Jacobs School researchers put a five-story building through motions from the 7.9 earthquake that took place in 2002 in Denali, Alaska. The results were quite impressive. See for yourself in the video below:
Snapshots from the UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering.
Friday, May 18, 2012
Wednesday, May 16, 2012
From Garage Band to Facebook Game to PNAS Paper
Ian B. Murphy over at DataInformed wrote a great article charting the course of some interesting music research from electrical engineering here at the Jacobs School of Engineering at UC San Diego. The story connects the dots from a garage band, to a Facebook game, all the way to a new paper in PNAS.
The Value in a Facebook Game: Training Machines to Characterize Music Selections
A related press release from the Jacobs School is here.
Cubic and the Jacobs School of Engineerint at UC San Diego to Collaborate On Next Generation Intelligent Travel Research
The San Diego Union Tribune ran news of the new research partnership between Cubic Transportation Systems (NYSE:CUB) and the Jacobs School of Engineering here at UC San Diego.
Cubic will contribute $500,000 over five years to the UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering to fund research done by faculty, students and Cubic Transportation Systems staff. The project aims to achieve a better understanding of the application and utilization of emerging technologies, with the ultimate goal of making transportation easier, more convenient, more economical and environmentally greener for transit operators and their customers.
Wednesday, May 9, 2012
Ortiva Wireless bought by Allot Communications
Allot Communications (NASDAQ: ALLT) announced
last week that it is acquiring Ortiva Wireless, the
company launched by University of California, San Diego Electrical Engineering
Professor Sujit Dey in 2004 to manage mobile video and rich media content
delivery. Terms of the acquisition were not disclosed. Allot, which is based in
Tel Aviv, said in a May 1 statement that incorporating Ortiva’s “leading-edge
mobile video optimization solution” with its own Allot Service Gateway
technology will “allow mobile service providers to effectively
manage the ever-increasing volume of video traffic on their networks, which
according to Allot’s latest Global MobileTrends report, now represents 42% of
mobile data traffic worldwide.”
We asked Dey for his thoughts on the acquisition and he responded:
“I am pleased
with the intended acquisition as it will be complimentary and strategic, in
line with rising market demand for integrated mobile data management solutions.
Allot’s fast expanding customer base will be beneficial for deployment of
Ortiva’s video delivery solutions globally. Allot is committed to expanding the
operations in San Diego, so it is good for the San Diego economy. I truly
appreciate the support and encouragement that I received while founding Ortiva
and later from UC San Diego, including from Dean Frieder Seible and the Jacobs
School, Calit2, the ECE department, the von Liebig Center, and the Technology
Transfer office.”
News
of the acquisition sent Allot’s stock climbing in response to analysts’
expectations that the company’s momentum in the network traffic management
sector will continue, particularly as the market for smart phones and computer
tablets expands. RCR
Wireless reported that “mobile
video is expected to comprise 41% to 67% of telecom network traffic by 2015.”
San
Diego-based Xconomy reported
that Allot intends to maintain Ortiva’s San Diego office and expects the
41-person staff here to grow.

Friday, April 27, 2012
Interdigital Innovation Challenge / Vote!
The InterDigital Innovation Challenge (I2C) is an opportunity for individuals or teams from any North American college or university to compete for $175,000 in prizes by testing out proposals and prototypes for wireless technologies before a panel of esteemed judges from industry and academia.
The Jacobs School of Engineering has a team in the competition. Public voting closes on April 30.
I voted for the Mobile 3D Video System.
Mobile 3D Video System (UC San Diego team)
Application Areas:
* Radio Signal Propogation and Processing
* Compression and Data Management Techniques
Quick Pitch
We propose to develop a system delivering immersive 3D video on mobile platforms, with applications in gaming, e-commerce, entertainment
Abstract
The prominence of 3D video technology has skyrocketed. The 2009 movie Avatar in 3D became the highest grossing movie of all time. Such a movie requires left and right views of a scene. Many video games which provide a 3D experience require multiple views of a scene. Such data is costly to store and to transmit. This project studies how to efficiently compress multiple-view video data, how to allow the scene to be viewed from any angle at different levels of precision, and how to reliably transmit the data over mobile wireless channels. This project has important applications in consumer electronics, e-commerce, entertainment, health care, science, and education.
The Team
The interdisciplinary project team consists of four faculties in the ECE Dept. at UC San Diego: Prof. Larry Milstein, an expert in communication systems, and cross-layer optimization; Prof. Pamela Cosman, an expert in image and video processing over network, and cross-layer optimization; Prof. Sujit Dey, an expert in multimedia networking and embedded systems; and Prof. Truong Nguyen, an expert in 3D video processing and communications. Our interdisciplinary team is uniquely qualified to address all theoretical and practical issues, proposed in this project.
The Jacobs School of Engineering has a team in the competition. Public voting closes on April 30.
I voted for the Mobile 3D Video System.
Mobile 3D Video System (UC San Diego team)
Application Areas:
* Radio Signal Propogation and Processing
* Compression and Data Management Techniques
Quick Pitch
We propose to develop a system delivering immersive 3D video on mobile platforms, with applications in gaming, e-commerce, entertainment
Abstract
The prominence of 3D video technology has skyrocketed. The 2009 movie Avatar in 3D became the highest grossing movie of all time. Such a movie requires left and right views of a scene. Many video games which provide a 3D experience require multiple views of a scene. Such data is costly to store and to transmit. This project studies how to efficiently compress multiple-view video data, how to allow the scene to be viewed from any angle at different levels of precision, and how to reliably transmit the data over mobile wireless channels. This project has important applications in consumer electronics, e-commerce, entertainment, health care, science, and education.
The Team
The interdisciplinary project team consists of four faculties in the ECE Dept. at UC San Diego: Prof. Larry Milstein, an expert in communication systems, and cross-layer optimization; Prof. Pamela Cosman, an expert in image and video processing over network, and cross-layer optimization; Prof. Sujit Dey, an expert in multimedia networking and embedded systems; and Prof. Truong Nguyen, an expert in 3D video processing and communications. Our interdisciplinary team is uniquely qualified to address all theoretical and practical issues, proposed in this project.
Thursday, April 26, 2012
We spent some time with Research Expo 2012 grand prize winner Carolyn Schutt after the April 12 competition and festivities to talk about her
research and other student experiences. Watch our video on YouTube. Carolyn is a PhD student in bioengineering here at the UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering. She entered her work in the nanoengineering category and won the school-wide Rudee Outstanding Poster Award and best poster for the Department of NanoEngineering for her research developing a new imaging technique that could
lead to highly-sensitive light imaging deeper inside the body, improving
the way we diagnose breast cancer. Read our full news release here.
Wednesday, April 18, 2012
The Jacobs School's in the Spotlight
The shake table at the Jacobs School of Engineering at UC San Diego and PIs Tara Hutchinson, Jose Restrepo and Joel Conte were featured on all three major networks' nightly news April 17. Here are the stories:
NBC Nightly News
Additional media hits include:
USA Today
BBC News
The New York Times
Bloomberg BusinessWeek
Popular Mechanics
Huffington Post
Daily Mail, U.K.
NBC Nightly News
CBS Evening News
ABC World News

USA Today
BBC News
The New York Times
Bloomberg BusinessWeek
Popular Mechanics
Huffington Post
Daily Mail, U.K.
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