Friday, May 27, 2011

One Village Philippines Project [Gawad Kalinga] / Global TIES

Check out this video created by UC San Diego engineering students who are using their skills to improves lives in a village in the Philippines. Learn more about Global TIES at UC San Diego.

Thursday, May 26, 2011

NPR All Things Considered: Study May Shed Light On How To Stop Spam

Computer science professor Stefan Savage is on NPR today. The interview with Robert Siegel is called "Study May Shed Light On How To Stop Spam".



This story is tied to a paper presented this week at the IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy. Get the PDF of the paper from Stefan Savage's website.

Click Trajectories: End-to-End Analysis of the Spam Value Chain, Kirill Levchenko, Andreas Pitsillidis, Neha Chachra, Brandon Enright, Márk Félegyházi, Chris Grier, Tristan Halvorson, Chris Kanich, Christian Kreibich, He Liu, Damon McCoy, Nicholas Weaver, Vern Paxson, Geoffrey M. Voelker, and Stefan Savage, Proceedings of the IEEE Symposium and Security and Privacy, Oakland, CA, May 2011.

More news stories tied to this research:

New York Times: Study Sees Way to Win Spam Fight

MIT Technology Review: Anatomy of a Spam Viagra Purchase

Wall Street Journal: Three Banks Handle Money For 95% World’s Spam

Discover: How to Stop Spammers: Focus on Money Going Out, Not Spam Coming In

IEEE Spectrum: Battling to Protect Online Privacy and Defeat Spam

The full list of authors:
Kirill Levchenko, Andreas Pitsillidis, Neha Chachra, Brandon Enright, Mark Felegyhazi, Chris Grier, Tristan Halvorson, Chris Kanich, Christian Kreibich, He Liu, Damon McCoy, Nicholas Weaver, Vern Paxson, Geoffrey M. Voelker, Stefan Savage.

The authors affiliated with the following institutions:

Department of Computer Science and Engineering
University of California San Diego

Computer Science Division
University of California, Berkeley

International Computer Science Institute

Laboratory of Cryptography and System Security (CrySyS)
Budapest University of Technology and Economics

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Chechnya Jihad / Book Signing May 31 at UCSD Bookstore


Signing: May 31, Tuesday,  Noon
UCSD Bookstore


The accidental discovery in New Mexico of a super explosive—a thousand times more powerful than conventional ones—sends assistant professor Jean-Claude Delvaux into a whirlwind of travel, passion, and discovery. Delvaux meets with tragedy in Chechnya, while taking part in its liberation struggle, and emerges broken-hearted from the rubble of Grozny, swearing off violence. Destiny strikes again when Delvaux is lured by love and loyalty around the world and into the new nexus of conflict— a brutal jihad in the mountains of Pakistan and Afghanistan. There, he meets Bin Laden and the dramatic end of the novel parallels recent events. 

Marc A. Meyers, Distinguished Professor of Materials Science at the University of California, San Diego, and Life Member, Clare Hall, Cambridge (UK), has carried out research within his field all over the world. His work with the Center for Explosives Technology Research (New Mexico), Japanese and Soviet research institutes, and the US Army, led him to imagine a chain of events which could lead to the frightening scenario in his first novel, Mayan Mars. His expertise in explosives, and his knowledge of Chechnya’s brutal war, inspired the situations and events in Chechnya Jihad. He is the recipient of numerous awards from international societies and the author or co-author, in addition to 350 papers, of three science & engineering books. Dr. Meyers lives in San Diego and travels extensively.  


Can't wait till Tuesday May 31? Then come to the book signing at Mysterious Galaxy on May 28 from 2 to 3:30 PM.



Celebrate the Intellectual, Entrepreneurial, Cultural and Economic Power of Alumni!

With a network 130,000 strong, UC San Diego alumni continue to change the world across all industries—from science, technology, medicine and public service to business, education, politics and the arts—and make a global impact. Come back to campus to reconnect with friends and celebrate the achievements of all UC San Diego alumni during the third annual Alumni Weekend, June 16-19, which includes our 50 Years|50 Leaders Alumni Celebration. 

Visit http://alumni.ucsd.edu/alumniweekend for details.

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Stingray Autonomous Underwater Vehicle

There is an interesting, techy video on the UC San Diego "Stingray" autonomous vehicle on www.engineeringtv.com The video was shot at the Embedded Systems Conference 2011. Good job Chris Barngrover.

