ACM-SIGGRAPH-Opening-Meeting

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

ACM-SIGGRAPH-Opening-Meeting What is ACMSIGGRAPH? TAMU ACM SIGGRAPH is a student organization committed to fostering relationships and education within the computer graphics community. Whether you’re interested in special effects, animated films, video games, or all of the above, we’re here to help you experience what happens behind the scenes. SIGGRAPH 2014 VIZ Party SIGMM SIGPLAN SIGACT SIGEVO SIGACCESS SIGMIS SIGCHI SIGecom SIGAPP SIGCAS SIGSOFT SIGART SIGDA SIGITE SIGBED SIGMOBILE SIGARCH SIGOPS SIGCSE SIGKDD SIGCOMM SIGDOC SIGIR SIGSAC SIGEVO SIGMETRICS ACMSIGGRAPH Annual Siggraph Professional Conference Chapters Student Chapters (This is us!) Officers President Vice President Treasurer Secretary Outreach Cameron Coker Gretchen Freitag Nathan Ayres Anne Lynch Austin Ratliff Industry Relations Member Development Webmaster Advertising Social Media Jacy Johnson Marcos Alfonso Mackenzie Dalglish Ricardo Montes Nicholas Harvey Social / Service Nightlife: Pixelnary, Super Art Fight, Ice Cream Social, Ping pong & Dodgeball Tournaments AIGA, TAGD, SWAMP Collaborations TAMU ACM SIGGRAPH Mentors & Animation Jam! Workshops Workshop Dates: • September 17th: Beginner Maya • October 1st: ??? • October 22nd: ??? Contact Marcos for workshop assisting opportunities or if you have an idea for a workshop! Field Trips and Guest Speakers ReelFX Animation Studio Industry Professionals Siggraph 2015 Studio Crawl T-Shirts Your choice of Pink, Green, Blue, or Maroon, free with new membership Can’t decide? Buy another for $10 Want a more professional shirt? Black can be purchased for $15 Make sure to mark your size, color choice, and pay for any other orders when signing up VIZ T-Shirt Contest The contest winner will have their shirt printed and sold as the new Visualization shirt throughout the year! • Rules, regulations, files, and dropbox link on Facebook! • Deadline October 1st Last year’s VIZ T-Shirt by Brian Smith TAMU ACM SIGGRAPH Raffle Recieve tickets for attending events, participating in contests and officer elections! Bonus tickets for attending every workshop or social event! Win prizes including wacom tablets, books, and TAMU ACM SIGGRAPH Swag! Annual Conference Anaheim, California Websites and Contact FACEBOOK.COM/TAMU.ACM.SIGGRAPH tamu.siggraph.org President: [email protected] Vice President: [email protected] Secretary: [email protected] Treasurer: [email protected] Industry Relations: [email protected] Webmaster: [email protected] Member Development: [email protected] Outreach: [email protected] If you are unsure of who to contact, feel free to email our chapter inbox at: [email protected] Membership Benefits of joining: Eligible for studio trips Participation in all workshops and contests Engaging in a community of like-minded people Opportunity to meet potential employers Membership for Spring 2014: $20 for Single Semester Membership $30 for 1 year Membership Closing Date: Wednesday, October 1st Upcoming Events September 17 First Workshop - Beginner Maya September 24 First Nightlife October 1 Second Workshop T-shirt Contest Due Date Membership Closed! .
Recommended publications
  • Communication of Design Quarterly
    Volume 1 Issue 2 January 2013 Communication of Design Quarterly Published by the Association for Computing Machinery Special Interest Group for Design of Communication ISSN: 2166-1642 Contents....................................................................................................................................................................................1 Editorial.....................................................................................................................................................................................3 Notes from the Chair............................................................................................................................................................5 SIGDOC 2013 conference...................................................................................................................................................7 Uncovering Analogness and Digitalness in Interactive Media.............................................................................8 Development Framework Components as Commonplaces..............................................................................37 I See You’re Talking #HPV: Communication Pattersn in the #HPV Stream on Twitter...............................50 Communication Design Quarterly ACM SIGDOC (Special Interest Group Design of Communication) seeks to be the premier information source for industry, management, and academia in the multidisciplinary field of the design and communication of information. It contains a
    [Show full text]
  • Hermes: a Scalable Event-Based Middleware
    UCAM-CL-TR-590 Technical Report ISSN 1476-2986 Number 590 Computer Laboratory Hermes: A scalable event-based middleware Peter R. Pietzuch June 2004 15 JJ Thomson Avenue Cambridge CB3 0FD United Kingdom phone +44 1223 763500 http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/ c 2004 Peter R. Pietzuch This technical report is based on a dissertation submitted February 2004 by the author for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy to the University of Cambridge, Queens’ College. Technical reports published by the University of Cambridge Computer Laboratory are freely available via the Internet: http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/TechReports/ ISSN 1476-2986 Abstract Large-scale distributed systems require new middleware paradigms that do not suffer from the limitations of traditional request/reply middleware. These limitations include tight coupling between components, a lack of information filtering capabilities, and support for one-to-one communication semantics only. We argue that event-based middleware is a scalable and power- ful new type of middleware for building large-scale distributed systems. However, it is important that an event-based middleware platform includes all the standard functionality that an appli- cation programmer expects from middleware. In this thesis we describe the design and implementation of Hermes, a distributed, event- based middleware platform. The power and flexibility of Hermes is illustrated throughout for two application domains: Internet-wide news distribution and a sensor-rich, active building. Hermes follows a type- and attribute-based publish/subscribe model that places particular emphasis on programming language integration by supporting type-checking of event data and event type inheritance. To handle dynamic, large-scale environments, Hermes uses peer-to-peer techniques for autonomic management of its overlay network of event brokers and for scalable event dissemination.
