3D Reconstruction Researchers with the University of Kentucky seek the technological goal of developing a 3D display that does not require special glasses.
A Day in the Life: Tessa, Kiera, Crystal A healthy job market and software industry innovations are attracting the attention of high school and college-age students.
A Web Interface to Large, High-Resolution X-Ray Computed Tomography Data Sets Humphries is a Research Scientist in the Geology Department at the University of Texas and Project Manger for the Digital Library of Vertebrate Morphology (or Digimorph Project), an NSF funded Digital Library Project. His background is in biology and biological informatics.
Amazon.com: A Data-Driven Enterprise Amazon.com's Dennis Lee takes you through the history of data platforms developed by the company since its inception.
Arctic Region Supercomputer Center The University of Alaska features explanations and demonstrations of the multiple uses of the Supercomputer Center to study the earth.
Assertion-driven Error Recovery Sarfraz Khurshid, assistant professor, Electrical and Computer Engineering Department, University of Texas at Austin June 23, 2008
Audio Cameras for Audio-Visual Scene Analysis Ramani Duraiswami, PhD, associate professor, Department of Computer Science, Institute for Advanced Computer Studies, University of Maryland, College Park June 3, 2009
Automated Assume-Guarantee Verification Corina Pãsãreanu, Ph.D., research scientist, NASA Ames Research Center, Robust Software Engineering Group July 21, 2008
Automatic Facial Expression Analysis Dr. Ying-Li Tian, associate professor, Electrical Engineering Department, The City College of the City University of New York (CCNY) June 16, 2009
Behavior-Based Malware Detection Mihai Christodorescu, doctoral candidate, Computer Science, University of Wisconsin, Madison April 19, 2007
Behind the Code with Anders Hejlsberg Barbara Fox interviews Anders Hejlsberg, an industry luminary and chief designer of the C# programming language and a key participant in the development of Microsoft's .NET Framework.
Behind the Code with Catharine van Ingen Catharine has a wealth of experience in hardware, including work with the Alpha machine and MIPS processor teams, and in industrial-strength software for algorithms used to manage water flows, logging data from particle accelerator detectors, and buying Mickey Mouse watches over the Internet.
Behind the Code with Eric Horvitz Eric Horvitz of Microsoft Research is the center of a variety of projects such as the Decision Theory and Adaptive Systems group. Learn what these projects entail and how they further Microsoft Research’s goal of improving the quality of life for all.
Behind the Code with Jim Gray Barbara Fox interviews Jim Gray, a 'Technical Fellow' in the Scalable Servers Research Group (Sky Server, Terra Server) and manager of Microsoft's Bay Area Research Center (BARC).
Behind the Code with Mohsen Agsen Conversation with Mohsen Agsen about the challenges that Microsoft has faced in the past and how the industry handles the challenges of today.
Behind the Code with Patrick Dussud Join Microsoft Technical Fellow Patrick Dussud for a look at his work in a range of programming languages and systems.
Behind the Code with Peter Spiro Discover how Peter Spiro got a job at Microsoft to help build the team that drove SQL Server to the huge success it is today.
Behind the Code with Rebecca Norlander Learn how Rebecca Norlander, a technical strategist for Microsoft, has made a name for herself in the often male-dominated computer world.
Behind the Code with Richard Ward Richard Ward of Microsoft sees his diverse experiences in life as a major contribution to the advances of modern computer engineering. Discover which experiences Ward finds most helpful, as he focuses on building out the core
infrastructure components.
Behind the Code with Rob Short Rob Short, vice president overseeing development of windows kernel and virtualization technologies, Microsoft September 15, 2006
Behind the Code with Terry Crowley Terry Crowley, a technical fellow and director of development for Microsoft Office, discusses his involvement in the transformation of the Internet from an academic exercise to a common household name.
Bridges to the Future, Part III: Standing Strong Linda Figg, President and CEO of Figg Engineering Group, leads a distinguished panel in a discussion of how state-of-the-art technology may fix America’s failing infrastructure.
Building Mashups by Example Dr. Craig Knoblock, Ph.D., senior project leader, Information Sciences Institute; research professor, Computer Science, University of Southern California August 1, 2008
Building Systems That Enforce Measurable Security Goals Trent Jaeger, Associate Professor. Computer Science and Engineering Department, Pennsylvania State University; Co-Director, Systems and Internet Infrastructure Security Lab September 16, 2009
C to FPGA Compilation and Domain-Specific Computing Dr. Jason Cong, professor and chairman, Computer Science Department, University of California, Los Angeles; co-director, VLSI CAD Laboratory June 6, 2008
CMPLE - Melting the Ice Between Cores Suleyman Sair, Ph.D., assistant professor, Electrical and Computer Engineering, North Carolina State University May 24, 2006
CU@USC with Professor Khoshnevis CU@USC host Jill Schneiderman speaks with Viterbi Engineering Professor Behrokh Khoshnevis concerning research in construction methods. This premier college interview program is produced by the University of Southern California.
