3 <!DOCTYPE eventdefs SYSTEM "csc.dtd">
7 <eventitem date="2010-10-13" time="04:30 PM" room="MC3003" title="UNIX 102">
9 <short><p>This installment in the CS Club's popular Unix tutorials UNIX 102 introduces powerful text editing tools for programming and document formatting.
13 <abstract><p>Unix 102 is a follow up to Unix 101, requiring basic knowledge of the shell.
14 If you missed Unix101 but still know your way around you should be fine.
15 Topics covered include: "real" editors, document typesetting with LaTeX
16 (great for assignments!), bulk editing, spellchecking, and printing in the
17 student environment and elsewhere.
21 <eventitem date="2010-10-06" time="04:30 PM" room="MC3003" title="UNIX 103">
23 <short><p>Unix 103 will cover version control systems and how to use them to manage your projects. Unix 101 would be helpful, but all that is needed is basic knowledge of the Unix command line (how to enter commands).
27 <abstract><p>Unix 103 will cover version control systems and how to use them to manage
28 your projects. Unix 101 would be helpful, but all that is needed is basic
29 knowledge of the Unix command line (how to enter commands).
34 <eventitem date="2010-10-12" time="04:30 PM" room="MC4061" title="How to build a brain: From single neurons to cognition">
36 <short><p><i>By Dr. Chris Eliasmith</i>. Theoretical neuroscience is a new discipline focused on constructing mathematical models of brain function. It has made significant headway in understanding aspects of the neural code. However, past work has largely focused on small numbers of neurons, and so the underlying representations are often simple. In this talk I demonstrate how the ideas underlying these simple forms of representation can underwrite a representational hierarchy that scales to support sophisticated, structure-sensitive representations.
40 <abstract><p><i>By Dr. Chris Eliasmith</i>. Theoretical neuroscience is a new discipline focused on constructing
41 mathematical models of brain function. It has made significant
42 headway in understanding aspects of the neural code. However,
43 past work has largely focused on small numbers of neurons, and
44 so the underlying representations are often simple. In this
45 talk I demonstrate how the ideas underlying these simple forms of
46 representation can underwrite a representational hierarchy that
47 scales to support sophisticated, structure-sensitive
48 representations. I will present a general architecture, the semantic
49 pointer architecture (SPA), which is built on this hierarchy
50 and allows the manipulation, processing, and learning of structured
51 representations in neurally realistic models. I demonstrate the
52 architecture on Progressive Raven's Matrices (RPM), a test of
53 general fluid intelligence.
58 <eventitem date="2010-10-04" time="04:30 PM" room="MC4021" title="BareMetal OS">
60 <short><p><i>By Ian Seyler, Return to Infinity</i>. BareMetal is a new 64-bit OS for x86-64 based computers. The OS is written entirely in Assembly, while applications can be written in Assembly or C/C++. High Performance Computing is the main target application.
64 <abstract><p><i>By Ian Seyler, Return to Infinity</i>. BareMetal is a new 64-bit OS for x86-64 based computers. The OS is written entirely in Assembly,
65 while applications can be written in Assembly or C/C++.
66 High Performance Computing is the main target application.
71 <eventitem date="2010-09-28" time="04:30 PM" room="MC4061" title="A Brief Introduction to Video Encoding">
73 <short><p><i>By Peter Barfuss</i>. In this talk, I will go over the concepts used in video encoding (such as motion estimation/compensation, inter- and intra- frame prediction, quantization and entropy encoding), and then demonstrate these concepts and algorithms in use in the MPEG-2 and the H.264 video codecs. In addition, some clever optimization tricks using SIMD/vectorization will be covered, assuming sufficient time to cover these topics.
77 <abstract><p><i>By Peter Barfuss</i>. With the recent introduction of digital TV and the widespread success
78 of video sharing websites such as youtube, it is clear that the task
79 of lossily compressing video with good quality has become important.
80 Similarly, the complex algorithms involved require high amounts of
81 optimization in order to run fast, another important requirement for
82 any video codec that aims to be widely used/adopted.
83 </p><p>In this talk, I
84 will go over the concepts used in video encoding (such as motion
85 estimation/compensation, inter- and intra- frame prediction,
86 quantization and entropy encoding), and then demonstrate these
87 concepts and algorithms in use in the MPEG-2 and the H.264 video
88 codecs. In addition, some clever optimization tricks using
89 SIMD/vectorization will be covered, assuming sufficient time to cover
95 <eventitem date="2010-09-23" time="04:30 PM" room="DC1301 (The Fishbowl)" title="Calling all CS Frosh">
97 <short><p>Come meet and greet your professors, advisors, and the heads of the school. Talk to the CSC executive and other upper year students about CS at Waterloo. Free food and beverages will also be available, so there is really no excuse to miss this.
101 <abstract><p>Come meet and greet your professors, advisors, and the heads of the school.
102 Talk to the CSC executive and other upper year students about CS at Waterloo.
103 Free food and beverages will also be available, so there is really no excuse
108 <eventitem date="2010-09-29" time="04:30 PM" room="MC3003" title="Unix 101">
110 <short><p>Need to use the Unix environment for a course, want to overcome your fears of the command line, or just curious? Attend the first installment in the CSC's popular series of Unix tutorials to learn the basics of the shell and how to navigate the unix environment. By the end of the hands on workshop you will be able to work efficiently from the command line and power-use circles around your friends.
114 <abstract><p>Need to use the Unix environment for a course, want to overcome your fears of
115 the command line, or just curious? Attend the first installment in the CSC's
116 popular series of Unix tutorails to learn the basics of the shell and how to
117 navigate the unix environment. By the end of the hands on workshop you will
118 be able to work efficiently from the command line and power-use circles around
124 <eventitem date="2010-09-22" time="06:00 PM" room="MC4045" title="Cooking for Geeks">
126 <short><p>The CSC is happy to be hosting Jeff Potter, author of "Cooking for Geeks" for a presentation on the finer arts of food science. Jeff's book has been featured on NPR, BBC and his presentations have wowed audiences of hackers & foodies alike. We're happy to have Jeff joining us for a hands on demonstration.
130 <abstract><p>The CSC is happy to be hosting Jeff Potter, author of "Cooking for Geeks" for a presentation on the finer arts of food science.
131 Jeff's book has been featured on NPR, BBC and his presentations have wowed audiences of hackers & foodies alike.
132 We're happy to have Jeff joining us for a hands on demonstration.
133 </p><p>But you don't have to take our word for it... here's what Jeff has to say:
134 </p><p>Hi! I'm Jeff Potter, author of Cooking for Geeks (O'Reilly Media, 2010), and I'm doing a "D.I.Y. Book Tour" to talk
135 about my just-released book. I'll talk about the food science behind what makes things yummy, giving you a quick
136 primer on how to go into the kitchen and have a fun time turning out a good meal.
137 Depending upon the space, I’ll also bring along some equipment or food that we can experiment with, and give you a chance to play with stuff and pester me with questions.
138 </p><p>If you have a copy of the book, bring it! I’ll happily sign it.
142 <eventitem date="2010-09-21" time="04:30 PM" room="MC4061" title="In the Beginning">
144 <short><p><b>by Dr. Prabhakar Ragde, Cheriton School of Computer Science</b>. I'll be workshopping some lecture ideas involving representations of
145 numbers, specification of computation in functional terms, reasoning about
146 such specifications, and comparing the strengths and weaknesses of different approaches.
150 <abstract><p>I'll be workshopping some lecture ideas involving representations
151 of numbers, specification of computation in
152 functional terms, reasoning about such specifications, and comparing the
153 strengths and weaknesses of
154 different approaches. No prior background is needed; the talk should be accessible
156 the University of Waterloo and, I hope, interesting to both novices and experts.
160 <eventitem date="2010-09-14" time="04:30 PM" room="Comfy Lounge" title="Elections">
161 <short><p>Fall term executive elections and general meeting.</p></short>
166 <eventitem date="2010-07-20" time="04:30 PM" room="MC2066" title="The Incompressibility Method">
168 In this talk, we shall explore the incompressibility method---an interesting and
169 extremely powerful framework for determining the average-case runtime of
170 algorithms. Within the right background knowledge, the heapsort question can be
171 answered with an elegant 3-line proof.
174 <p>Heapsort. It runs in $\Theta(n \log n)$ time in the worst case, and in $O(n)$
175 time in the best case. Do you think that heapsort runs faster than $O(n
176 \log n)$ time on average? Could it be possible that on most inputs,
177 heapsort runs in $O(n)$ time, running more slowly only on a small fraction
179 <p>Most students would say no. It "feels" intuitively obvious that heapsort
180 should take the full $n \log n$ steps on most inputs. However, proving this
181 rigourously with probabilistic arguments turns out to be very difficult.
182 Average case analysis of algorithms is one of those icky subjects that most
183 students don't want to touch with a ten foot pole; why should it be so
184 difficult if it is so intuitively obvious?</p>
185 <p>In this talk, we shall explore the incompressibility method---an interesting
186 and extremely powerful framework for determining the average-case runtime of
187 algorithms. Within the right background knowledge, the heapsort question
188 can be answered with an elegant 3-line proof.</p>
189 <p>The crucial fact is that an overwhelmingly large fraction of randomly
190 generated objects are incompressible. We can show that the inputs to
191 heapsort that run quickly correspond to inputs that can be compressed,
192 thereby proving that heapsort can't run quickly on average. Of course,
193 "compressible" is something that must be rigourously defined, and for this
194 we turn to the fascinating theory of Kolmogorov complexity.</p>
195 <p>In this talk, we'll briefly discuss the proof of the incompressibility
196 theorem and then see a number of applications. We won't dwell too much on
197 gruesome mathemtical details. No specific background is required, but
198 knowledge of some of the topics in CS240 will be helpful in understanding
199 some of the applications.</p>
203 <eventitem date="2010-07-13" time="04:30 PM" room="MC2066" title="Halftoning and Digital Art">
204 <short><p>Edgar Bering will be giving a talk titled: Halftoning and Digital Art</p></short>
205 <abstract><p>Halftoning is the process of simulating a continuous tone image
206 with small dots or regions of one colour. Halftoned images may be seen
207 in older newspapers with a speckled appearance, and to this day colour
208 halftoning is used in printers to reproduce images. In this talk I will
209 present various algorithmic approaches to halftoning, with an eye not
210 toward exact image reproduction but non-photorealistic rendering and
211 art. Included in the talk will be an introduction to digital paper
212 cutting and a tutorial on how to use the CSC's paper cutter to render
218 <eventitem date="2010-07-09" time="07:00 PM" room="MC Comfy" title="Code Party">
219 <short><p>There is a CSC Code Party Friday starting at 7:00PM (1900)
220 until we get bored (likely in the early in morning). Come out for
223 <abstract><p>There is a CSC Code Party Friday starting at 7:00PM (1900)
224 until we get bored (likely in the early in morning). Come out for
229 <eventitem date="2010-07-06" time="04:30 PM" room="MC2054" title="Dataflow Analysis">
230 <short><p>Nomair Naeem, a P.H.D. Student at Waterloo, will be giving a talk about Dataflow Analysis</p></short>
232 After going through an introduction to Lattice Theory and a formal treatment to
233 Dataflow Analysis Frameworks, we will take an in-depth view of the
234 Interprocedural Finite Distributive Subset (IFDS) Algorithm which implements a
235 fully context-sensitive, inter-procedural static dataflow analysis. Then, using
236 a Variable Type Analysis as an example, I will outline recent extensions that we
237 have made to open up the analysis to a larger variety of static analysis
238 problems and making it more efficient.
240 The talk is self-contained and no prior knowledge of program analysis is
245 <eventitem date="2010-06-22" time="04:30 PM" room="MC2066" title="Compiling To Combinators">
246 <short><p>Professor Ragde will be giving the first of our Professor talks for the Spring 2010 term.</p></short>
248 Number theory was thought to be mathematically appealing but practically
249 useless until the RSA encryption algorithm demonstrated its considerable
250 utility. I'll outline how combinatory logic (dating back to 1920) has a
251 similarly unexpected application to efficient and effective compilation,
252 which directly catalyzed the development of lazy functional programming
253 languages such as Haskell. The talk is self-contained; no prior knowledge
254 of functional programming is necessary.