    [Show full text]
  • Clarisse Sieckenius De Souza Academic Degrees Positions
    Clarisse de Souza’s Short CV (as of December 2014) Clarisse Sieckenius de Souza Born 23.09.57 in Bento Gonçalves, State of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil Academic degrees PhD, Applied Linguistics – Computational Linguistics, PUC‐Rio, 1988. MA, Portuguese Language, PUC‐Rio, 1982. BA, Written, Consecutive and Simultaneous Translation (Portuguese, English, French), PUC‐Rio, 1979. Positions 1982-1988 Head of Natural Language Database Querying Systems Design Group at EMBRATEL (Brazilian Telecommunications Company) 1987-1988 Visiting Professor at the Department of Informatics, PUC-Rio 1988-2006 Assistant/Associate Professor at the Department of Informatics, PUC-Rio 1989 Visiting Researcher at Philips Research Labs, Surrey UK (2 months) – with Donia Scott Visiting Scholar at CSLI (Center for the Study of Language and Information), Stanford 1991-1992 University (6 months) – with Terry Winograd Visiting Researcher (for short Winter visits, 1-2 months) at the Computer Science 1998…2001 Department, University of Waterloo (Canada), as part of collaboration with Tom Carey Visiting Professor at the Information Systems Department, University of Maryland Baltimore County (4 months) – with Jenny Preece 2002 Full Professor at the Department of Informatics, PUC-Rio. 2006-to date Research areas Human‐computer interaction. Semiotics and HCI. HCI theories. End User Development. Computer‐Mediated Communication. Cultural Dimensions in HCI. Awards and Distinctions 2010: ACM SIGDOC Rigo Award, “for extraordinary contributions to the field of communication design”. (http://sigdoc.acm.org/awards/rigo‐award/) 2013: Inducted to ACM SIGCHI CHI Academy. (http://www.sigchi.org/about/awards/2013‐ sigchi‐awards‐1) 2014: IFIP TC13 Pioneer in Human‐Computer Interaction (award to be handed over at INTERACT 2015 in Bamberg, September 2015 http://interact2015.org/) PhD supervising Currently principal supervisor of 4 PhD projects and co-supervisor of 2 PhD projects.
    [Show full text]
  • The 60Th Issue of IEEE Women in Engineering Newsletter with Current
    IEEE WOMEN IN ENGINEERING NEWSLETTER JANUARY 2013 The mission of WIE is to facilitate the recruitment and retention of women in technical disciplines globally. IEEE WIE envisions a vibrant community of IEEE women and men collectively using their diverse talents to innovate for the benefit of humanity. The making of these stories do not Welcome to the 60th Issue of just happen; They are made to WIE Featured Person of the IEEE Women in Engineering happen by people who do not just Month Highlights Newsletter with current five- do their jobs but they care and year editorial staff. To mark the they lead, providing guidance and 60th issue of the IEEE Women in encouragement to affinity groups Engineering Newsletter, we bring and individuals, worldwide. These you kind greetings as we celebrate stories also happen because of the having a consistent and dedicated hard work, achievements, and newsletter staff for the last five dedication exemplified by our years. individual members as well, who excel and make a difference in their respective fields . Over the past five years, we have told many great stories of success, The collective achievements of “us achievements, and fascinating experiences and opportunities – all all” are what make “WIE Around the World” a true phenomenon. In The WIE Featured Person of the about our WIE members, about all Month is Katina Michael, editor-in- of you and each of you. light of this, we will bring you greetings over the next few chief of IEEE Technology and Society months from the regional Magazine. After working at OTIS The WIE newsletter staff cannot coordinators from Regions 1 Elevator Company and Andersen begin to express the excitement though 10 who have helped to Consulting, Katina was offered and that goes along with telling the make the 60th Issue of the IEEE exciting graduate engineering stories of the many of WIE, from all Women in Engineering Newsletter position at Nortel in 1996; and her around the world, sharing a the landmark success that is career has been fast track from there.