Also, the students themselves have a number of videos of their autonomous underwater vehicle on YouTube and on their IBOTICS site. Also, check out the related Stingray Underwater Craft video from Calit2.

Monday, May 23, 2011

University of California Research News


The University of California Office of the President recently launched a new UC research news website:

The site will highlight the depth and breadth of research across the University of California system and the value of research to Californians.

Features of the new site include:

 *   A weekly in-depth story
 *   Weekly video and multimedia features
 *   Faculty and graduate student profiles
 *   Research news highlights from the campuses
 *   Science Today radio interviews
 *   Daily images

FYI, the "shake, rattle, roll" video is about research from structural engineers here at the Jacobs School of Engineering at UC San Diego. The image is of structural engineering professor Benson Shing.

Friday, May 20, 2011

Limbic Software (UCSD Alums) are Launching a New Game Monday



Friday May 20 at 4PM: We are giving away a free download of  Nuts! the new game from Limbic Software via the Jacobs School Facebook page. Limbic was started by UCSD computer scientists. Remember this story from the Jacobs School newsroom?  Cheat-Resistant 3D iPhone Game Relies on Score-Checking Replays

Jacobs School of Rock is June 3 / Porters Pub UCSD



Jacobs School of Rock is Friday June 3, here on the UCSD campus, at Porters Pub.

Jacobs School of Rock is FREE.

The bands (keep up with the latest Jacobs School of Rock details on Facebook.
Marlena Fecho
Five + 2
Telefunk
CODE
SO3
Foxxy Chancellor


Check out a video from Jacobs School of Rock 2009:

Thursday, May 19, 2011

Spam study in the New York Times

The New York Times just posted a story about a new study from computer scientists here at UC San Diego and at UC Berkeley / International Computer Science Institute.

The paper describing the study is called "Click Trajectories: End-to-End Analysis of the Spam Value Chain".

The abstract is below, and a PDF of the paper is available here.

The New York Times article by John Markoff is here:
"Study Sees Credit Cards as ‘Choke Point’ for Spam"

Spam-based advertising is a business. While it has engendered both widespread antipathy and a multi-billion dollar anti-spam industry, it continues to exist because it fuels a profitable enterprise. We lack, however, a solid understanding of this enterprise’s full structure, and thus most anti-spam interventions focus on only one facet of the overall spam value chain (e.g., spam filtering, URL blacklisting, site takedown). In this paper we present a holistic analysis that quantifies the full set of resources employed to monetize spam email— including naming, hosting, payment and fulfillment—using extensive measurements of three months of diverse spam data, broad crawling of naming and hosting infrastructures, and over 100 purchases from spam-advertised sites. We relate these resources to the organizations who administer them and then use this data to characterize the relative prospects for defensive interventions at each link in the spam value chain. In particular, we provide the first strong evidence of payment bottlenecks in the spam value chain; 95% of spam-advertised pharmaceutical, replica and software products are monetized using merchant services from just a handful of banks.

The full list of authors: 
Kirill Levchenko, Andreas Pitsillidis, Neha Chachra, Brandon Enright, Mark Felegyhazi, Chris Grier, Tristan Halvorson, Chris Kanich, Christian Kreibich, He Liu, Damon McCoy, Nicholas Weaver, Vern Paxson, Geoffrey M. Voelker, Stefan Savage.

The authors affiliated with the following institutions:

Department of Computer Science and Engineering 
University of California San Diego

Computer Science Division
University of California, Berkeley

International Computer Science Institute 

Laboratory of Cryptography and System Security (CrySyS)
Budapest University of Technology and Economics

Monday, May 16, 2011

In Memory of Jack Keil Wolf, Prominent Information Theorist at UC San Diego

Jack Keil Wolf, a pioneer in information theory and its applications, died in La Jolla, California on May 12, 2011. A member of both the National Academy of Engineering and the National Academy of Sciences, Wolf made profound contributions to digital communication and data storage technology. He served as a UC San Diego professor since 1984.
 
Jack Keil Wolf, a pioneer in information theory and its applications, died in La Jolla, California on May 12 at the age of 76, following a battle with cancer. A member of both the National Academy of Engineering and the National Academy of Sciences, Wolf made profound contributions to digital communication and data storage technology. Wolf served as a professor of electrical and computer engineering at UC San Diego since 1984.