258 <eventitem date="2010-05-25" time="05:00 PM" room="MC2066" title="Gerald Sussman">
259 <short><p>Why Programming is a Good Medium for Expressing Poorly Understood and Sloppily Formulated Ideas</p></short>
260 <abstract>Full details found <a href="http://csclub.uwaterloo.ca/misc/sussman/">here</a></abstract>
263 <eventitem date="2010-05-26" time="03:30 PM" room="MC5136" title="Gerald Sussman">
264 <short><p>Public Reception</p></short>
265 <abstract>Full details found <a href="http://csclub.uwaterloo.ca/misc/sussman/">here</a></abstract>
268 <eventitem date="2010-05-26" time="05:000PM" room="MC5158" title="Gerald Sussman">
269 <short><p>The Art of the Propagator</p></short>
270 <abstract>Full details found <a href="http://csclub.uwaterloo.ca/misc/sussman/">here</a></abstract>
273 <eventitem date="2010-05-11" time="05:30 PM" room="Comfy Lounge" title="Elections">
274 <short><p>Spring term executive elections and general meeting.</p></short>
278 <eventitem date="2010-04-06" time="04:30 PM" room="DC1304" title="Brush-Based Constructive Solid Geometry">
280 <short><p>The last talk in the CS10 series will be presented by Jordan Saunders, in which he will discuss methods for processing brush-based constructive solid geometry.
284 <abstract><p>For some would-be graphics programmers, the biggest barrier-to-entry is getting data to render. This is why there exist so
285 many terrain renderers: by virtue of the fact that rendering height-fields tends to give pretty pictures from next to no
286 "created" information. However, it becomes more difficult when programmers want to do indoor rendering (in the style of the
287 Quake and Unreal games). Ripping map information from the Quake games is possible (and fairly simple), but their tool-chain
288 is fairly clumsy from the point of view of adding a conversion utility.
289 </p><p>My talk is about Constructive Solid Geometry from a Brush-based perspective (nearly identical to Unreal's and still very similar
290 to Quake's). The basic idea is that there are brushes (convex volumes in 3-space) and they can either be additive (solid brushes)
291 or subtractive (hollow, or air brushes). The entire world starts off as an infinite solid lump and you can start removing sections
292 of it then adding them back in. The talk pertains to fast methods of taking the list of brushes and generating world geometry. I may
293 touch on interface problems with the editor, but the primary content will be the different ways I generated the geometry and what I found to be best.
297 <eventitem date="2010-04-07" time="1:00 PM" room="MC2037" title="Windows Azure Lab">
299 <short><p>Get the opportunity to learn about Microsoft's Cloud Services Platform, Windows Azure. Attend this Hands-on-lab session sponsored by Microsoft.
303 <abstract><p>We are in the midst of an industry shift as developers and businesses embrace the Cloud.
304 Technical innovations in the cloud are dramatically changing the economics of computing
305 and reducing barriers that keep businesses from meeting the increasing demands of
306 today's customers. The cloud promises choice and enables scenarios that previously
307 were not economically practical.
308 </p><p>Microsoft's Windows Azure is an internet-scale cloud computing services platform hosted
309 in Microsoft data centers. The Windows Azure platform, allows developers to build and
310 deploy production ready cloud services and applications. With the Windows Azure platform,
311 developers can take advantage of greater choice and flexibility in how they develop and
312 deploy applications, while using familiar tools and programming languages.
313 </p><p>Get the opportunity to learn about Microsoft's Cloud Services Platform, Windows Azure.
314 Attend the Hands-on-lab session sponsored by Microsoft.
318 <eventitem date="2010-04-01" time="6:30 PM" room="CSC Office" title="CTRL-D">
320 <short><p>Once again the CSC will be holding its traditional end of term dinner. It will be at the Vice President's house. If you don't know how to get there meet at the club office at 6:30 PM, a group will be leaving from the MC then. The dinner will be potluck style so bring a dish for 4-6 people, or some plates or pop or something.
324 <abstract><p>Once again the CSC will be holding its traditional end of term dinner. It will
325 be at the Vice President's house. If you don't know how to get there meet
326 at the club office at 6:30 PM, a group will be leaving from the MC then. The
327 dinner will be potluck style so bring a dish for 4-6 people, or some plates
332 <eventitem date="2010-03-30" time="4:30 PM" room="DC1304" title="NUI: The future of robotics and automated systems">
334 <short><p>Member Sam Pasupalak will present some of his ongoing work in Natural User Interfaces and Robotics in this sixth installment of CS10.
338 <abstract><p>Bill Gates in his article “A Robot in every home” in the Scientific American describes how the current
339 robotics industry resembles the 1970’s of the Personal Computer Industry. In fact it is not just
340 Microsoft which has already taken a step forward by starting the Microsoft Robotics studio, but robotics
341 researchers around the world believe that robotics and automation systems are going to be ubiquitous in
342 the next 10-20 years (similar to Mark Weiser’s analogy of Personal Computers 20 years ago). Natural User
343 Interfaces (NUIs) are going to revolutionize the way we interact with computers, cellular phones, household
344 appliances, automated systems in our daily lives. Just like the GUI made personal computing a reality,
345 I believe natural user interfaces will do the same for robotics.
346 </p><p>During the presentation I will be presenting my ongoing software project on natural user interfaces as well
347 as sharing my goals for the future, one of which is to provide an NUI SDK and the other to provide a common
348 Robotics OS for every hardware vendor that will enable people to make applications without worrying about
349 underlying functionality. If time permits I would like to present a demo of my software prototype.
353 <eventitem date="2010-03-26" time="7:00 PM" room="MC7001" title="A Final Party of Code">
355 <short><p>There is a CSC/CMC Code Party Friday starting at 7:00PM (1900) until we get bored (likely in the early in morning). Come out for fun hacking times, spreading Intertube memes (optional), hacking on open source projects, doing some computational math, and other general classiness. There will be free energy drinks for everyone's enjoyment. This is the last of the term so don't miss out.
359 <abstract><p>There is a CSC/CMC Code Party Friday starting at 7:00PM (1900) until we
360 get bored (likely in the early in morning). Come out for fun hacking
361 times, spreading Intertube memes (optional), hacking on open source projects,
362 doing some computational math, and other
363 general classiness. There will be free energy drinks for everyone's
364 enjoyment. This is the last of the term so don't miss out.
368 <eventitem date="2010-03-23" time="4:30 PM" room="MC5158" title="Memory-Corruption Security Holes: How to exploit, patch and prevent them.">
370 <short><p>Despite it being 2010, code is still being exploited due to stack overflows, a 40+ year old class of security vulnerabilities. In this talk, I will go over several common methods of program exploitation, both on the stack and on the heap, as well as going over some of the current mitigation techniques (i.e. stack canaries, ASLR, etc.) for these holes, and similarly, how some of these can be bypassed as well.
374 <abstract><p>Despite it being 2010, code is still being exploited due to
375 stack overflows, a 40+ year old class of security vulnerabilities. In
376 this talk, I will go over several common methods of program
377 exploitation, both on the stack and on the heap, as well as going over
378 some of the current mitigation techniques (i.e. stack canaries, ASLR,
379 etc.) for these holes, and similarly, how some of these can be
384 <eventitem date="2010-03-19" time="7:00 PM" room="Comfy Lounge" title="Another Party of Code">
386 <short><p>There is a CSC Code Party Friday starting at 7:00PM (1900) until we get bored (likely in the early in morning). Come out for fun hacking times, spreading Intertube memes (optional), hacking on the OpenMoko, creating music mixes, and other general classiness. There will be free energy drinks for everyone's enjoyment.
390 <abstract><p>There is a CSC Code Party Friday starting at 7:00PM (1900) until we
391 get bored (likely in the early in morning). Come out for fun hacking
392 times, spreading Intertube memes (optional), hacking on the OpenMoko,
393 creating music mixes, and other
394 general classiness. There will be free energy drinks for everyone's
399 <eventitem date="2010-03-16" time="4:30 PM" room="MC5158" title="Approximation Hardness and the Unique Games Conjecture">
401 <short><p>The fifth installment in CS10: Undergraduate Seminars in CS, features CSC member Elyot Grant introducing the theory of approximation algorithms. Fun times and a lack of gruesome math are promised.
405 <abstract><p>The theory of NP-completeness suggests that some problems in CS are inherently hard—that is,
406 there is likely no possible algorithm that can efficiently solve them. Unfortunately, many of
407 these problems are ones that people in the real world genuinely want to solve! How depressing!
408 What can one do when faced with a real-life industrial optimization problem whose solution may
409 save millions of dollars but is probably impossible to determine without trillions of
410 years of computation time?
411 </p><p>One strategy is to be content with an approximate (but provably "almost ideal") solution, and from
412 here arises the theory of approximation algorithms. However, this theory also has a depressing side,
413 as many well-known optimization problems have been shown to be provably hard to approximate well.
414 </p><p>This talk shall focus on the depressing. We will prove that various optimization problems (such as
415 traveling salesman and max directed disjoint paths) are impossible to approximate well unless P=NP.
416 These proofs are easy to understand and are REALLY COOL thanks to their use of very slick reductions.
417 </p><p>We shall explore many NP-hard optimization problems and state the performance of the best known
418 approximation algorithms and best known hardness results. Tons of open problems will be mentioned,
419 including the unique games conjecture, which, if proven true, implies the optimality of many of the
420 best known approximation algorithms for NP-complete problems like MAX-CUT and INDEPENDENT SET.
421 </p><p>I promise fun times and no gruesome math. Basic knowledge of graph theory and computational
422 complexity might help but is not required.
426 <eventitem date="2010-03-12" time="7:00 PM" room="Comfy Lounge" title="A Party of Code">
428 <short><p>A fevered night of code, friends, fun, energy drinks, and the CSC.
432 <abstract><p>A fevered night of code, friends, fun, energy drinks, and the CSC.
433 </p><p>Come join us for a night of coding. Get in touch with more experianced coders,
434 advertize for/bug squash on your favourite open source project, write that personal
435 project you were planning to do for a while but haven't found the time. Don't
436 have any ideas but want to sit and hack? We can find something for you to do.
441 <eventitem date="2010-03-09" time="4:30 PM" room="DC1304" title="Software Transactional Memory and Using STM in Haskell">
443 <short><p>The fourth Undergraduate Seminar in Computer Science will be presented by Brennan Taylor, a club member. He will be discussing various concurrent computing problems, and introducing Software Transactional Memory as a solution to them.
447 <abstract><p>Concurrency is hard. Well maybe not hard, but it sure is annoying to get right. Even the
448 simplest of synchronization tasks are hard to implement correctly when using synchronization
449 primitives such as locks and semaphores.
450 </p><p>In this talk we explore what Software Transactional Memory (STM) is, what problems STM solves,
451 and how to use STM in Haskell. We explore a number of examples that show how easy STM is to use
452 and how expressive Haskell can be. The goal of this talk is to convince attendees that STM is
453 not only a viable synchronization solution, but superior to how synchronization is typically
458 <eventitem date="2010-03-06" time="5:00 PM" room="Waterloo Bowling Lanes" title="Bowling">
459 <short><p>The CSC is going bowling. $9.75 for shoes and two games. The bowling alley serves fried food and beer. Join us for
460 some or all of the above</p></short>
463 <eventitem date="2010-03-02" time="4:30 PM" room="DC1304" title="QIP=PSPACE">
465 <short><p>Dr. John Watrous of the <a href="http://www.iqc.ca">IQC</a> will present his recent result "QIP=PSPACE". The talk will not assume any familiarity with quantum computing or complexity theory, and light refreshments will be provided.
469 <abstract><p>The interactive proof system model of computation is a cornerstone of
470 complexity theory, and its quantum computational variant has been
471 studied in quantum complexity theory for the past decade. In this
472 talk I will discuss an exact characterization of the power of quantum
473 interactive proof systems that I recently proved in collaboration with
474 Rahul Jain, Zhengfeng Ji, and Sarvagya Upadhyay. The characterization
475 states that the collection of computational problems having quantum
476 interactive proof systems consists precisely of those problems
477 solvable with an ordinary classical computer using a polynomial amount
478 of memory (or QIP = PSPACE in complexity-theoretic terminology). This
479 characterization implies the striking fact that quantum computing does
480 not provide any increase in computational power over classical
481 computing in the context of interactive proof systems.
