Alumni Talk: Antonio Garcia Castaneda ‘01

April 21st, 2009

Join us on Thursday, April 23rd to hear Antonio Garcia Castaneda (Oberlin Class of 2001) give a talk on “Everything you ever wanted to know about the games industry* … but had no one to ask.”

Antonio has worked in the video game industry for 8 years, most recently for Sony.  He is currently a graduate student at the University of London.

Reception at 4:00pm in King 223, Talk follows at 4:30pm in King 221.

Are you considering graduate school?

April 15th, 2009

Come to our info session to hear about
* types of CS graduate programs
* what one does in graduate school
* what kind of funding is available for this extended education
* application processes
* how and when to register for GREs

Pizza will be provided in King 223 at noon on Wed. 4/22/09
Sign up in the CSCI office King 223 or email jackie.fortino@oberlin.edu if you plan to attend.

Honors proposals for 2009-10 due no later than April 17, 2009

April 1st, 2009

What is Senior Honors? In the spring of every year juniors in Computer Science are invited to submit an Honors Proposal. On the basis of these proposals persons are invited to participate in the Honors program. The Honors program at Oberlin is campus-wide in the sense that almost every department and program has some sort of procedure for determining Honors at Graduation.

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2009 CMU Programming Contest

March 31st, 2009

This past Saturday (March 28th), Oberlin Computer Science’s Team O(Bees) competed at the 2009 Carnegie Melon Invitational Programming Contest.  Michael Brooks and Katie Kuksenok competed against almost 30 other teams from schools around the region.  They successfully solved 7 out of the 8 problems and took second place in both the “doubles division” as well as 2nd in the overall contest.

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OCWiC workshop

March 4th, 2009

On February 27-28, the 3rd Ohio Celebration of Women in Computing (OCWiC – pronounced “Oh-quick”) was held in the Mohican Resort and Conference Center.  Thanks to a generous donation from Susanne Hambrusch (from Purdue University) the department was able to send 2 students to attend.  As you can see below, Emma Anderson ‘09 and Elara Willett ‘10 had a great time.

Emma and Elara at OCWiC 2009

Emma and Elara at OCWiC 2009

OCWiC brings together women majoring in computer science and related fields together with women teaching or working in computing careers.  It is an opportunity for the community to get to know each other, meet possible mentors, and encourage young women in computer science to complete their studies and explore possible career paths by meeting women leaders from business, industry, and academia.

For more information see the OCWiC Website.

2009 Denison Programming Contest

March 2nd, 2009

On February 28, two intrepid teams of students competed in the 20th annual Denison University Programming Contest.  This year there were 16 teams from 9 schools competing in a 4-hour contest.

The O(bees)

O(bees)

The “O(bees)” (Joe Kramer-Miller, Katie Kuksenok, Michael Brooks, and Michael Stevenson) took first place, solving 4 out of the 6 problems in just over 90 minutes.  The coaches were watching the scoreboard as other teams kept creeping closer and closer.  In the last 40 minutes, it looked like one of the Denison teams was going to pass them, but they held onto the lead until the very end.

IMG_1698.JPG

Foo of Oberlin

Our other team “Foo of Oberlin” consisted of Thomas Ramfjord, Brendan Chambers, Zack Levine, and Jules Wellinghoff.  They also solved 4 problems and took third overall.

Congratulations to all of our students on an excellent job!

If you are interested getting involved in programming contests, get in touch with either Professor Donaldson or Kuperman (the coaches) or check out the Competitive Programming Exco!

See more photos in the gallery: 2009 Denison Programming Contest

On-campus summer research in security

February 22nd, 2009

Professor Kuperman is looking for students interested in working with him on 2 projects related to computer security this summer.  You would be paid for 8-10 weeks of work, up to 40 hours per week with some flexibility as to scheduling.

One project needs students with a strong C programming background and comfort working in Unix environments.

The second project will be building a custom server to be used as part of labs in future security courses.  A good background in Linux/Unix is needed, and experience setting up custom systems/distributions would be great.

If you are interested in either or both of these projects, or have questions about them, send email to Benjamin.Kuperman@oberlin.edu by Thursday, February 26.