in the sciences.
Domingos and Popović are CSE's 9th and 10th Sloan recipients,
joining Tom Anderson, Brian Curless, Chris Diorio,
Alon Halevy, Raj Rao, David Salesin, Steve Seitz, and Dan Suciu.
Domingos and Popović each have been recognized previously
with NSF CAREER Awards.
- Jerre
Noe turns 80! (February 2003)
Jerre Noe, recruited from SRI in 1968 as the first chair
of UW Computer Science & Engineering, turned 80 on
February 1 2003.
- Raj
Rao wins Office of Naval Research Young Investigator Award
(January 2003)
CSE professor
Raj Rao
has been named one of 26 FY03 Office of
Naval Research Young Investigators. The ONRYIs come from all
fields of science and engineering; this year two were awarded
nationally in the Mathematical, Computer and Information Sciences
Division and two in the Cognitive, Neural, and Biomolecular
Science and Technology Division.
Rao is CSE's sixth ONRYI Award recipient. He joins
Brian Bershad,
Chris Diorio,
David Salesin,
Steve Seitz, and
Dan Weld.
Rao has previously been recognized by a
David
and Lucille Packard Foundation Fellowship for Science and Engineering
(CSE's 2nd),
a Sloan
Research Fellowship (CSE's 8th), and a
National
Science Foundation CAREER Award (CSE's 29th, including predecessor
programs).
- "UW's
new computer science building nearing completion" (January 2003)
"The project provides a vivid example of public support for the
University of Washington, Lazowska said. 'Because of CSE's close
ties with our alumni and with the region's technology and venture
capital communities, our project has attracted nearly $40 million
in private funds thus far,' supplementing $30 million in state and
UW funds. 'In extraordinarily difficult economic times, our friends
and alumni have really come through,' he said. 'They see the
importance of the ideas and people that flow from our program, and
their gifts have made this project possible.'"
- IEEE Computer
profiles Intel Research "lablets" (pdf) (January 2003)
"What is unique about Intel's lablets, says Ed Lazowska, former
chair of the University of Washington's Computer Science &
Engineering Department, is that they are created with the explicit
purpose of collaboration, and the specific projects are picked from
the intersection of what's interesting to both Intel and the
neighboring university ... As current University of Washington
CSE chair David Notkin states, '... this is an ecosystem that
the region is extremely fortunate to have.'"
- Yeung,
Haynor, Ruzzo author computer science field's "fast breaking
paper" (January 2003)
Six times each year, ISI Essential Science Indicators
recognizes a single "fast breaking paper" in each of 22 broad
fields of science -- the paper having the highest rate of increase
in citations in its field.
For November/December 2002 in the computer science field,
that paper was
"Validating
clustering for gene expression data" by
UW CSE Ph.D. student (now UW Microbiology
bioinformatics scientist) Ka Yee Yeung,
UW Radiology professor David R. Haynor, and
UW CSE professor Larry Ruzzo.
- Ed Lazowska
interviewed in ethix (January 2003)
"Here in the State of Washington, we are failing to make the choices that
will leave our kids the kind of region they need ... Our economy is creating
jobs for which our education system is not preparing our kids. It's
an enormous issue for this state and we don't have any discernible
plan."
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