482 </p><p>I will not assume that the audience for this talk has any familiarity
483 with either quantum computing or complexity theory; and to be true to
484 the spirit of the interactive proof system model, I hope to make this
485 talk as interactive as possible -- I will be happy to explain anything
486 related to the talk that I can that people are interested in learning
491 <eventitem date="2010-02-26" time="7:00 PM" room="CnD Lounge" title="Contest Closing">
492 <short><p>The <a href="http://contest.csclub.uwaterloo.ca">contest</a> is coming to a close tomorrow, so to finish it in style we will be having ice cream and code friday night.
493 It would be a shame if Waterloo lost (we're not on top of the <a href="http://csclub.uwaterloo.ca/contest/rankings.php">leaderboard</a> right now) so come out and hack for the home team.</p></short>
496 <eventitem date="2010-02-25" time="4:30 PM" room="DC1302" title="CSCF Town Hall">
498 <short><p>Come to a town hall style meeting with the managers of CSCF to discuss how to improve the undergraduate (student.cs) computing environment. Have gripes? Suggestions? Requests? Now is the time to voice them.
502 <abstract><p>Come to a town hall style meeting with the managers of CSCF to discuss how
503 to improve the undergraduate (student.cs) computing environment. Have gripes?
504 Suggestions? Requests? Now is the time to voice them.
505 </p><p>CSCF management (Bill Ince, Associate Director; Dave Gawley, Infrastructure Support;
506 Dawn Keenan, User Support; Lawrence Folland, Research Support) will be at the
507 meeting to listen to student concerns and suggestions. Information gathered from
508 the meeting will be summarized and taken to the CSCF advisory committee for
509 discussion and planning.
514 <eventitem date="2010-02-23" time="04:30 PM" room="MC5136B" title="The Best Algorithms are Randomized Algorithms">
516 <short><p>In this talk Nicholas Harvey discusses the prevalence of randomized algorithms and their application to solving optimization problems on graphs; with startling results compared to deterministic algorithms.
520 <abstract><p>For many problems, randomized algorithms are either the fastest algorithm or the simplest algorithm;
521 sometimes they even provide the only known algorithm. Randomized algorithms have become so prevalent
522 that deterministic algorithms could be viewed as a curious special case. In this talk I will describe
523 some startling examples of randomized algorithms for solving some optimization problems on graphs.
528 <eventitem date="2010-02-09" time="4:30 PM" room="DC1304" title="An Introduction to Vector Graphics Libraries with Cairo">
530 <short><p>Cairo is an open source, cross platform, vector graphics library with the ability to output to many kinds of surfaces, including PDF, SVG and PNG surfaces, as well as X-Window, Win32 and Quartz 2D backends. Unlike the raster graphics used with programmes and libraries such as The Gimp and ImageMagick, vector graphics are not defined by grids of pixels, but rather by a collection of drawing operations. These operations detail how to draw lines, fill shapes, and even set text to create the desired image. This has the advantages of being infinitely scalable, smaller in file size, and simpler to express within a computer programme. This talk will be an introduction to the concepts and metaphors used by vector graphics libraries in general and Cairo in particular.
534 <abstract><p>Cairo is an open source, cross platform, vector graphics library with the ability to
535 output to many kinds of surfaces, including PDF, SVG and PNG surfaces, as well as
536 X-Window, Win32 and Quartz 2D backends. Unlike the raster graphics used with programmes
537 and libraries such as The Gimp and ImageMagick, vector graphics are not defined by grids
538 of pixels, but rather by a collection of drawing operations. These operations detail how to
539 draw lines, fill shapes, and even set text to create the desired image. This has the
540 advantages of being infinitely scalable, smaller in file size, and simpler to express within
541 a computer programme. This talk will be an introduction to the concepts and metaphors used
542 by vector graphics libraries in general and Cairo in particular.
547 <eventitem date="2010-02-11" time="4:30 PM" room="MC3005" title="UNIX 101 Encore">
549 <short><p>New to Unix? No problem, we'll teach you to power use circles around your friends! The popular tutorial returns for a second session, in case you missed the first one.
553 <abstract><p>New to Unix? No problem, we'll teach you to power use circles around your friends!
554 The popular tutorial returns for a second session, in case you missed the first one.
555 </p><p>This first tutorial is an introduction to the Unix shell environment, both on the student
556 servers and on other Unix environments. Topics covered include: using the shell, both basic
557 interaction and advanced topics like scripting and job control, the filesystem and manipulating
558 it, and ssh. If you feel you're already familiar with these topics don't hesitate to come
559 to Unix 102 to learn about documents, editing, and other related tasks, or watch out
560 for Unix 103 and 104 that get much more in depth into power programming tools on Unix.
564 <eventitem date="2010-02-10" time="4:30 PM" room="MC3003" title="UNIX 101">
566 <short><p>New to Unix? No problem, we'll teach you to power use circles around your friends!
570 <abstract><p>New to Unix? No problem, we'll teach you to power use circles around your friends!
571 </p><p>This first tutorial is an introduction to the Unix shell environment, both on the student
572 servers and on other Unix environments. Topics covered include: using the shell, both basic
573 interaction and advanced topics like scripting and job control, the filesystem and manipulating
574 it, and ssh. If you feel you're already familiar with these topics don't hesitate to come
575 to Unix 102 to learn about documents, editing, and other related tasks, or watch out
576 for Unix 103 and 104 that get much more in depth into power programming tools on Unix.
580 <eventitem date="2010-01-18" time="15:30 PM" room="MC2066" title="Wilderness Programming">
582 <short><p>Paul Lutus describes his early Apple II software development days, conducted from the far end of a 1200-foot power cord, in a tiny Oregon cabin. Paul describes how he wrote a best-seller (Apple Writer) in assembly language, while dealing with power outages, lightning storms and the occasional curious bear.
586 <abstract><p>Paul Lutus describes his early Apple II software development days, conducted
587 from the far end of a 1200-foot power cord, in a tiny Oregon cabin. Paul
588 describes how he wrote a best-seller (Apple Writer) in assembly language,
589 while dealing with power outages, lightning storms and the occasional
591 </p><p>Paul also describes his subsequent four-year solo around-the-world sail in a
592 31-foot boat. And be ready with your inquiries -- Paul will answer your
594 </p><p>Paul Lutus has a wide background in science and technology. He designed spacecraft
595 components for the NASA Space Shuttle and created a mathematical model of the solar
596 system used during the Viking Mars lander program. Then, at the beginning of the
597 personal computer revolution, Lutus switched career paths and took up computer
598 science. His best-known program is "Apple Writer," an internationally successful
599 word processing program for the early Apple computers.
604 <eventitem date="2010-01-26" time="05:00 PM" room="DC1302" title="Deep learning with multiplicative interactions">
606 <short><p>Geoffrey Hinton, from the University of Toronto and the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, will discuss some of his latest work in learning networks and artificial intelligence. The talk will be accessable, so don't hesitate to come out. More information about Dr. Hinton's research can be found on <a href="http://www.cs.toronto.edu/~hinton/">his website</a>.
610 <abstract><p>Deep networks can be learned efficiently from unlabeled data. The layers
611 of representation are learned one at a time using a simple learning
612 module, called a "Restricted Boltzmann Machine" that has only one layer
613 of latent variables. The values of the latent variables of one
614 module form the data for training the next module. Although deep
615 networks have been quite successful for tasks such as object
616 recognition, information retrieval, and modeling motion capture data,
617 the simple learning modules do not have multiplicative interactions which
618 are very useful for some types of data.
619 </p><p>The talk will show how a third-order energy function can be factorized to
620 yield a simple learning module that retains advantageous properties of a
621 Restricted Boltzmann Machine such as very simple exact inference and a
622 very simple learning rule based on pair-wise statistics. The new module
623 contains multiplicative interactions that are useful for a variety of
624 unsupervised learning tasks. Researchers at the University of Toronto
625 have been using this type of module to extract oriented energy from image
626 patches and dense flow fields from image sequences. The new module can
627 also be used to allow motions of a particular style to be achieved by
628 blending autoregressive models of motion capture data.
635 <eventitem date="2009-12-05" time="6:30 PM" room="MC3036" edate="2009-12-05" etime="11:55 PM" title="The Club That Really Likes Dinner">
636 <short><p>Come on out to the club's termly end of term dinner, details in the abstract</p></short>
637 <abstract><p>The dinner will be potluck style at the Vice President's house, please RSVP (respond swiftly to the vice president)
638 <a href="https://csclub.uwaterloo.ca/rsvp">here</a> if you plan on attending. If you don't know how to get there meet at the club
639 office at 6:30 PM, a group will be leaving to lead you there.</p></abstract>
642 <eventitem date="2009-11-27" time="7:00 PM" room="Comfy Lounge" edate="2009-11-28" etime="7:00 AM" title="Code Party!!11!!">
644 <short><p>A fevered night of code, friends, fun, energy drinks, and the CSC. Facebook will be around to bring some food and hang out.
648 <abstract><p>Come join us for a night of coding. Get in touch with more experianced coders,
649 advertize for/bug squash on your favourite open source project, write that personal
650 project you were planning to do for a while but haven't found the time. Don't
651 have any ideas but want to sit and hack? Try your hand at the Facebook puzzles,
652 write a new app, or just chill and watch scifi.
657 <eventitem date="2009-11-05" time="4:30 PM" room="MC2065" title="In the Beginning">
659 <short><p>To most CS students an OS kernel is pretty low level. But there is something even lower, the instructions that must be executed to get the CPU ready to accept a kernel. That is, if you look at any processor's reference manual there is a page or two describing the state of the CPU when it powered on. This talk describes what needs to happen next, up to the point where the first kernel instruction executes.
663 <abstract><p>To most CS students an OS kernel is pretty low level. But there is
664 something even lower, the instructions that must be executed to get the
665 CPU ready to accept a kernel. That is, if you look at any processor's
666 reference manual there is a page or two describing the state of the CPU
667 when it powered on. This talk describes what needs to happen next,
668 up to the point where the first kernel instruction executes.
669 </p><p>This part of execution is extremely architecture-dependent. Those of
670 you who have any experience with this aspect of CS probably know the x86
671 architecture, and think it's horrible, which it is. I am going to talk
672 about the ARM architecture, which is inside almost all mobile phones,
673 and which allows us to look at a simple implementation that includes
679 <eventitem date="2009-10-20" time="04:30 PM" room="MC3036" title="CSC Goes To Dooly's">
681 <short><p>We're going to Dooly's to play pool. What more do you want from us? Come to the Club office and we'll all bus there together. We've got discount tables for club members so be sure to be there.
685 <abstract><p>We're going to Dooly's to play pool. What more do you want from us?
686 Come to the Club office and we'll all bus there together. We've got
687 discount tables for club members so be sure to be there.
692 <eventitem date="2009-10-16" time="7:00 PM" room="Comfy Lounge" title="Code Party and Contest Finale">
694 <short><p>Come on out for a night of code, contests, and energy drinks. Join the Computer Scinece Club for the finale of the Google AI Challenge and an all night code party. Finish up your entry, or start it (its not too late). Not interested in the contest? Come out anyway for a night of coding and comradarie with us.
698 <abstract><p>Come on out for a night of code, contests, and energy drinks. Join the Computer
699 Scinece Club for the finale of the Google AI Challenge and an all night code party.
700 Finish up your entry, or start it (its not too late). Not interested in the contest?
701 Come out anyway for a night of coding and comradarie with us.
702 </p><p>Included in the party will be the contest finale and awards cerimony, so if you've
703 entered be sure to stick arround to collect the spoils of victory, or see just who
704 that person you couldn't edge off is.
709 <eventitem date="2009-10-08" time="4:30 PM" room="MC3003" title="UNIX 103">
711 <short><p>In this long-awaited third installment of the popular Unix Tutorials the friendly experts of the CSC will teach you the simple art of version control. You will learn the purpose and use of two different Version Control Systems (git and subversion). This tutorial will advise you in the discipline of managing the source code of your projects and enable you to quickly learn new Version Control Systems in the work place -- a skill that is much sought after by employers.
715 <abstract><p>In this long-awaited third installment of the popular Unix Tutorials the
716 friendly experts of the CSC will teach you the simple art of version control.