“When you save data on a hard disk, the magnetic medium is imperfect. Jack’s innovations have allowed us to write and read data from these magnetic devices with near perfect fidelity. This is at the heart of the information revolution,” said Lawrence Larson, professor and chair of the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at the UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering. “Jack was one of the deepest thinkers in terms of how you take information – ones and zeros – and make it so it can be stored or transmitted without losing its fidelity,” said Larson.
“It’s hard to overstate Jack’s role in getting the information theory community interested in data storage,” said Paul Siegel, Director of UCSD’s Center for Magnetic Recording Research (CMRR) and an electrical engineering professor at the Jacobs School of Engineering.

In the 1980s, Wolf was instrumental in bringing a technique known as maximum likelihood detection to the field of data storage.  Essentially every hard disk drive, tape drive, and DVD player made in the last 20 years uses some form of this technology. Read the full story on the Jacobs School of Engineering news site: Jack Keil Wolf, Prominent Information Theorist at UC San Diego, Dies

Photo caption: An early hard disk drive. Courtesy of the UC San Diego Center for Magnetic Recording Research (CMRR).

Thursday, May 12, 2011

Siebel Scholars Travel to China to Meet Business, Government, and Cultural Leaders


From May 7-17, 2011, Thomas M. Siebel, Chairman of the Siebel Scholars Foundation, will lead a delegation of nearly 20 Siebel Scholars to Beijing, Hangzhou, and Shanghai.  Frieder Seible, Dean of the Jacobs School of Engineering at the University of California, San Diego, also accompanies Mr. Siebel and the Siebel Scholars delegation.

Follow Live Updates & Tweet with #siebelscholars 

The Siebel Scholars alumni in this delegation to China come from a wide variety of technical, scientific, and managerial backgrounds. This accomplished group includes executives at leading healthcare, investment, consulting, and energy companies such as Morgan Stanley, Baxter, McKinsey & Company, Kraft Foods, and The Hina Group; and postdoctoral researchers in Bioengineering and Computer Science at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Johns Hopkins University, and Tsinghua University.

Hosted by President Gu of Tsinghua University, the purpose of the Siebel Scholars delegation trip to China is to provide these leaders with an opportunity to learn about Chinese business, technology, and culture firsthand, through visits to businesses and factories and meetings with executives and senior Chinese central and regional governmental leadership.  See the full trip itinerary here.

In doing so, the Siebel Scholars Foundation hopes that the delegation, and the greater Siebel Scholars community, will gain deeper insight into the issues and opportunities facing China—and the rest of the world.

Click here for the full list of Siebel Scholars alumni who are on the trip.  The delegation includes Marcio von Muhlen, MIT Bioengineering '10, who is now a research scientist at the UC San Diego School of Medicine.

Marcio is tweeting from China. Follow along by searching for the #siebelscholars "hash tag".

Friday, May 6, 2011

UCSD Entrepreneur Challenge Final Business Plan Competition Prizes Increased to $100k

UCSD Entrepreneur Challenge Final Business Plan Competition Prizes Increased to $100k

Always striving to create the most unique entrepreneur environment, the UCSD Entrepreneur Challenge has year over year been able to expand it's prize offerings.  This year they are excited to be able to increase our $80k prize package to $100k and expand the resources they are able to provide to aspiring entrepreneurs.

(Be sure to also check out the Startup Job Fair on Monday May 9, organized by the UCSD Entrepreneur Challenge).

The $100k in prizes offered will encompass 
1) Cash
2) Legal Services provided by DLA Piper
3) Incubation Services 
4) Financial Services


The Deadline for submission is Friday May 13 at 11:59pm.  Submissions consist of a 1500 word Executive Summary and 15 slide Powerpoint deck.
The top 5 submissions will pitch live on June 1st at the Neurosciences Institute Auditorium for our final Judging Panel:


Ernest Rady--Namesake Rady School of Management, Rady Childrens Hospital
Saeed Amidi--Founder Plug and Play Tech Center--seed funders of Paypal
Gail Naughton--Dean of the College of Business Administration at SDSU
Leo Spiegel--Managing Partner Mission Ventures
Blaise Barrelet--Founder and CEO Anametrix and WebSideStory (acquired by Adobe for $1.8 Billion)
Mary Ann Beyster--President for the Foundation of Enterprise Development
Bruce Breslau--Senior Vice President Market Manager at Union Bank of California
 *NOTE THAT ALL E. CHALLENGE COMPETITIONS ARE SEPARATE AND INDEPENDENT

"UCSD Entrepreneur Challenge is bringing to light the vibrant, yet underground entrepreneurial scene in San Diego. Thanks to programs like these, we are sure to see the growth of San Diego as a well known entrepreneurial hot spot. Thank you UCSD Entrepreneur Challenge."

