Events
Rich Frietas, IBM Research, SSRC Seminar: Storage Class Memory: Technology and Use, Wednesday, December 3, 11:30 am, E2-599
Andrew Hargadon [Associate Professor of Management and Director of the UC Davis Center for Entrepren, CITRIS Research Exchange: "The Networks of (Green) Innovation", Wednesday, December 3, 12:00 pm, 290 Hearst Memorial Mining Building, UC Berkeley
Jean Paul Jacob, Technology Evangelist, IBM and CITRIS Special Advisor, CITRIS Management of Technology (MOT) Lecture Series: "The Invasion of the Virtual (Digital) Worlds", Wednesday, December 3, 4:00 pm, Haas School of Business, Wells Fargo Room C420
Justin Hensley, PhD, AMD's Stream Computing Platform: From the hardware to the software, Wednesday, December 3, 6:00 pm, E2 Simularium
Human-Computer Interaction student showcase Sample projects, Rock Vibe: Rock Band for people with visual impairment, Thursday, December 4, 12:00 pm, Jack's Lounge
Friis Arne Petersen [Danish Ambassador to the United States], CITRIS: EU as a Rising Superpower, Friday, December 5, 2:00 pm, Sibley Auditorium, UC Berkeley campus
Daniel Sperling [Founding Director of the Institute of Transportation Studies, UC Davis], CITRIS Distinguished Speaker Series: Two Billion Cars and California Climate Policy, Monday, December 8, 4:00 pm, 290 Hearst Memorial Mining Building, the Maria & Dado Banatao Conference Room, UC Berkeley
News
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Magnetic nanotags allow sensitive detection of cancer biomarkers
The detection of cancer-associated proteins, or biomarkers, in blood samples is a potentially powerful tool for early diagnosis of cancer and monitoring of cancer treatment. A team led by researchers at Stanford University and the University of California, Santa Cruz, has developed a compact prototype detector that uses magnetic nanotechnology to spot cancer-associated proteins in a human blood serum sample with much higher sensitivity than current detectors. More
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A team of SOE researchers receive IEEE Fred W. Ellersick Award for Best Unclassified Paper at 2008 Milcom conference
A paper by a team of researchers in the Baskin School of Engineering was selected to receive the IEEE Fred W. Ellersick Award for Best Unclassified Paper at the 2008 Milcom conference in San Diego. The authors of the paper are graduate student Zheng Wang; postdoctoral fellow Shirish Karande; Hamid Sadjadpour, associate professor of electrical engineering; and J. J. Garcia-Luna-Aceves, Baskin professor of computer engineering. They will be honored for their paper "On the capacity improvement of multicast traffic with network coding." The researchers will receive the award in a ceremony during the Chairman's Gala at the conference on November 18. More
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Expert on origins of life to give free public lecture November 13 at UCSC
Biochemist David Deamer will discuss the origins of life in a free public lecture on Thursday, November 13, at UC Santa Cruz. More
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Sun Microsystems Renews OpenSPARC Center of Excellence at UCSC
Sun Microsystems has renewed the OpenSPARC Center of Excellence at UCSC. Sun created the first ever OpenSPARC center of excellence in UCSC as a renewable 3 year project. The Center of Excellence establishes a collaborative partnership between Sun and UCSC faculty (Assistant Prof Renau and Guthaus) who are working with the OpenSPARC community and promoting OpenSPARC in academia and research. This second Year, Sun donated a $100K gift to provide additional support to the MASC group and sponsor a new "Distinguished OpenSPARC Guest Talk" seminar. More
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Computer Engineering Department Announces New Langdon Fellowships
The Computer Engineering Department was pleased to award two inaugural Langdon Fellowships to new graduates students Bryant Mairs and Fan Wang. Bryant did his undergraduate work at Brown University and is pursing studies in computer architecture and inter-networking. Fan studied at Tsinghua University in Beijing and will work in image retrieval and computer vision. More