717 You will learn the purpose and use of two different Version Control Systems
718 (git and subversion). This tutorial will advise you in the discipline of
719 managing the source code of your projects and enable you to quickly learn new
720 Version Control Systems in the work place -- a skill that is much sought after
726 <eventitem date="2009-10-14" time="2:30 PM" room="DC1304" title="UofT Graduate School Information Session">
727 <short><p> "Is Graduate School for You?" Get the answers to your grad school questions - and have a bite to eat, our treat</p>
729 <abstract><p> Join Prof. Greg Wilson, faculty member in the Software Engineering research group in the UofT's Department of Computer Science,
730 as he gives insight into studying at the graduate level-what can be expected, what does UofT offer, is it right for you? Pizza and pop will
731 be served. <b>Come see what grad school is all about!</b>. All undergraduate students are welcome; registration is not required.</p>
732 <p>For any questions about the program, visit <a href="http://www.cs.toronto.edu/dcs/prospective-grad.html">UofT's website</a>. This
733 event is not run by the CS Club, and is announced here for the benefit of our members.</p></abstract>
736 <eventitem date="2009-10-03" time="10:00 AM" edate="2009-10-03" etime="3:30 PM" room="DC1301 FishBowl" title="Linux Install Fest">
738 <short><p>Interested in trying Linux but don't know where to start?
739 Come to the Linux install fest to demo Linux, get help installing it
740 on your computer, either stand alone or a dual boot, and help setting
741 up your fresh install. Have lunch and hang around if you like, or just come in for a CD.
745 <abstract><p>Interested in trying Linux but don't know where to start?
746 Come to the Linux install fest to demo Linux, get help installing it on
747 your computer, either stand alone or a dual boot, and help setting
748 up your fresh install. Have lunch and hang around if you like, or just
749 come in for a qick install.
754 <eventitem date="2009-10-01" time="4:30 PM" room="MC3003" title="UNIX 102">
756 <short><p>The next installment in the CS Club's popular Unix tutorials UNIX 102 introduces powerful text editing tools for programming and document formatting.
760 <abstract><p>Unix 102 is a follow up to Unix 101, requiring basic knowledge of the shell.
761 If you missed Unix101 but still know your way around you should be fine.
762 Topics covered include: "real" editors, document typesetting with LaTeX
763 (great for assignments!), bulk editing, spellchecking, and printing in the
764 student environment and elsewhere.
765 </p><p>If you aren't interested or feel comfortable with these taskes, watch out for
766 Unix 103 and 104 to get more depth in power programming tools on Unix.
771 <eventitem date="2009-09-28" time="4:30 PM" edate="2009-10-09" etime="11:59 OM" room="MC3003" title="AI Programming Contest sponsored by Google">
773 <short><p>Come learn how to write an intelligent game-playing program.
774 No past experience necessary. Submit your program using the <a href="http://csclub.uwaterloo.ca/contest/">online web interface</a>
775 to watch it battle against other people's programs. Beginners and experts welcome! Prizes provided by google,
776 including the delivery of your resume to google recruiters.
780 <abstract><p>Come learn how to write an intelligent game-playing program.
781 No past experience necessary. Submit your program using the <a href="http://csclub.uwaterloo.ca/contest/">online
782 web interface</a> to watch it battle against other people's programs.
783 Beginners and experts welcome!
784 </p><p>The contest is sponsored by Google, so be sure to compete for a chance
785 to get noticed by them.
786 </p><p>Prizes for the top programs:
787 <ul><li>$100 in Cash Prizes</li>
788 <li> Google t-shirts</li>
789 <li>Fame and recognition</li>
790 <li>Your resume directly to a Google recruiter</li>
795 <eventitem date="2009-09-24" time="4:30 PM" room="MC3003" title="UNIX 101">
798 New to Unix? No problem, we'll teach you to power use circles around your friends!
803 New to Unix? No problem, we'll teach you to power use circles around your friends!
805 This first tutorial is an introduction to the Unix shell environment, both on the student
806 servers and on other Unix environments. Topics covered include: using the shell, both basic
807 interaction and advanced topics like scripting and job control, the filesystem and manipulating
808 it, and ssh. If you feel you're already familiar with these topics don't hesitate to come
809 to Unix 102 to learn about documents, editing, and other related tasks, or watch out
810 for Unix 103 and 104 that get much more in depth into power programming tools on Unix.
814 <eventitem date="2009-09-15" time="5:00PM" edate="2009-09-15" etime="6:00 PM"
815 room="Comfy Lounge" title="Elections">
817 Nominations are open now, either place your name on the nominees board or
818 e-mail <a href="mailto:cro@csclub.uwaterloo.ca">the CRO</a>
819 to nominate someone for a position.
820 Come to the Comfy Lounge to elect your fall term executive. Contact
821 <a href="mailto:cro@csclub.uwaterloo.ca">the CRO</a> if you have questions.
827 <eventitem date="2009-07-23" time="4:30 PM" edate="2009-07-23" etime="6:00 PM"
828 room="MC 3003" title="Unix 103">
830 In this long-awaited third installment of the popular Unix Tutorials the dark
831 mages of the CSC will train you in the not-so-arcane magick of version control.
832 You will learn the purpose and use of two different Version Control Systems
833 (git and subversion). This tutorial will advise you in the discipline of
834 managing the source code of your projects and enable you to quickly learn new
835 Version Control Systems in the work place -- a skill that is much sought after
840 <eventitem date="2009-07-17" time="7:00 PM" edate="2009-07-18" etime="4:00 AM"
841 room="MC 3001" title="Code Party">
843 Have an assignment or project you need to work on? We
844 will be coding from 7:00pm until 4:00am starting on Friday, July 17th
845 in the Comfy lounge. Join us!
849 <eventitem date="2009-07-07" time="3:00 PM" etime="5:00 PM" room="DC 1302"
850 title="History of CS Curriculum at UW">
852 This talk provides a personal overview of the evolution of the
853 undergraduate computer science curriculum at UW over the past forty
854 years, concluding with an audience discussion of possible future
859 <eventitem date="2009-06-22" time="4:30 PM" etime="6:30 PM" room="MC 4041"
861 <short><p> Come and drink tea and read an academic CS paper with
862 the Paper Club. We will be meeting from 4:30pm until 6:30pm on
863 Monday, June 22th on the 4th floor of the MC (exact room number
864 TBA). See http://csclub.uwaterloo.ca/~paper
868 <eventitem date="2009-06-19" time="5:30 PM" room="Dooly's" title="Dooly's Night">
870 The CSC will be playing pool at Dooly's. Join us for only a few dollars.
874 <eventitem date="2009-06-05" time="7:00 PM" edate="2009-06-06" etime="4:00 AM"
875 room="MC 3001" title="Code Party">
877 Have an assignment or project you need to work on? We
878 will be coding from 7:00pm until 7:00am starting on Friday, June 5th
879 in the Comfy lounge. Join us!
883 <eventitem date="2009-06-02" time="4:30 PM" room="MC 2037" title="Unix 101">
885 Need to use the UNIX environment for a course, want to overcome your fears of
886 the command line, or just curious? Come and learn the arcane secrets of the
887 UNIX command line interface from CSC mages. After this tutorial you will be
888 comfortable with the essentials of navigating, manipulating and viewing files,
889 and processing data at the UNIX shell prompt.
893 <eventitem date="2009-05-12" time="12:00 PM" room="MC 2034" title="PHP on Windows">
894 <short><p>PHP Programming Contest Info Session</p></short>
896 Port or create a new PHP web application and you could win a prize
897 of up to $10k. Microsoft is running a programming contest for PHP
898 developers willing to support the Windows platform. The contest is
899 ongoing; this will be a short introduction to it by
900 representatives of Microsoft and an opportunity to ask questions.
901 Pizza and pop will be provided.
907 <eventitem date="2009-04-02" time="4:30 PM" room="DC1302" title="Rapid prototyping and mathematical art">
909 <short><p>A talk by Craig S. Kaplan.</p></short>
912 <abstract><p>The combination of computer graphics, geometry, and rapid
913 prototyping technology has created a wide range of exciting
914 opportunities for using the computer as a medium for creative
915 expression. In this talk, I will describe the most popular
916 technologies for computer-aided manufacturing, discuss
917 applications of these devices in art and design, and survey
918 the work of contemporary artists working in the area (with a
919 focus on mathematical art). The talk will be primarily
920 non-technical, but I will mention some of the mathematical
921 and computational techniques that come into play.
925 <eventitem date="2009-04-03" time="6:00 PM" edate="2009-04-04"
926 etime="6:00 AM" room="TBA" title="CTRL-D">
929 Join the Club That Really Likes Dinner for the End Of Term
930 party! Inquire closer to the date for details.
935 This is not an official club event and receives no funding.
936 Bring food, drinks, deserts, etc.
941 <eventitem date="2009-03-27" time="6:00 PM" edate="2009-03-28"
942 etime="12:00 PM" room="Comfy Lounge (MC)"
946 CSC Code Party! Same as always - no sleep, lots of caffeine,
947 and really nerdy entertainment. Bonus: Free Cake!
952 This code party will have the usual, plus it will double as the
953 closing of the programming contest. Our experts will be
954 available to help you polish off your submission.
959 <eventitem date="2009-03-19" time="4:30 PM" edate="2009-03-28"
960 etime="12:00 PM" room="MC2061"
961 title="Artificial Intelligence Contest">
964 Come out and try your hand at writing a computer program that
965 plays Minesweeper Flags, a two-player variant of the classic
966 computer game, Minesweeper. Once you're done, your program
967 will compete head-to-head against the other entries in a
968 fierce Minesweeper Flags tournament. There will be a contest
969 kick-off session on Thursday March 19 at 4:30 PM in room
970 MC3036. Submissions will be accepted until Saturday March 28.
975 Come out and try your hand at writing a computer program that
976 plays Minesweeper Flags, a two-player variant of the classic
977 computer game, Minesweeper. Once you're done, your program
978 will compete head-to-head against the other entries in a
979 fierce Minesweeper Flags tournament. There will be a contest
980 kick-off session on Thursday March 19 at 4:30 PM in room
981 MC3036. Submissions will be accepted until Saturday March 28.
986 <eventitem date="2009-03-05" time="4:30 PM" edate="2009-03-05"
987 etime="6:30 PM" room="Comfy Lounge"
988 title="SIGGRAPH Night">
991 Come out and watch the SIGGRAPH (Special Interest Group on
992 Graphics) conference video review. A video of insane, amazing,
993 and mind blowing computer graphics. .
998 The ACM SIGGRAPH (Special Interest Group on Graphics) hosts a
999 conference yearly in which the latest and greatest in computer
1000 graphics premier. They record video and as a result produce a
1001 very nice Video Review of the conference. Come join us watching
1002 these videos, as well as a few professors from the UW Computer
1003 Graphics Lab. There will be some kind of food and drink, and its
1004 guranteed to be dazzling.
1009 <eventitem date="2009-03-12" time="8:00 AM" edate="2009-03-13"
1010 etime="9:00 PM" room="Toronto Hilton"
1011 title="Canadian Undergraduate Technology Conference">
1014 See <a href="http://www.cutc.ca">cutc.ca</a> for more details.
1019 The Canadian Undergraduate Technology Conference is Canada's
1020 largest student-run conference. From humble roots it has emerged
1021 as a venue that offers an environment for students to grow
1022 socially, academically, and professionally. We target to exceed
1023 our past record of 600 students from 47 respected institutions
1024 nationwide. The event mingles ambitious as well as talented
1025 students with leaders from academia and industry to offer
1026 memorable experiences and valuable opportunities.
1031 <eventitem date="2009-03-09" time="3:00 PM" room="DC1302"
1032 title="Prabhakar Ragde">
1034 Functional Lexing and Parsing</p></short>
1037 This talk will describe a non-traditional functional approach
1038 to the classical problems of lexing (breaking a stream of
1039 characters into "words" or tokens) and parsing (identifying
1040 tree structure in a stream of tokens based on a grammar,
1041 e.g. for a programming language that needs to be compiled or
1042 interpreted). The functional approach can clarify and organize
1043 a number of algorithms that tend to be opaque in their
1044 conventional imperative presentation. No prior background in
1045 functional programming, lexing, or parsing is assumed.