--
Daniel
Bonsoms (Babson College--Ranked #1 in Entrepreneurship)

Weekend Reading from Jan Kleissl: Convective heat transfer on leeward building walls in an urban environment: Measurements in an outdoor scale model

New paper from environmental engineering professor Jan Kleissl and Jacobs School PhD student Anders Notrott (and A. Inagaki, M. Kanda from Tokyo Institute of Technology).

"Convective heat transfer on leeward building walls in an urban environment: Measurements in an outdoor scale mode". It appears this week online in the International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer.
Abstract: Convection over the building envelope is a critical determinant of building cooling load, but parameterization of convection in building energy models and urban computational fluid dynamics models is challenging. An experimental investigation intended to clarify the heat transfer mechanism of a convective wall boundary layer (WBL) on a leeward, vertical building wall was conducted at the Comprehensive Outdoor Scale Model (COSMO) facility for urban atmospheric research. Comparison of mean and turbulent temperature fluctuation intensity profiles showed that the dominant regime of the WBL flow was turbulent natural convection. Implications for parameterization of convective heat fluxes in urban areas are discussed.
Notrott and Kleissl worked together on the California solar map project: Engineers Help Power Solar Use by 'Mapping' the Sun

Startup Job Fair / UCSD Entrepreneur Challenge

The first annual Startup Job Fair is this Monday May 9th, 2011 from 5PM to 8PM.
Where? UCSD Student Services Center, Multipurpose Room

The student-organizers of the event expect 30 startup companies to attend, including:

BrightScope, Client Radius, SOOVO, Open Candy, Edge Tech Wireless, Zenobia Therapeutics, Precision Point, Cloud Canvas and Congionics.

The organizers give special thanks to:
CONNECT, CommNexus San Diego, Tech Coast Angelsvon Liebig Center and BIOCOM.

The Startup Job Fair is hosted by the UC San Diego Entrepreneur Challenge and Ansir Innovation Center

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

Bioengineer Kun Zhang Wins Stem Cell Grant to Study Stem Cell Mutations


Bioengineering professor Kun Zhang took home one of the 8 CIMR grants that went to UC San Diego today. (Read the original press release by Debra Kain.)

The summary of Zhang's newly funded project:

Kun Zhang, assistant professor, Department of Bioengineering, Jacobs School of Engineering and the UCSD Institute for Genomic Medicine, was awarded $1,382,140 to study mutations associated with stem cell reprogramming and differentiation. By understanding the functional consequences of mutations that can arise during the course of reprogramming a patient’s own stem cells into pluripotent stem cells, the researchers hope to clear one of the biggest hurdles in the field of hIPS cells – the risk of cancer.  The scientists will comprehensively identify genetic changes in protein coding sequences, or exomes, through large-scale DNA sequencing, with the goal of better understanding of how such mutations occur and propagate. Read about Zhang's recent Nature paper on stem cell mutations.

Learn about Zhang's recent Nature paper.

Media coverage from the Zhang Nature paper:
Nature News & Views
MIT Technology Review
San Diego Union Tribune
Los Angeles Times
NPR Science Friday

Monday, May 2, 2011

MicroMouse the Maze Solving Robot / Cool video from 2010

Here is text and video from an electrical engineering undergrad's blog post regarding a maze-solving robot designed and built here at the Jacobs School of Engineering by the UCSD IEEE Micromouse team:

We took a mouse to UCLA last weekend for an unofficial competition. It was actually a much more interesting competition than the official IEEE southwest area competition since several bots actually solved the maze. The maze was more reasonable than the SW area maze. Even though it was only 13x13 instead of 16x16, the walls were properly aligned and well-programmed bots didn’t have many problems getting stuck. This is a video of our mouse’s shortest solution path. Unfortunately, we only took 2nd place since one of the teams from UCLA had a much smaller and more maneuverable robot.