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What’s hot in CS

Today, a group of graduating PhD students in our department met up to brief each other on what’s new and hot in their respective fields, to remind each other of what’s going on outside their respective specialties. The idea is that when interviewing for jobs, you have to hold up your end of a conversation with professors outside your specialty, and it helps to know a bit about their field.

To quote one professor in our department, “…there is a special circle of hell reserved for grad students interviewing for jobs who are unable to answer questions of the form, ‘Oh, you’re from UCSD. What’s Professor so-and-so up to these days?’.”

It took about six hours to get through talks from students working on Architecture, Bioinformatics, Systems, Graphics, Vision, Databases, Security, VLSI and more, and I’m not going to try to repeat any of the details, because frankly I’m numb. I will say that it was a great idea, and if you’re a grad student and your department doesn’t do something like this, you should start a tradition.

I will mention one thing: automatic detection and adaptation to network attacks is so hot right now.

Previously:
Talk: Bart Miller and Dyninst
February 3, 2006

In a recent largescale systems seminar*, we had Bart Miller from Wisconsin talk about some of the upcoming work on DynInst. DynInst is an API for runtime code patching, which lets you do things like attach to a running program and insert your own code around every network call, or replace procedures with your own [...]

read the rest.
State of the Union
February 1, 2006

I completely missed this year’s State of the Union address, but was pleased to see this quote from the speech:

First, I propose to double the federal commitment to the most critical basic research programs in the physical sciences over the next 10 years. This funding will support the work of America’s most creative [...]

read the rest.
PLDI Papers I’m interested in, part one
January 26, 2006

I mentioned that I’d post about some of the papers I found interesting from this year’s PLDI conference. Disclaimer: for the most part this is based on reading the abstracts only, so this shouldn’t be considered a thorough review.

Session one is Transactions. I will probably look through these, especially the first paper, “The Atomos Transactional [...]

read the rest.
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