1050 <eventitem date="2009-03-12" time="5:00 PM" etime="7:00 PM" room="RAC2009"
1051 title="IQC - Programming Quantum Computers">
1054 A brief intro to Quantum Computing and why it matters,
1055 followed by a talk on programming quantum computers. Meet at
1056 the CSC at 4:00PM for a guided walk to the RAC.
1061 Raymond Laflamme is the director of the Institute for Quantum
1062 Computing at the University of Waterloo and holds the Canada
1063 Research Chair in Quantum Information. He will give a brief
1064 introduction to quantum computing and why it matters, followed
1065 by a talk on programming quantum computers. There will be
1066 tours of the IQC labs at the end, and pizza will be provided
1067 back at the CSC for all attendees.
1072 <eventitem date="2009-02-27" time="5:00 PM" etime="7:00 PM" room="CSC Office: MC3036" title="Dooly's Night">
1074 Come join the CSC as we head to Dooly's.</p></short>
1076 Meet us at the Club office as we head to Dooly's for cheap tables and good times.</p></abstract>
1079 <eventitem date="2009-02-05" time="5:30 PM" room="MC2062 and MC2063" title="UNIX 101 and 102">
1081 Continuing the popular Unix Tutorials with a rerun of 101 and the debut of 102.</p></short>
1083 Unix 101 is an introduction to the Unix shell environment, both on the student
1084 servers and on other Unix environments. Topics covered include: using the shell, both basic
1085 interaction and advanced topics like scripting and job control, the filesystem and manipulating
1086 it, and ssh. </p><p>
1087 Unix 102 is a follow up to Unix 101, requiring basic knowledge of the shell.
1088 If you missed Unix101 but still know your way around you should be fine.
1089 Topics covered include: "real" editors, document typesetting with LaTeX
1090 (great for assignments!), bulk editing, spellchecking, and printing in the
1091 student environment and elsewhere. </p><p>
1092 If you aren't interested or feel comfortable with these taskes, watch out for
1093 Unix 103 and 104 to get more depth in power programming tools on Unix. </p></abstract>
1097 <eventitem date="2009-02-03" time="5:30 PM" room="MC3003" title="UNIX 101">
1098 <short><p> New to Unix? No problem, we'll teach you to power use circles around your friends!</p></short>
1099 <abstract><p>This first tutorial is an introduction to the Unix shell environment, both on the student
1100 servers and on other Unix environments. Topics covered include: using the shell, both basic
1101 interaction and advanced topics like scripting and job control, the filesystem and manipulating
1102 it, and ssh. If you feel you're already familiar with these topics don't hesitate to come
1103 to Unix 102 to learn about documents, editing, and other related tasks, or watch out
1104 for Unix 103 and 104 that get much more in depth into power programming tools on Unix.</p></abstract>
1107 <eventitem date="2009-02-06" time="7:00 PM" room="Comfy Lounge" title="Code Party!">
1110 There is a CSC Code Party starting at 7:00PM (19:00). Come out
1111 and enjoy some good old programming and meet others interested
1112 in writing code! Free energy drinks and snacks for all. Plus,
1113 we have lots of things that need to be done if you're looking
1114 for a project to work on!
1119 Code Party. Awesome. Need we say more?
1124 <eventitem date="2009-01-16" time="7:30 PM" room="Comfy Lounge" title="Code party !!11!!1!!">
1126 <short><p>There is a CSC Code Party Tonight starting at 7:30PM
1127 (1930) until we get bored (likely in the early in morning). Come
1128 out for fun hacking times, spreading Intertube memes (optional),
1129 hacking on the OpenMoko, creating music mixes, and other general
1130 classyness. If we manage to swing it, there will be delicious
1131 energy drinks for your consumption! Alternatively, if we don't we
1132 will have each other as well as some delicious tea and
1133 coffee. Perhaps a crumpet
1137 <abstract><p>There is a CSC Code Party Tonight starting at 7:30PM
1138 (1930) until we get bored (likely in the early in
1139 morning). Come out for fun hacking times, spreading Intertube
1140 memes (optional), hacking on the OpenMoko, creating music
1141 mixes, and other general classyness. If we manage to swing it,
1142 there will be delicious energy drinks for your consumption!
1143 Alternatively, if we don't we will have each other as well as
1144 some delicious tea and coffee. Perhaps a crumpet
1149 <eventitem date="2009-01-29" time="6:30 PM" room="Modern Languages Theatre" title="Richard M. Stallman">
1150 <short><p> The Free Software Movement and the GNU/Linux Operating System </p>
1154 Richard Stallman will speak about the Free Software Movement, which
1155 campaigns for freedom so that computer users can cooperate to
1156 control their own computing activities. The Free Software Movement
1157 developed the GNU operating system, often erroneously referred to as
1158 Linux, specifically to establish these freedoms.</p>
1159 <p><b>About Richard Stallman:</b>
1160 Richard Stallman launched the development of the GNU operating system (see
1161 <a href="http://www.gnu.org">www.gnu.org</a>) in 1984. GNU is free
1162 software: everyone has the freedom to copy it and redistribute it,
1163 as well as to make changes either large or small. The GNU/Linux
1164 system, basically the GNU operating system with Linux added, is used
1165 on tens of millions of computers today. Stallman has received the
1166 ACM Grace Hopper Award, a MacArthur Foundation fellowship, the
1167 Electronic Frontier Foundation's Pioneer award, and the the Takeda
1168 Award for Social/Economic Betterment, as well as several honorary
1173 <eventitem date="2009-01-22" time="12:00 PM" room="MC5136" title="Joel Spolsky">
1174 <short><p> Joel Spolsky, of <a href="http://www.joelonsoftware.com">Joel on Software</a> will be giving a talk entitled "Computer Science Education and the Software Industry".</p>
1176 <abstract><p><b>About Joel Spolsky:</b> Joel Spolsky is a
1177 globally-recognized expert on the software development process. His
1178 website <em>Joel on Software</em>
1179 (<a href="http://www.joelonsoftware.com/">www.joelonsoftware.com</a>)
1180 is popular with software developers around the world and has been
1181 translated into over thirty languages. As the founder
1182 of <a href="http://www.fogcreek.com/">Fog Creek Software</a> in New
1184 created <a href="http://www.fogcreek.com/FogBugz">FogBugz</a>, a
1185 popular project management system for software teams. He is the
1186 co-creator of <a href="http://stackoverflow.com/">Stack
1187 Overflow</a>, a programmer Q&A site. Joel has worked at
1188 Microsoft, where he designed VBA as a member of the Excel team, and
1189 at Juno Online Services, developing an Internet client used by
1191 written <a href="http://www.joelonsoftware.com/BuytheBooks.html">four
1192 books</a>: <em>User Interface Design for Programmers</em> (Apress,
1193 2001), <em>Joel on Software</em> (Apress, 2004), <em>More Joel on
1194 Software </em>(Apress, 2008), and <em>Smart and Gets Things Done:
1195 Joel Spolsky's Concise Guide to Finding the Best Technical
1196 Talent </em>(Apress, 2007). He also writes a monthly column
1197 for<strong> </strong><em><a href="http://www.inc.com/">Inc
1198 Magazine</a>. </em>Joel holds a BS from Yale in Computer
1199 Science. Before college he served in the Israeli Defense Forces as a
1200 paratrooper, and he was one of the founders of Kibbutz Hanaton.</p>
1204 <eventitem date="2009-01-13" time="4:20 PM" room="Comfy Lounge" title="Term Elections">
1205 <short><p>Winter Elections</p>
1210 <eventitem date="2008-11-15" time="6:30 AM" room="Toronto" title="Changing the World Conference">
1212 <short><p>Organized by Queen's students, Changing the World aims to bring together the world's greatest visionaries to inspire people to innovate and better our world. Among these speakers include Nobel Peace Prize winner, Eric Chivian. He was a recipient for his work on stopping nuclear war.
1216 <abstract><p>Organized by Queen's students, Changing the World
1217 aims to bring together the world's greatest visionaries to
1218 inspire people to innovate and better our world. Among these
1219 speakers include Nobel Peace Prize winner, Eric Chivian. He
1220 was a recipient for his work on stopping nuclear war.
1221 </p><p>The conference is modeled after TED (Technology,
1222 Entertainment, Design), an annual conference uniting the
1223 world's most fascinating thinkers and doers, and like TED,
1224 each speaker is given 18 minutes to give the talk of their
1226 </p><p>Specifically for students in CS/Math, 50 tickets have
1227 been reserved (non-students: $500). For those who would like
1228 to attend, please pick up your ticket in the Computer Science
1229 Club office. The tickets are limited and they are first come
1235 <eventitem date="2008-11-06" time="10:00 AM" room="SLC Multipurpose Room" title="Linux Install Fest">
1237 <short><p>Come join the CSC in celebrating the new releases of
1238 Ubuntu Linux, Free BSD and Open BSD, and get a hand installing one
1239 of them on your own system.
1243 <abstract><p>Come join the CSC in celebrating the new releases of
1244 Ubuntu Linux, Free BSD and Open BSD, and get a hand installing
1245 one of them on your own system.
1246 </p><p>This is an event to celebrate the releases of new
1247 versions of Ubuntu Linux, OpenBSD, and FreeBSD. CDs will be
1248 available and everyone is invited to bring their PC or laptop
1249 to get help installing any of these Free operating
1250 systems. Knowledgeable CSC members will be available to help
1251 with any installation troubles, or to troubleshooting any
1252 existing problems that users may have.
1253 </p><p>This event will also promote gaming on Linux, as well as
1254 FLOSS (Free/Libre and Open Source Software) in general. We may
1255 also have a special guest (Ian Darwin, of OpenBSD and OpenMoko
1260 <eventitem date="2008-11-10" time="4:30 PM" room="MC4061" title="Functional Programming">
1262 <short><p>This talk will survey concepts, techniques, and
1263 languages for functional programming from both historical and
1264 contemporary perspectives, with reference to Lisp, Scheme, ML,
1265 Haskell, and Erlang. No prior background is assumed.
1269 <abstract><p>This talk will survey concepts, techniques, and
1270 languages for functional programming from both historical and
1271 contemporary perspectives, with reference to Lisp, Scheme, ML,
1272 Haskell, and Erlang. No prior background is assumed.
1277 <eventitem date="2008-10-24" time="6:00 PM" room="Comfy Lounge" title="Code Party">
1279 Come join us for a night of coding. Get in touch with more experianced coders,
1280 advertize for/bug squash on your favourite open source project, write that personal
1281 project you were planning to do for a while but haven't found the time. Don't
1282 have any ideas but want to sit and hack? We can find something for you to do.
1285 A fevered night of code, friends, fun, free energy drinks, and the CSC.
1289 <eventitem date="2008-10-16" time="4:30 PM" room="Comfy Lounge" title="SIGGRAPH Night">
1291 Come out and watch the SIGGRAPH (Special Interest Group on Graphics) conference video
1292 review. A video of insane, amazing, and mind blowing computer graphics.
1295 The ACM SIGGRAPH (Special Interest Group on Graphics) hosts a conference yearly
1296 in which the latest and greatest in computer graphics premier. They record video
1297 and as a result produce a very nice Video Review of the conference. Come join us
1298 watching these videos, as well as a few professors from the UW Computer Graphics
1299 Lab. There will be some kind of food and drink, and its guranteed to be dazzling.
1303 <eventitem date="2008-09-12" time="4:30 PM" room="Comfy Lounge" title="Meet the CSC">
1305 Come out and meet other CSC members, find out about the CSC, meet the executive
1306 nominees, and join if you like what you see. Nominees should plan on attending.
1310 <eventitem date="2008-09-16" time="4:30 PM" room="Comfy Lounge" title="CSClub Elections">
1312 Elections are scheduled for Tues, Sep 16 @ 4:30 pm in the comfy lounge.
1313 The nomination period closes on Mon, Sep 15 @ 4:30 pm. Nominations may be
1314 sent to cro@csclub.uwaterloo.ca. Candidates should not engage in
1315 campaigning after the nomination period has closed.
1319 <eventitem date="2008-09-25" time="4:30 PM" room="MC2037" title="Unix 101">
1321 New to Unix? No problem, we'll teach you to power use circles around your friends!
1324 This first tutorial is an introduction to the Unix shell environment, both on the student
1325 servers and on other Unix environments. Topics covered include: using the shell, both basic
1326 interaction and advanced topics like scripting and job control, the filesystem and manipulating
1327 it, and ssh. If you feel you're already familiar with these topics don't hesitate to come
1328 to Unix 102 to learn about documents, editing, and other related tasks, or watch out
1329 for Unix 103 and 104 that get much more in depth into power programming tools on Unix.