Dependable Messaging in Sensor Networks Hongwei Zhang, Ph.D. student, Department of Computer Science and Engineering, The Ohio State University March 30, 2006
Discovering Fluid Power In this University of Minnesota program, distinguished panelists discuss fluid power, its many uses and its role for our future.
Distant Speech Recognition: No Black Boxes Allowed John McDonough, Institute for Computer Science and Engineering, Intelligent Sensor-Actuator Systems (ISAS), University of Karlsruhe September 19, 2008
Distinguished Faculty Lecture: Charles Bostian Alumni Distinguished Professor Charles Bostian speaks on modern radio research as part of the Distinguished Faculty Lectures at Virginia Tech.
Dynamic Algebraic Algorithms Piotr Sankowski, Ph. D., Post-Doc Fellow, University of Rome "La Sapienza", Italy 8/16/2007
Dynamic Inference of Abstract Types Michael D. Ernst, associate professor, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Lab, Massachusetts Institute of Technology December 12, 2006
Dynamics of Highly Connected Queuing Networks Senya Shlosman, directeur de recherche, Centre de Physique Theorique, Luminy, Marseille; senior researcher, Institute of Information Transmission Problems, Moscow December 11, 2007
Engineers Without Borders: Engineering with Soul EWB-USA Founder Bernard Amadei, PhD. shares his passion to partner with disadvantaged communities to improve their quality of life through implementation of sustainable engineering projects.
Enriching Speech Translation: Exploiting Information Beyond Words Vivek Kumar Rangarajan Sridhar, B.E. (honors) degree in electrical and electronics engineering, Birla Institute of Technology and Science, Pilani, India; M.S. degree in electrical engineering, University of Southern California, Los Angeles May 1, 2008
First-Order Probabilistic Inference Rodrigo de Salvo Braz, postdoctoral researcher, Computer Science Division, EECS, University of California, Berkeley September 5, 2008
Flow Control in Wireless Networks Minghua Chen, Ph.D. student, Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences, University of California at Berkeley June 6, 2006
Global n-Way Interactive HD over IP Video Michael Wellings describes the systems used, preparations at the remote sites and how problems were overcome for the Neptune HD project.
Globally Optimized Robust System Design Subhasish Mitra, Ph.D., assistant professor, Departments of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, Stanford University August 29, 2008
Google Ad Systems How Google makes money through the Google ad systems.
Google: A Behind-the-Scenes Look Google Fellow Jeff Dean chronicles the history of data processing at Google, including in-house innovations such as GFS and MapReduce.
Havoc on Ntfs' Brian Hackett, PhD candidate, Computer Science Department, Stanford 10/3/2007
Hawaii's High Tech Workforce University of Hawai'i CIO David Lassner leads the discussion regarding issues in Hawaii's high tech workforce and environment. High Tech Hawai'i is a production of the University of Hawai'i.
Hawaii's High Technology Development Corporation Find out how Hawaii looks to expand its economy through development of commercial high tech ventures. High Tech Hawai'i is a production of the University of Hawai'i.
How Helpful is Network Coding? Baochun Li, associate professor, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Toronto September 22, 2006
Inferring Rankings under Constrained Sensing Devavrat Shah, Jamieson Career Development Associate Professor, Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, MIT June 15, 2009
Invisible Engines: How Software Platforms Drive Innovation David Evans, founder, Market Platform Dynamics; managing director, LECG's Global Competition Policy Practice; and visiting professor, University College, London November 14, 2006
Light, Agile and Flexible Discover why today’s lightweight applications are quickly replacing the heavy and clumsy collaboration technologies of the past. Stephen Downes, senior researcher at the National Research Council, examines how Web 2.0 applications and other collaborative technologies can better support learning and capabilities leveraging.
Linguistic Visualization for Fun and Profit Christopher Collins, PhD candidate, computational linguistics, information visualization, and human-computer interaction, University of Toronto October 2, 2008
Location Enhanced Web Services A discussion of open software that enables private, course grain, indoor and outdoor positioning on cellular mobile computers with no additional hardware.