    [Show full text]
  • Frederick Phillips Brooks, Jr
    May 13, 2005 Frederick Phillips Brooks, Jr. Department of Computer Science 413 Granville Road University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, NC 27514-2723 Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3175 (919) 942-2529 (919) 962-1931 (919) 962-1799 Fax Born 19 April 1931; Durham, NC [email protected] Married, three children: http://www.cs.unc.edu/~brooks Kenneth P. Brooks, 8/14/58 Roger G. Brooks, 12/25/61 Barbara B. LaDine, 2/24/65 EDUCATION Ph.D., Harvard University, Applied Mathematics (Computer Science), 1956; Howard H. Aiken, advisor; dissertation: The Analytic Design of Automatic Data Processing Systems S.M., Harvard University, Applied Mathematics (Computer Science), 1955 A.B. summa cum laude, Duke University, Physics, 1953. First in class of 1953. TEACHING EXPERIENCE University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Department of Computer Science Kenan Professor of Computer Science, 1975- Professor of Computer Science, 1964-75 Chairman, 1964-1984; founder Twente Technical University, Enschede, The Netherlands: Visiting Professor, 1970 Columbia University: Adjunct Assistant Professor, 1960-61 Vassar College: Visiting Instructor, 1958 IBM Systems Research Institute, Voluntary Education Program, and Summer Student Program Teacher, 1957-59 DEVELOPMENT EXPERIENCE IBM Corporation Poughkeepsie, New York Corporate Processor Manager for Development of System/360 Computer Systems, 1961-1965 Manager of Operating System/360, 1964-65 Manager, System/360 Hardware Development, Data Systems Division, 1961-64 Systems Planning Manager, Data Systems Division (8000 series et al.),
    [Show full text]
  • SIGOPS Annual Report 2012
    SIGOPS Annual Report 2012 Fiscal Year July 2012-June 2013 Submitted by Jeanna Matthews, SIGOPS Chair Overview SIGOPS is a vibrant community of people with interests in “operatinG systems” in the broadest sense, includinG topics such as distributed computing, storaGe systems, security, concurrency, middleware, mobility, virtualization, networkinG, cloud computinG, datacenter software, and Internet services. We sponsor a number of top conferences, provide travel Grants to students, present yearly awards, disseminate information to members electronically, and collaborate with other SIGs on important programs for computing professionals. Officers It was the second year for officers: Jeanna Matthews (Clarkson University) as Chair, GeorGe Candea (EPFL) as Vice Chair, Dilma da Silva (Qualcomm) as Treasurer and Muli Ben-Yehuda (Technion) as Information Director. As has been typical, elected officers agreed to continue for a second and final two- year term beginning July 2013. Shan Lu (University of Wisconsin) will replace Muli Ben-Yehuda as Information Director as of AuGust 2013. Awards We have an excitinG new award to announce – the SIGOPS Dennis M. Ritchie Doctoral Dissertation Award. SIGOPS has lonG been lackinG a doctoral dissertation award, such as those offered by SIGCOMM, Eurosys, SIGPLAN, and SIGMOD. This new award fills this Gap and also honors the contributions to computer science that Dennis Ritchie made durinG his life. With this award, ACM SIGOPS will encouraGe the creativity that Ritchie embodied and provide a reminder of Ritchie's leGacy and what a difference a person can make in the field of software systems research. The award is funded by AT&T Research and Alcatel-Lucent Bell Labs, companies that both have a strong connection to AT&T Bell Laboratories where Dennis Ritchie did his seminal work.