1333 <eventitem date="2008-10-07" time="4:30 PM" room="MC2037" title="Unix 101">
1335 New to Unix? No problem, we'll teach you to power use circles around your friends!
1338 This first tutorial is an introduction to the Unix shell environment, both on the student
1339 servers and on other Unix environments. Topics covered include: using the shell, both basic
1340 interaction and advanced topics like scripting and job control, the filesystem and manipulating
1341 it, and ssh. If you feel you're already familiar with these topics don't hesitate to come
1342 to Unix 102 to learn about documents, editing, and other related tasks, or watch out
1343 for Unix 103 and 104 that get much more in depth into power programming tools on Unix.
1347 <eventitem date="2008-10-09" time="4:30 PM" room="MC2037" title="Unix 102">
1349 Want more from Unix? No problem, we'll teach you to create and quickly edit high quality documents.
1352 This is a follow up to Unix 101, requiring basic knowledge of the shell. If you missed
1353 Unix101 but still know your way around you should be fine. Topics covered include: "real" editors,
1354 document typesetting with LaTeX (great for assignments!), bulk editing, spellchecking, and printing
1355 in the student environment and elsewhere. If you aren't interested or feel comfortable with these
1356 taskes, watch out for Unix 103 and 104 to get more depth in power programming tools on Unix. If you
1357 don't think you're ready go to Unix 101 on Tuesday to get familiarized with the shell environment.
1361 <eventitem date="2008-10-03" time="4:30 PM" room="MC2065" title="Game Sketching">
1362 <short><p>Juancho Buchanan, CTO Relic Entertainment</p></short>
1364 In this talk I will give an overview of the history of Relic and our
1365 development philosophy. The Talk will then proceed to talk about work
1366 that is being pursued in the area of early game prototyping with the
1367 introduction of game sketching methodology.
1372 Fired from his first job for playing Video Games Juancho Buchanan is
1373 currently the director of Technology for Relic Entertainment. Juancho
1374 Buchanan Wrote his first game in 1984 but then pursued other interests
1375 which included a master's in Program Visualization, A Doctorate in
1376 Computer Graphics, a stint as a professor at the University of Alberta
1377 where he pioneered early work in Non photo realistic rendering, A stint
1378 at Electronic Arts as Director, Advanced Technology, A stint at EA as
1379 the University Liaison Dude, A stint at Carnegie Mellon University where
1380 he researched the Game Sketching idea. His current role at Relic has
1381 him working with the soon to be released Dawn of War II.
1386 <eventitem date="2008-10-02" time="4:30 PM" room="MC4021" title="General Meeting 2">
1388 The second official general meeting of the term. Items on the adgenda are CSC Merch,
1389 upcoming talks, and other possible planned events, as well as the announcement of
1390 a librarian and planning of an office cleanout and a library organization day.
1394 <!-- Spring 2008 -->
1396 <!-- Winter 2008 -->
1398 <eventitem date="2008-02-08" time="4:30 PM" room="MC4042" title="A Brief History of Blackberry and the Wireless Data Telecom Industry">
1399 <short>Tyler Lessard</short>
1401 Tyler Lessard from RIM will present a brief history of BlackBerry
1402 technology and will discuss how the evolution of BlackBerry as an
1403 end-to-end hardware, software and services platform has been
1404 instrumental to its success and growth in the market. Find out how the
1405 BlackBerry service components integrate with wireless carrier networks
1406 and get a sneak peek at where the wireless data market is going.
1410 <eventitem date="2008-02-29" time="5:00 PM" room="BFG2125" title="Quantum Information Processing">
1411 <short>Raymond Laflamme</short>
1413 Information processing devices are pervasive in our society; from the 5
1414 dollar watches to multi-billions satellite network. These devices have
1415 allowed the information revolution which is developing around us. It has
1416 transformed not only the way we communicate or entertain ourselves but
1417 also the way we do science and even the way we think. All this
1418 information is manipulated using the classical approximation to the laws
1419 of physics, but we know that there is a better approximation: the
1420 quantum mechanical laws. Would using quantum mechanics for information
1421 processing be an impediment or could it be an advantage? This is the
1422 fundamental question at the heart of quantum information processing
1423 (QIP). QIP is a young field with an incredible potential impact reaching
1424 from the way we understand fundamental physics to technological
1425 applications. I will give an overview of the Institute for Quantum
1426 Computing, comment on the effort in this field at Waterloo and in
1427 Canada and, time permitted visit some of the IQC labs.
1431 <eventitem date="2008-02-14" time="4:00PM" room="MC2061" title="CSC Programming Contest 1">
1432 <short>Yes, we know this is Valentine's Day.</short>
1434 Contestants will be writing an artificial intelligence to play Risk. The
1435 prize will be awarded to the intelligence which wins the most
1436 head-to-head matches against competing entries. We're providing easy
1437 APIs for several languages, as well as full documentation of the game
1438 protocol so contestants can write wrappers for any additional language
1439 they wish to work in.
1442 We officially support entries in Scheme, Perl, Java, C, and C++. If you
1443 would like help developing an API for some other language contact us
1444 through the systems committee mailing list (we will require that your API
1445 is made available to all entrants).
1448 To kick off the contest we're hosting an in-house coding session starting
1449 at 4:00PM on Thursday, February 14th in MC2061. Members of our contest
1450 administration team will be available to help you work out the details of
1451 our APIs, answer questions, and provide the necessities of life (ie,
1452 pizza). Submissions will open no later than 5:00PM on February 14th
1453 and will close no earlier than 12:00PM on February 17th.
1456 Visit our contest site <a href="http://csclub.uwaterloo.ca/contest/"> here!</a>
1461 <eventitem date="2008-01-23" time="5:00 PM" room="MC 4020" title="Creating Distributed Applications with TIPC">
1462 <short>Elmer Horvath</short>
1464 The problem: coordinating and communicating between multiple processors
1465 in a distributed system (possibly containing heterogeneous elements)
1467 The open source TIPC (transparent interprocess communication) protocol
1468 has been incorporated into the Linux kernel and is available in VxWorks
1469 and, soon, other OSes. This emerging protocol has a number of
1470 advantages in a clustered environment to simplify application
1471 development while maintaining a familiar socket programming interface.
1472 The service oriented capabilities of TIPC help in applications easily
1473 finding required services in a system. The location transparent aspect
1474 of TIPC allows services to be located anywhere in the system as well as
1475 allowing redundant services for both load reduction and backup.
1477 Learn about the emerging cluster protocol.
1481 <eventitem date="2008-01-15" time="4:30 PM" room="Comfy Lounge" title="CSClub Elections">
1483 Elections are scheduled for Tues, Jan 15 @ 4:30 pm in the comfy lounge.
1484 The nomination period closes on Mon, Jan 14 @ 4:30 pm. Candidates should
1485 not engage in campaigning after the nomination period has closed.
1492 <eventitem date="2007-10-19" time="5:00 PM" room="MC4058" title="General Meeting">
1495 There is a general meeting scheduled for Friday, October 19, 2007 at 17:00.
1498 This is a chance to bring out any ideas and concerns about CSC happenings into the open, as well as a chance to make sure all CSC staff is up to speed on current CSC doings. The current agenda can be found at <a href="http://wiki.csclub.uwaterloo.ca/wiki/Friday_19_October_2007">http://wiki.csclub.uwaterloo.ca/wiki/Friday_19_October_2007.</a>
1503 <eventitem date="2007-09-25" time="1:30 PM" room="DC 1302" title="Virtual Reality, Real Law: The regulation of Property in Video Games">
1504 <short>Susan Abramovitch</short>
1507 This talk is run by the School of Computer Science
1510 How should virtual property created in games, such as weapons used in
1511 games like Mir 3 and real estate or clothing created or acquired in
1512 games like Second Life, be treated in law. Although the videogaming
1513 industry continues to multiply in value, virtual property created in
1514 virtual worlds has not been formally recognized by any North American
1515 court or legislature. A bridge has been taking shape from gaming's
1516 virtual economies to real world economies, for example, through
1517 unauthorized copying of designer clothes sold on Second Life for in-game
1518 cash, or real court damages awarded against deletion of player-earned
1519 swords in Mir 3. The trading of virtual property is important to a
1520 large number of people and property rights in virtual property are
1521 currently being recognized by some foreign legal bodies.
1524 Susan Abramovitch will explain the legal considerations in determining
1525 how virtual property can or should be governed, and ways it can be
1526 legally similar to tangible property. Virtual property can carry both
1527 physical and intellectual property rights. Typically video game
1528 developers retain these rights via online agreements, but Ms.
1529 Abramovitch questions whether these rights are ultimately enforceable
1530 and will describe policy issues that may impact law makers in deciding
1531 how to treat virtual property under such agreements.
1536 <eventitem date="2007-10-02" time="4:30 PM" room="MC4061" title="Putting the fun into Functional Languages and Useful Programming with OCaml/F#">
1537 <short>Brennan Taylor</short>
1539 <p>A lecture on why functional languages are important, practical applications, and some neat examples. Starting with an introduction to
1540 basic functional programming with ML syntax, continuing with the strengths of OCaml and F#, followed by some exciting examples. Examples include GUI
1541 programming with F#, Web Crawlers with F#, and OpenGL/GTK programming with OCaml. This lecture aims to display how powerful functional languages can
1545 <eventitem date="2007-10-09" time="4:45 PM" room="MC 4060" title="Join-Calculus with JoCaml. Concurrent programming that doesn't fry your brain">
1546 <short>Brennan Taylor</short>
1549 A lecture on the fundamentals of Pi-Calculus followed by an introduction
1550 to Join-Calculus in JoCaml with some great examples. Various concurrent
1551 control structures are explored, as well as the current limitations of
1552 JoCaml. The examples section will mostly be concurrent programming,
1553 however some basic distributed examples will be explored. This lecture
1554 focuses on how easy concurrent programming can be.
1559 <eventitem date="2007-10-15" time="4:30 PM" room="MC4041" title="Off-the-Record Messaging: Useful Security and Privacy for IM">
1560 <short>Ian Goldberg</short>
1563 Instant messaging (IM) is an increasingly popular mode of communication
1564 on the Internet. Although it is used for personal and private
1565 conversations, it is not at all a private medium. Not only are all of
1566 the messages unencrypted and unauthenticated, but they are all
1567 routedthrough a central server, forming a convenient interception point
1568 for an attacker. Users would benefit from being able to have truly
1569 private conversations over IM, combining the features of encryption,
1570 authentication, deniability, and forward secrecy, while working within
1571 their existing IM infrastructure.
1574 In this talk, I will discuss "Off-the-Record Messaging" (OTR), a widely
1575 used software tool for secure and private instant messaging. I will
1576 outline the properties of Useful Security and Privacy Technologies that
1577 motivated OTR's design, compare it to other IM security mechanisms, and
1578 talk about its ongoing development directions.
1581 Ian Goldberg is an Assistant Professor of Computer Science at the
1582 University of Waterloo, where he is a founding member of the
1583 Cryptography, Security, and Privacy (CrySP) research group. He holds a
1584 Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley, where he discovered
1585 serious weaknesses in a number of widely deployed security systems,
1586 including those used by cellular phones and wireless networks. He also
1587 studied systems for protecting the personal privacy of Internet users,
1588 which led to his role as Chief Scientist at Zero-Knowledge Systems (now
1589 known as Radialpoint), where he commercialized his research as the
1596 <eventitem date="2007-11-20" time="4:30 PM" room="MC 4041" title="Why you should care about functional programming with Haskell *New-er Date*">
1597 <short>Andrei Barbu</short>
1601 <eventitem date="2007-11-22" time="4:30 PM" room="MC 4041" title="More Haskell functional programming fun!">
1602 <short>Andrei Barbu</short>
1604 Haskell is a modern lazy, strongly typed functional language with type inferrence. This talk will focus on multiple monads, existential types,
1605 lambda expressions, infix operators and more. Along the way we'll see a parser and interpreter for lambda calculus using monadic parsers. STM,
1606 software transactional memory, a new approach to concurrency, will also be discussed. Before the end we'll also see the solution to an ACM problem
1607 to get a hands on feeling for the language. Don't worry if you haven't seen the first talk, you should be fine for this one anyway!
