|
EECS undergraduate student Scott Crawford was featured in an East Bay Business News article titled “Sandia lab tool puts Internet traffic on the map”. During his internship at Sandia National Laboratories Livermore, Scott and fellow intern Andrew Schran, under the mentorship of computer scientist Steve Hurd, developed SHINI, the Sandia Heuristic Intelligent Network Imaging tool that allows computer scientists to visualize connections between computers drawn as lines between points or color-coded “heat maps” on Google Earth.
EB Business Times (subsrciption required)
Podcast
October 1
Dave Patterson has won the 2008 Alumni Achievement in Academia Award from the UCLA School of Engineering and Applied Science. Recipients of this award are chosen for excellence in their fields as researchers and educators.
September 18
EECS alumnus Paul E. Jacobs, Ph.D. '89, is the recipient of the 2008 Berkeley Engineering Innovation Award. This award recognizes outstanding achievements by alumni in the field of engineering and technology. Selection of recipients is based on exemplary performance and recognition locally, nationally, or internationally in one or more of the following areas: professional achievement, academic achievement and public service achievement.
More>>
September 11
Ron Fearing, head of the research group continuing their march toward creating a synthetic, gecko-like adhesive was featured in Langmuir, the online publication of the American Chemical Society. The article titled, “Engineers create new gecko-like adhesive that shakes off dirt” have reached their latest milestone creating the first adhesive that cleans itself after each use without the need for water or chemicals, much like the remarkable hairs found on the gecko lizard’s toes.
UC Newsroom
More>>
September 10
Two EECS alumni, Robert Wood, Ph.D. ’05 and Andrew Ng, Ph.D. ‘03 were named two of the 2008 Top 100 Young Innovators (under the age of 35) by MIT’s Technology Review. Robert Wood, now an assistant professor of engineering and applied sciences at Harvard, developed a revolutionary fabrication technique that allows engineers to make a range of very tiny parts for any kind of robot. Andrew Ng, an assistant professor of computer science at Stanford, founded the Stanford Artificial Intelligence Robot (STAIR) project that can deduce how to pick up an object it's never seen before.
More>>
September 3
Dawn Song and Michael Gastpar have won the Okawa Foundation Research Grant for 2008. The Okawa Foundation for Information and Telecommunications was established in 1986, and every year awards this research grant to a select few for their accomplishments and promise in this area. This prestigious award comes with a $10,000 research gift.
More>>
August 14
Ali Javey was featured in a Berkeley Lab News article titled "A First in Integrated Nanowire Sensor Circuitry". Prof. Javey, head of the research team from the Lawrence Berkeley National Lab have created the world's first all-integrated sensor circuit based on nanowire arrays, combining light sensors and electronics made of different crystalline materials. Their method can be used to reproduce numerous such devices with high uniformity.
More>>
August 6
|