    [Show full text]
  • Phillip B. Gibbons Curriculum Vitae
    Phillip B. Gibbons Curriculum Vitae [email protected] http://cs.cmu.edu/~gibbons/ July 2020 Research Interests Research areas include big data, parallel computing, databases, cloud computing, sensor networks, distributed systems, and computer architecture. My publications span theory and systems, across a broad range of computer science and engineering (e.g., conference papers in APoCS, ATC, ESA, EuroSys, HPCA, ICML, IPDPS, ISCA, MICRO, NeurIPS, NSDI, OSDI, PACT, SoCC, SODA, SOSP, SPAA and VLDB since 2015). Education • University of California at Berkeley, Berkeley, California, 1984{1989. Ph.D. in Computer Science. Dissertation advisor: Richard M. Karp. • Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire, 1979{1983. B.A. in Mathematics. Graduated summa cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa. Professional Experience • Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Professor, Computer Science Department, 2015{present. Professor, Electrical and Computer Engineering Department, 2015{present. Principal Investigator (PI or co-PI) for the following research projects: { Prescriptive Memory: Razing the semantic wall between applications and computer systems with heterogeneous compute and memories. { Asymmetric Memory: Write-efficient algorithms and systems, for settings (such as emerging non- volatile memories) where writes are significantly more costly than reads. { Big Learning Systems: Mapping out and exploring the space of large-scale machine learning from a systems' perspective. Recent focus on geo-distributed learning over non-IID data. Adjunct Professor, Computer Science Department, 2003{2015. Adjunct Associate Professor, Computer Science Department, 2000{2003. Visiting Professor, Computer Science Department, 2000. • Intel Labs Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Principal Research Scientist, 2001{2015. Principal Investigator for the Intel Science and Technology Center for Cloud Computing { A $11.5M research partnership with Carnegie Mellon, Georgia Tech, Princeton, UC Berkeley, and U.
    [Show full text]
  • SIGOPS Annual Report 2011
    SIGOPS Annual Report 2011 Fiscal Year July 2010-June 2011 Submitted by Doug Terry, SIGOPS Chair Overview SIGOPS is a vibrant community of people with interests in “operating systems” in the broadest sense, including topics such as distributed computing, storage systems, security, concurrency, middleware, mobility, virtualization, networking, cloud computing, datacenter software, and Internet services. We sponsor a number of top conferences, provide travel grants to students, present yearly awards, disseminate information to members electronically, and collaborate with other SIGs on important programs for computing professionals. Notable activities from the past year include: Elections were held for new officers, and Jeanna Matthews was elected as the new SIGOPS Chair, George Candea as Vice Chair, and Dilma da Silva as Treasurer. They will serve two-year terms from July 1, 2011 through June 30, 2013. The past officers (Doug Terry as Chair, Frank Bellosa as Vice Chair and Jeanna Matthews as Treasurer) completed their 4 years of service on June 30. Planning for the next ACM Symposium on Operating Systems (SOSP), which is scheduled for October 2011 in Cascais, Portugal, has been largely completed by Ted Wobber, the General Chair, and Peter Druschel, the Program Chair. The Second ACM Symposium on Cloud Computing (SOCC), which is co-sponsored between SIGOPS and SIGMOD, is being co-located with SOSP in Portugal. The first SIGOPS Asia-Pacific Workshop on Systems (APSys) was held on August 30, 2010 in New Delhi, India, immediately before the SIGCOMM 2010 conference. And the second instance of this workshop is being held in Shanghai, China, in July 2011. ACM released the first version of the Cloud Computing Tech Pack, which was produced by Doug Terry, the SIGOPS Chair.
    [Show full text]
  • Annual Report
    ANNUAL REPORT 2019FISCAL YEAR ACM, the Association for Computing Machinery, is an international scientific and educational organization dedicated to advancing the arts, sciences, and applications of information technology. Letter from the President It’s been quite an eventful year and challenges posed by evolving technology. for ACM. While this annual Education has always been at the foundation of exercise allows us a moment ACM, as reflected in two recent curriculum efforts. First, “ACM’s mission to celebrate some of the many the ACM Task Force on Data Science issued “Comput- hinges on successes and achievements ing Competencies for Undergraduate Data Science Cur- creating a the Association has realized ricula.” The guidelines lay out the computing-specific over the past year, it is also an competencies that should be included when other community that opportunity to focus on new academic departments offer programs in data science encompasses and innovative ways to ensure at the undergraduate level. Second, building on the all who work in ACM remains a vibrant global success of our recent guidelines for 4-year cybersecu- the computing resource for the computing community. rity curricula, the ACM Committee for Computing Edu- ACM’s mission hinges on creating a community cation in Community Colleges created a related cur- and technology that encompasses all who work in the computing and riculum targeted at two-year programs, “Cybersecurity arena” technology arena. This year, ACM established a new Di- Curricular Guidance for Associate-Degree Programs.” versity and Inclusion Council to identify ways to create The following pages offer a sampling of the many environments that are welcoming to new perspectives ACM events and accomplishments that occurred over and will attract an even broader membership from the past fiscal year, none of which would have been around the world.