1612 <eventitem date="2007-11-29" time="4:30 PM" room="MC 4061" title="Concurrent / Distributed programming with JoCaml">
1613 <short>Brennan Taylor</short>
1616 A lecture on the fundamentals of Pi-Calculus followed by an introduction to Join-Calculus in JoCaml with some great examples.
1617 Various concurrent control structures are explored, as well as the current limitations of JoCaml. The examples section will
1618 mostly be concurrent programming, however some basic distributed examples will be explored. This lecture focuses on how easy
1619 concurrent programming can be.
1624 <eventitem date="2007-12-04" time="4:30 PM" room="TBA" title="PE Executable Translation: A solution for legacy games on linux (Postponed)">
1625 <short>David Tenty</short>
1628 With today's fast growing linux user base, a large porportion of legacy applications have established open-source equivalents or ports.
1629 However, legacy games provided an intresting problem to gamers who might be inclinded to migrate to linux or other open platforms.
1630 PE executable translation software will be presented that provides a solution to this dilema and will be contrasted with the windows compatiblity framwork Wine.
1631 Postponed to a later date.
1636 <eventitem date="2007-12-01" time="1:30 PM" room="MC 2037" title="Programming Contest">
1637 <short>Win Prizes!</short>
1640 The Computer Science club is holding a programming contest from 1:00 to 6:30 open to all! C++,C,Perl,Scheme are allowed.
1641 Prizes totalling in value of $75 will be distributed. You can participate online! For more information, including source files visit <a href="http://www.csclub.uwaterloo.ca/contest">http://www.csclub.uwaterloo.ca/contest</a>
1644 And Free Pizzaa for all who attend!
1648 <eventitem date="2007-12-02" time="2:30 PM" room="TBA" title="Multi-Player Linux games for Linux awarness week">
1649 <short>Multi-Player Gaming with Linux [Possibly Pizza!]</short>
1652 Come out for multi-player gaming on Linux. If you don't have linux on your machine, we will have LiveCDs available.
1653 Lots of fun! Possible Pizzaa!
1658 <eventitem date="2007-10-04" time="4:30 PM" room="TBA" title="Distributed Programming with Erlang">
1659 <short>Brennan Taylor</short>
1662 A quick introduction on the current state of distributed programming and various grid computing projects. Followed by some
1663 history and features of the Erlang language and finishing with distributed examples including operating on a cluster.
1668 <eventitem date="2007-12-05" time="4:30 PM" room="MC 4061" title="Google Summer of Code, a look back on 2007">
1669 <short>Holden Karau</short>
1672 An overview on Google Summer of Code 2007. This talk will look at some of the Summer of Code projects, the project organization, etc.
1675 Holden Karau participated in Google Summer of Code 2007 as a student on the subversion team. He created a set of scheme bindings for the
1685 <eventitem date="2007-07-17" time="7:00 PM" room="AL 116" title="C++0x - An Overview">
1686 <short>Bjarne Stroustrup</short>
1688 A good programming language is far more than a simple collection of
1689 features. My ideal is to provide a set of facilities that smoothly work
1690 together to support design and programming styles of a generality beyond
1691 my imagination. Here, I briefly outline rules of thumb (guidelines,
1692 principles) that are being applied in the design of C++0x. Then, I
1693 present the state of the standards process (we are aiming for C++09) and
1694 give examples of a few of the proposals such as concepts, generalized
1695 initialization, being considered in the ISO C++ standards committee.
1696 Since there are far more proposals than could be presented in an hour,
1697 I'll take questions.
1701 <eventitem date="2007-07-06" time="4:30 PM" room="AL 116" title="Copyright vs Community in the Age of Computer Networks">
1702 <short>Richard Stallman</short>
1704 Copyright developed in the age of the printing press, and was designed
1705 to fit with the system of centralized copying imposed by the printing
1706 press. But the copyright system does not fit well with computer
1707 networks, and only draconian punishments can enforce it.
1709 The global corporations that profit from copyright are lobbying for
1710 draconian punishments, and to increase their copyright powers, while
1711 suppressing public access to technology. But if we seriously hope to
1712 serve the only legitimate purpose of copyright--to promote progress, for
1713 the benefit of the public--then we must make changes in the other
1716 The CSC would like to thank MEF and Mathsoc for funding this talk.
1718 <a href="http://www.fsf.org/events/waterloo20070706">The Freedom Software Foundation's description</a><br />
1719 <a href="http://www.defectivebydesign.org">FSF's anti-DRM campaign</a><br />
1720 <a href="http://www.badvista.org">Why you shouldn't use Microsoft Vista</a><br />
1721 <a href="http://www.gnu.org">The GNU's Not Unix Project</a><br />
1725 <eventitem date="2007-06-27" time="4:30 PM" room="MC 4042" title="Usability in the wild">
1726 <short>A talk by Michael Terry</short>
1728 What is the typical monitor resolution of a GIMP user? How many monitors
1729 do they have? What size images do they work on? How many layers are in
1730 their images? The answers to these questions are generally unknown: No
1731 means currently exist for open source applications to collect usage
1732 data. In this talk, I will present ingimp, a version of GIMP that has
1733 been instrumented to automatically collect usage data from real-world
1734 users. I will discuss ingimp's design, the type of data we collect, how
1735 we make the data available on the web, and initial results that begin to
1736 answer the motivating questions.
1738 ingimp can be found at http://www.ingimp.org.
1742 <eventitem date="2007-06-22" time="4:30 PM"
1744 title="Email encryption for the masses">
1745 <short>Ken Ho</short>
1747 E-mail transactions and confirmations have become commonplace and the
1748 information therein can often be sensitive. We use email for purposes as
1749 mundane as inbound marketing, to as sensitive as account passwords and
1750 financial transactions. And nearly all our email is sent in clear text;
1751 we trust only that others will not eavesdrop or modify our messages. But
1752 why rely on the goodness or apathy of your fellow man when you can
1753 ensure your message's confidentiality with encryption so strong not even
1754 the NSA can break? Speaker (Kenneth Ho) will discuss email encryption,
1755 and GNU Privacy Guard to ensure that your messages are sent, knowing
1756 that only your intended recipient can receive it.
1757 </p><p>An optional code-signing party will be held immediately
1758 afterwards; if you already have a PGP or GPG key and wish to
1759 participate, please submit the public key to
1760 <a href="mailto:gpg-keys@csclub.uwaterloo.ca">
1761 gpg-keys@csclub.uwaterloo.ca</a>.
1763 Laptop users are invited also to participate in key-pair sharing
1764 on-site, though it is preferable to send keys ahead of time.
1768 <eventitem date="2007-06-18" time="4:30 PM"
1769 room="DC 4040" title="Fedspulse.ca, Web 3.0, Portals and the Metaverse">
1770 <short>Peter Macdonald</short>
1772 The purpose of the talk is to address how students interact with the
1773 internet, and possibilities for how they could do so more efficiently.
1774 Information on events and happenings on UW campus is currently hosted
1775 on a desperate, series of internet applications. Interactions with
1776 WatSFIC is done over a Yahoo! mailing list, GLOW is organized through a
1777 Facebook group, campus information at large comes from
1778 <a href="http://imprint.uwaterloo.ca">imprint.uwaterloo.ca</a>. There
1779 has been historical pressures from various bodies, including some
1780 thinkers in feds and the administration, to centralize these issues. To
1781 create a one stop shop for students on campus.
1783 It is not through confining data in cages that we will finally link all
1784 student activities together, instead it is by truly freeing it. When
1785 data can be anywhere, then it will be everywhere students need it. This
1786 is the underlying concept behind metadata, data that is freed from the
1787 confines of it's technical imprisonment. Metadata is the extension of
1788 people, organizations, and activities onto the internet in a way that is
1789 above the traditional understanding of how people interact with their
1790 networks. The talk will explore how Metadata can exist freely on the
1791 internet, how this affects concepts like Web 3.0, and how the university
1792 and the federation are poised to take advantage of this burgeoning new
1793 technology through adoptions of portals which will allow students to
1794 interact with a metaverse of data.
1798 <!-- Winter 2007 -->
1800 <eventitem date="2007-04-11" time="3:30 PM" room="Hagey Hall" title="The Free Software Movement and the GNU/Linux Operating System">
1801 <short>A talk by Richard M. Stallman (RMS) <b>[CANCELLED]</b></short>
1803 Richard Stallman has cancelled his trip to Canada.
1807 <eventitem date="2007-04-08" time="4:30pm" room="MC 4041" title="Loop Optimizations">
1808 <short>A talk by Simina Branzei</short>
1810 Abstract coming soon!
1814 <eventitem date="2007-04-01" time="4:30 PM" room="MC 3036" title="Surprise
1818 While reading Slashdot, Bill came across the recently digitized audio
1819 recording of his 1989 talk at the Computer Science Club. As Bill has always
1820 had a soft-spot for the Computer Science Club, he has decided to pay us a
1823 Bill promises to give away free copies of Windows Vista Ultimate, because
1824 frankly, nobody here (except j2simpso) wants to pay for a frisbee. Be sure
1825 to bring your resumes kids, because Bill will be recruiting for some
1826 exciting new positions at Microsoft, including Mindless Drone, Junior Code
1827 Monkey, and Assistant Human Cannonball.
1832 <eventitem date="2007-03-28" time="5:30 PM"
1833 room="MC 1056" title="Computational Physics Simulations">
1834 <short>A talk by David Tenty and Alex Parent</short>
1844 <eventitem date="2007-03-29" time="4:30 PM"
1845 room="MC 1056" title="All The Code">
1846 <short>A demo/introduction to a new source code search engine. A talk by Holden Karau</short>
1849 Source code search engines are a relatively new phenomenon . The general idea of most source code search engines is helping programmers find
1850 pre-existing code. So if you were writing some code and you wanted to find a csv library, for example, you could search for csv.
1851 <a href="http://www.allthecode.com/">All The Code</a> is a
1852 next generation source code search engine. Unlike earlier generations of source code search engines, it considers how code is used to help determine
1856 The talk will primarily be a demo of <a href="http://www.allthecode.com">All The Code</a>,
1857 along with a brief discussion of some of the technology behind it.
1863 <eventitem date="2007-04-04" time="4:00 PM"
1864 room="MC 1056" title="Data Analysis with Kernels: [an introduction]">
1865 <short>A talk by Michael Biggs. This talk is RESCHEDULED due to unexpected
1866 circumstances</short>
1869 I am going to take an intuitive, CS-style approach to a discussion about the
1870 use of kernels in modern data analysis. This approach often lends us
1871 efficient ways to consider a dataset under various choices of inner product,
1872 which is roughly comparable to a measure of "similarity". Many new tools in
1873 AI arise from kernel methods, such as the infamous Support Vector Machines for
1874 classification, and kernel-PCA for nonlinear dimensionality reduction. I will
1875 attempt to highlight, and provide visualization for some of the math involved
1876 in these methods while keeping the material at an accessible, undergraduate
1884 <eventitem date="2007-02-26" time="4:30 pm"
1885 room="DC 1350" title="ReactOS: An Open Source OS Platform for Learning">
1886 <short>A talk by Alex Ionescu</short>
1889 The ReactOS operating system has been in development for over eight years and aims to provide users
1890 with a fully functional and Windows-compatible distribution under the GPL license. ReactOS comes with
1891 its own Windows 2003-based kernel and system utilities and applications, resulting in an environment
1892 identical to Windows, both visually and internally.
1894 More than just an alternative to Windows, ReactOS is a powerful platform for academia, allowing
1895 students to learn a variety of skills useful to software testing, development and management, as well as
1896 providing a rich and clean implementation of Windows NT, with a kernel compatible to published
1897 internals book on the subject.
1899 This talk will introduce the ReactOS project, as well as the various software engineering challenges
1900 behind it. The building platform and development philosophies and utilities will be shown, and
1901 attendees will grasp the vast amount of effort and organization that needs to go into building an
1902 operating system or any other similarly large project. The speaker will gladly answer questions related to
1903 his background, experience and interests and information on joining the project, as well as any other
1904 related information.