Location-Based Activity Recognition Dieter Fox, associate professor and director, Robotics and State Estimation Lab, Computer Science & Engineering, University of Washington May 17, 2006
Making Concurrency Mainstream Edward A. Lee, Robert S. Pepper Distinguished professor, EECS and chair, Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences (EECS) Department, U.C. Berkeley January 12, 2007
Microcosm: E. coli and the New Science Life Carl Zimmer, science writer, New York Times; author of six books including "Evolution: The Triumph of an Idea and Parasite Rex" June 3, 2008
Model-based Testing with Labeled Transition Systems Jan Tretmans, researcher, Embedded Systems Institute (ESI), Eindhoven; part-time associate professor, Radboud University Nijmegen, Netherlands August 14, 2006
Network Architecture for Automatic Security and Policy Enforcement An overview of various approaches for automating technical policy enforcement as a condition for network access in colleges and universities, including approaches which allow for host isolation into specialized networks, captive-portal-like remediation systems, and other forms of conditional network access.
On Evaluating Language Technologies Ellen Voorhees, manager, Retrieval Group, Information Access Division, National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) August 11, 2008
On Graph Kernels S V N Vishwanathan, Ph. D., Principal Researcher, National ICT Australia 9/28/2007
Opening Plenary - Fall 2004 Dr. Larry Faulkner, president University of Texas-Austin, begins the session with an oratory regarding networking for research and education.
OSIsoft PI System Overview Christian Luckock, Directory of Enterprise Architecture, Data Center & IT Solutions Group 4/2/2008
Our Infrastructures - Online And Vulnerable? Part 1 of 3 From electricity usage to water consumption, from traffic lights to dams, our world is monitored by computer systems. Join a panel of experts who take a look at the reliability of these control systems.
Part 1: NCWIT - Introduction and Welcome Lucy Sanders, NCWIT CEO; Bill Wulf, President, National Academy of Engineering; Rick Rashid, Senior Vice President, Microsoft Research; Padmasree Warrior, Executive Vice President and CTO, Motorola; Dr. Kathie Olsen, NSF Deputy Director and COO; and more May 17, 2006
Part 2: NCWIT - Executive Branch Panel and Dialogue Lucy Sanders, NCWIT CEO; Bill Wulf, President, National Academy of Engineering; Rick Rashid, Senior Vice President, Microsoft Research; Padmasree Warrior, Executive Vice President and CTO, Motorola; Dr. Kathie Olsen, NSF Deputy Director and COO; and more May 17, 2006
Part 3: NCWIT - Congressional Panel and Dialogue Lucy Sanders, NCWIT CEO; Bill Wulf, President, National Academy of Engineering; Rick Rashid, Senior Vice President, Microsoft Research; Padmasree Warrior, Executive Vice President and CTO, Motorola; Dr. Kathie Olsen, NSF Deputy Director and COO; and more May 17, 2006
Part 4: NCWIT - Remarks by Senator Obama Lucy Sanders, NCWIT CEO; Bill Wulf, President, National Academy of Engineering; Rick Rashid, Senior Vice President, Microsoft Research; Padmasree Warrior, Executive Vice President and CTO, Motorola; Dr. Kathie Olsen, NSF Deputy Director and COO; and more May 17, 2006
Perspectives on the Information Industry An insider’s view of Google Inc., the Internet search engine known for its clean interface and speedy, highly relevant results.
Pervasive Technologies for Health: a Focus on the Human Dr. Kay Connelly, Assistant Professor, Computer Science Department, co-founder, Ethical Technologies in the Homes of Seniors lab, Associate Director, Center for Applied Cybersecurity Research, Indiana University August 19, 2008
PLOW: A Collaborative Task Learning Agent James Allen, Senior Research Scientist and Associate Director of the Institute for Human and Machine Cognition, Pensacola Florida March 11, 2008
Podcasting: What's the Big Deal? Could Podcasting be the 'next big thing'? A panel of technology experts discusses the possibility. High Tech Hawaii is produced by the University of Hawaii.
Processes without Partitions Matthew Flatt, assistant professor at the University of Utah, demonstrates a novel software approach for programmers, the PLT Scheme.
Project Halo: A Digital Aristotle Discussion of Vulcan, Inc.’s Project Halo _ a digital, interactive application for student tutoring / instruction and scientific research.
Rebuilding Rome in a Day Sameer Agarwal, PhD, Department of Computer Science and Engineering, University of Washington June 12, 2009
Recent Advances in Convex Optimization Stephen P. Boyd, Samsung Professor of Engineering, Professor of Electrical Engineering, Information Systems Laboratory, Stanford University October 17, 2008
Research on Cognitive Radio Networks at Real-Time Computing Laboratory Kang G. Shin, Kevin and Nancy O'Connor Professor of Computer Science; founding director, Real-Time Computing Laboratory, Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, The University of Michigan July 16, 2009