    [Show full text]
  • Curriculum Vitae
    Massachusetts Institute of Technology School of Engineering Faculty Personnel Record Date: April 1, 2020 Full Name: Charles E. Leiserson Department: Electrical Engineering and Computer Science 1. Date of Birth November 10, 1953 2. Citizenship U.S.A. 3. Education School Degree Date Yale University B. S. (cum laude) May 1975 Carnegie-Mellon University Ph.D. Dec. 1981 4. Title of Thesis for Most Advanced Degree Area-Efficient VLSI Computation 5. Principal Fields of Interest Analysis of algorithms Caching Compilers and runtime systems Computer chess Computer-aided design Computer network architecture Digital hardware and computing machinery Distance education and interaction Fast artificial intelligence Leadership skills for engineering and science faculty Multicore computing Parallel algorithms, architectures, and languages Parallel and distributed computing Performance engineering Scalable computing systems Software performance engineering Supercomputing Theoretical computer science MIT School of Engineering Faculty Personnel Record — Charles E. Leiserson 2 6. Non-MIT Experience Position Date Founder, Chairman of the Board, and Chief Technology Officer, Cilk Arts, 2006 – 2009 Burlington, Massachusetts Director of System Architecture, Akamai Technologies, Cambridge, 1999 – 2001 Massachusetts Shaw Visiting Professor, National University of Singapore, Republic of 1995 – 1996 Singapore Network Architect for Connection Machine Model CM-5 Supercomputer, 1989 – 1990 Thinking Machines Programmer, Computervision Corporation, Bedford, Massachusetts 1975
    [Show full text]
  • The Changing Shape of the Computing World
    Outside the Box — The Changing Shape of the Computing World Steve Cunningham Computer Science California State University Stanislaus Turlock, CA 95382 [email protected] http://www.cs.csustan.edu/~rsc Something happened to computing while many of us were busy practicing or teaching our craft, and computing is not quite the same thing we learned. We can ignore this change and others will take our place and teach about it, but they will not have the context and the skill to understand the technology behind it and to carry it forward to the success it should have. And if others carry that torch, computer science will be stunted because we didn't recognize and respond to the opportunity. What happened? Simply this—that Xerox and Apple and, yes, Microsoft opened up the box labeled “CAUTION: Computer Inside” and let the user into the computing picture. Users responded hesitantly but increasingly eagerly and now expect the computer to work for them instead of their working for the computer. Every application now in wide use, and any system that supports a general market, has evolved to meet that expectation. Any computing education that does not pay attention to the user’s role in computing is missing the most vibrant and exciting part of computing today. As it says at the top of this page, you are reading an editorial, not an academic paper. As an editorial, this note represents my personal passion and commitment to the user communication part of computing that the “official” computing establishment has long discounted, and I appreciate John Impagliazzo’s offer of this forum to make my case that computer science is missing the boat in not understanding the need to reshape computer science education to fill this void.
    [Show full text]
  • Yuriy Brun Curriculum Vitae June 27, 2021 Page 1 of 32 Honors, Awards, Fellowships
    Yuriy Brun College of Information and Computer Sciences +1-609-379-2786 University of Massachusetts [email protected] 140 Governors Dr., Amherst, MA 01003-9264 http://people.cs.umass.edu/brun/ Research Interests Software systems engineering, software fairness, self-adaptation, behavioral inference, and automated repair. Education UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA . Los Angeles, CA, USA 5/2008 Doctor of Philosophy in Computer Science Dissertation: Self-assembly for discreet, fault-tolerant, and scalable computation on Internet-sized distributed networks Advisor: Prof. Nenad Medvidovic´ 5/2006 Master of Science in Computer Science MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY . Cambridge, MA, USA 9/2003 Master of Engineering in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Thesis: Fault identification via dynamic analysis and machine learning Advisor: Prof. Michael D. Ernst 6/2003 Bachelor of Science in Computer Science and Engineering 6/2003 Bachelor of Science in Mathematics Employment History UNIVERSITY OF MASSACHUSETTS . Amherst, MA, USA 9/2021 – present Professor 9/2017 – 8/2021 Associate Professor 9/2012 – 8/2017 Assistant Professor Co-director: Laboratory for Advanced Software Engineering Research (LASER) Co-director: Programming Languages and Systems at Massachusetts (PLASMA) UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON . Seattle, WA, USA 9/2009 – 8/2012 NSF CRA Postdoctoral Computing Innovation Fellow UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA . Los Angeles, CA, USA 7/2008 – 9/2009 Postdoctoral Research Associate: Center for Systems and Software Engineering 8/2003 –
    [Show full text]