Microsoft Corporation Continues Major Support
for UW Computer Science & Engineering
August 1997
Microsoft Corporation
continues its program of major support for the
University of Washington
Department of Computer
Science & Engineering.
Recent initiatives include:
- In July 1997, Microsoft sponsored the
University
of Washington / Microsoft Summer Research Institute in
Data Mining, which brought 75 leading researchers
from fields such as statistics, artificial intelligence,
visualization, databases, computer systems, and learning
to Seattle for 7 days to discuss a multi-disciplinary research
agenda in Data Mining.
- Beginning with the 1996-97 academic year,
Microsoft has made its
software
available free of charge to
all undergraduate majors, graduate students, staff,
faculty, and laboratory systems in the Department of
Computer Science & Engineering.
- During the 1996-97 academic year, Microsoft participated in
several major educational initiatives jointly with UW CSE:
- Dennis
Canady, a Microsoft developer, worked with UW CSE
Professor John Zahorjan to design and teach a senior-level
"capstone" course in which three teams of CSE undergraduates
learned commercial software development methodology and synthesized
knowledge from a variety of previous courses by designing, implementing,
documenting, and demonstrating 3-D multi-player distributed videogames
built using VC++, Visual SourceSafe, and DirectX.
See a
video
in
Microsoft
NetShow format.
- Internationally-known Microsoft database and transaction
processing expert Phil Bernstein taught a course on
Transaction
Processing Systems in UW CSE's new
Professional
Masters Program.
Bernstein's course, like others in this program,
was taught simultaneously to students at UW and on Microsoft's
Redmond campus using Internet and videoconferencing technology,
as well as being archived for on-demand access via the web.
Microsoft was a major supporter of the UW CSE Professional
Masters Program.
- Microsoft provides directed support to specific research
programs, such as
Brian Bershad's
work on Java security
and
David
Salesin's work on computer graphics.
- Microsoft provides multiple undergraduate and graduate
scholarships and fellowships annually to students in the
Department of Computer Science & Engineering.
- Microsoft is working closely with UW CSE to facilitate
the conversion of major portions of our research, education,
and infrastructure activities to Windows NT.
- Mike Jones from Microsoft Research and
Ed Lazowska from UW CSE co-chaired the
USENIX
Windows NT Research Workshop, which brought to Seattle in
August 1997 more than 300 academic and industrial computer
science researchers who are moving to Windows NT as a
platform.