1906 <strong>Speaker Bio</strong>
1908 Alex Ionescu is currently studying in Software Engineering at Concordia University in Montreal, Quebec
1909 and is a Microsoft Technical Student Ambassador. He is the lead kernel developer of the ReactOS Project
1910 and project leader of TinyKRNL. He regularly speaks at Linux and Open Source conferences around the
1911 world and will be a lecturer at the 8th International Free Software Forum in Brazil this April, as well as
1912 providing hands-on workshops and lectures on Windows NT internals and security to various companies.
1918 <eventitem date="2007-02-15" time="4:30 PM"
1919 room="MC 2065" title="An Introduction to Recognizing Regular Expressions in Haskell">
1920 <short>A talk by James deBoer</short>
1924 This talk will introduce the Haskell programming language and and walk
1925 through building a recognizer for regular languages. The talk will
1926 include a quick overview of regular expressions, an introduction to
1927 Haskell and finally a line by line analysis of a regular language
1933 <eventitem date="2007-02-09" time="4:30 PM"
1934 room="MC 4041" title="Introduction to 3-d Graphics">
1935 <short>A talk by Chris "The Prof" Evensen</short>
1938 A talk for those interested in 3-dimensional graphics but unsure of where to
1939 start. Covers the basic math and theory behind projecting 3-dimensional
1940 polygons on screen, as well as simple cropping techniques to improve
1941 efficiency. Translation and rotation of polygons will also be discussed.
1946 <eventitem date="2007-02-09" time="8:30 PM"
1947 room="DC 1351" title="Writing World Class Software">
1948 <short>A talk by James Simpson</short>
1951 A common misconception amongst software developers is that top quality software
1952 encompasses certain platforms, is driven by a particular new piece of
1953 technology, or relies solely on a particular programming language. However as
1954 developers we tend to miss the less hyped issues and techniques involved in
1955 writing world class software. These techniques are universal to all
1956 programming languages, platforms and deployed technologies but are often times
1957 viewed as being so obvious that they are ignored by the typical developer. The
1958 topics covered in this lecture will include:
1960 - Writing bug-free to extremely low bug count software in real-time<br/>
1961 - The concept of single-source, universal platform software<br/>
1962 - Programming language interoperability<br/>
1964 ... and other less hyped yet vitally important concepts to writing
1965 World Class Software
1970 <eventitem date="2007-02-08" time="4:30 PM"
1971 room="MC 2066" title="UW Software Start-ups: What Worked and What Did Not">
1972 <short>A talk by Larry Smith</short>
1975 A discussion of software start-ups founded by UW students and what they did
1976 that helped them grow and what failed to help. In order to share the most
1977 insights and guard the confidences of the individuals involved, none of the
1978 companies will be identified.
1984 <eventitem date="2007-02-07" time="4:30 PM"
1985 room="MC 4041" title="Riding The Multi-core Revolution">
1986 <short>How a Waterloo software company is changing the way people program computers.
1987 A talk by Stefanus Du Toit</short>
1990 For decades, mainstream parallel processing has been thought of as
1991 inevitable. Up until recent years, however, improvements in
1992 manufacturing processes and increases in clock speed have provided
1993 software with free Moore's Law-scale performance improvements on
1994 traditional single-core CPUs. As per-core CPU speed increases have
1995 slowed to a halt, processor vendors are embracing parallelism by
1996 multiplying the number of cores on CPUs, following what Graphics
1997 Processing Unit (GPU) vendors have been doing for years. The Multi-
1998 core revolution promises to provide unparalleled increases in
1999 performance, but it comes with a catch: traditional serial
2000 programming methods are not at all suited to programming these
2001 processors and methods such as multi-threading are cumbersome and
2002 rarely scale beyond a few cores. Learn how, with hundreds of cores in
2003 desktop computers on the horizon, a local software company is looking
2004 to revolutionize the way software is written to deliver on the
2005 promise multi-core holds.
2008 Refreshments (and possible pizza!) will be provided.
2013 <!-- <eventitem date="2007-01-24" time="4:00 PM"
2014 room="TBA" title="TBA">
2015 <short>A talk by Reg Quinton</short>
2023 <eventitem date="2007-01-31" time="4:00 PM"
2024 room="MC 4041" title="Network Security -- Intrusion Detection">
2025 <short>A talk by Reg Quinton</short>
2028 IST monitors the campus network for vulnerabilities and scans
2029 systems for security problems.
2030 This informal presentation will look behind the scenes to show the
2031 strategies and technologies used and to show the problem magnitude. We
2032 will review the IST Security web site with an emphasis on these pages
2034 <a href="http://ist.uwaterloo.ca/security/vulnerable/">http://ist.uwaterloo.ca/security/vulnerable/</a><br/>
2035 <a href="http://ist.uwaterloo.ca/security/security-wg/reports/20061101.html">http://ist.uwaterloo.ca/security/security-wg/reports/20061101.html</a><br/>
2036 <a href="http://ist.uwaterloo.ca/security/position/20050524/">http://ist.uwaterloo.ca/security/position/20050524/</a><br/>
2041 <eventitem date="2007-01-31" time="4:30 PM"
2042 room="TBA" title="An Brief Introduction to Projection Graphics">
2043 <short>A talk by Christopher Evensen</short>
2053 <!-- Nothing happened :( -->
2055 <!-- Spring 2006 -->
2058 <eventitem date="2006-07-29" title="CTRL D" time="7:00pm" room="East Side Mario">
2059 <short>Come out for the Club that Really Likes Dinner</short>
2062 Summer: the sparrows whistle through the teapot-steam breeze. The
2063 ubiquitous construction team tears the same pavement up for the third
2064 time, hammering passers-by with dust and noise: our shirts, worn for
2065 the third time, noisome from competing heat and shame. As Nature
2066 continues her Keynesian rotation of policy, and as society decrees yet
2067 another parting of ways, it is proper for the common victims to have
2068 an evening to themselves, looking both back and ahead, imagining new
2069 opportunities, and recognising those long since missed. God fucking
2073 This term's CTRL-D end-of-term dinner is taking place tomorrow
2074 (Saturday) at 7:00 P.M. at East Side Mario's, in the plaza. Meet in
2075 the C.S.C. fifteen minutes beforehand, so they don't take away our
2076 seats or anything nasty like that.
2079 A lot of people wanted to go to the Mongolian Grill, but I'm pretty
2080 sure this place has a similar price-to-tasty ratio; what's more,
2081 they'll actually grant us a reservation more than four nights a week.
2082 I've confirmed that the crazy allergenic peanuts no longer exist
2083 (sad), and they have a good vegetarian selection, which is likely
2084 coincides with their kosher and halal menus.
2087 Come out for the tasty and the awesome! If you pretend it's your
2088 birthday, everyone's a loser! Tell your friends, because I told the
2089 telephone I wanted to reserve for 10 to 12 people, and I don't wish to
2090 sully Calum T. Dalek's good name!
2097 <eventitem date="2006-07-26" title="Lemmings Day" time="3:30pm" room="MC Comfy Lounge">
2098 <short>Come out for some retro Amiga-style Lemmings gaming action!</short>
2101 Does being in CS make you feel like a lemming? Is linear algebra driving you
2102 into walls? Do you pace back and forth, constantly, regardless of whatever's
2103 in your path? Then you should come out to CSC Lemmings Day. This time, we're
2104 playing the pseudo-sequel: Oh No! More Lemmings!
2107 <li>Old-skool retro gaming, Amiga-style (2 mice, 2 players!)</li>
2108 <li>Projector screen: the pixels are man-sized!</li>
2109 <li>Enjoy classic Lemmings tunes</li>
2114 <eventitem date="2006-07-25" title="Linux Installfest!" time="1:00pm" room ="DC Fishbowk">
2115 <short>A part of Linux Awareness Week</short>
2118 The Computer Science Club is once again stepping forward to fulfill its ancient duty to the people-this time by installing one of the many
2119 fine distributions of Linux for you.
2122 Ubuntu? Debian? Gentoo? Fedora? We might not have them all, but we seem to have an awful lot! Bring your boxen down to the D.C. Fishbowl for
2126 Install Linux on your machine-install fear in your opponents!
2132 <eventitem date="2006-07-24" title="Software development gets on the Cluetrain" time="4:30pm" room ="MC 4063">
2133 <short>or How communities of interest drive modern software development.</short>
2136 Simon Law leads the Quality teams for Ubuntu, a free-software operating
2137 system built on Debian GNU/Linux. As such, he leads one of the largest
2138 community-based testing efforts for a software product. This does get a
2142 In this talk, we'll be exploring how the Internet is changing how
2143 software is developed. Concepts like open source and technologies like
2144 message forums are blurring the lines between producer and consumer.
2145 And this melting pot of people is causing people to take note, and
2146 changing the way they sling code.
2149 Co-Sponsored with CS-Commons Committee
2154 <eventitem date="2006-07-21" time="5:30 PM"
2155 room="MC1085" title="March of the Penguins">
2156 <short>The Computer Science Club will be showing March of the Penguins</short>
2159 <a href="http://wip.warnerbros.com/marchofthepenguins/">March of the Penguins</a> , an epic nature documentary, as dictated
2160 by some guy with a funny voice is being shown by the Computer Science club because penguins are cute and were bored [that and the
2161 whole Linux awareness week that forgot to tell people about].
2167 <eventitem date="2006-07-20" time="5:30 PM"
2168 room="MC4041" title="Cool Stuff to do With Python">
2169 <short>Albert O'Connor will be introducing the joys of programming in python</short>
2172 Albert O'Connor, a UW grad, will be giving a ~30 minute talk on introducing the joys of programming python. Python is an open source
2173 object-oriented programming language which is most awesome.
2178 <eventitem date="2006-07-20" time="4:30 PM"
2179 room="MC4041" title="Simulating multi-tasking on an embedded architecture">
2180 <short>Alex Tsay will look at the common hack used to simulate multi-processing in a real time embedded environment.</short>
2183 In an embedded environment resources are fairly limited, especially. Typically an embedded system has strict time constraints in which it must
2184 respond to hardware driven interrupts and do some processing of its own. A full fledged OS would consume most of the available resources, hence
2185 crazy hacks must be used to get the benefits without paying the high costs. This talk will look at the common hack used to simulate multi-processing
2186 in a real time embedded environment.
2192 <eventitem date="2006-07-19" title="Semacode: Image recognition on mobile camera phones" time="4:30 PM" room ="MC1085">
2193 <short>Simon Woodside, founder of Semacode, comes to discuss image what it is like to start a business and how imaging code works</short>
2196 Could you write a good image recognizer for a 100 MHz mobile phone
2197 processor with 1 MB heap, 320x240 image, on a poorly-optimized Java
2198 stack? It needs to locate and read two-dimensional barcodes made up of
2199 square modules which might be no more than a few pixels in size. We
2200 had to do that in order to establish Semacode, a local start up
2201 company that makes a software barcode reader for cell phones. The
2202 applications vary from ubiquitous computing to advertising. Simon
2203 Woodside (founder) will discuss what it's like to start a business and
2204 how the imaging code works.
2213 <eventitem date="2006-07-17" time="11:59 PM"
2214 room="MC3036" title="Midnight Madness, Alpha Edition">
2215 <short>Come out to discuss current & future plans/projects for the Club</short>
2218 The Computer Science Club (CSClub) has "new" DEC Alphas which are most awesome. Come out, help take them part, put them back
2219 together, solder, and eat free food (probably pizza).
2225 <eventitem date="2006-06-21" time="4:30 PM"
2226 room="MC4042" title="CSC General Meeting">
2227 <short>Come out to discuss current & future plans/projects for the Club</short>
2230 The venue will include:</p>
2232 <li><p>Computer usage agreement discussion (Holden has some changes he'd like to propose)</p></li>
2233 <li><p>Web site - Juti is redesigning the web site (you can see <a href="beta/">a beta here</a> - ideas are welcome.</p></li>
2234 <li><p>Frosh Linux cd's that could be put in frosh math faculty kits.</p></li>
2235 <li><p>VoIP "not phone services" ideas.</p></li>
2236 <li><p>Ideas for talks (people, topics, etc...). We requested Steve Jobs and Steve Balmer, so no idea is too crazy.</p></li>
2237 <li><p>Ideas for books.</p></li>
2238 <li><p>General improvements/comments for the club.</p></li>
2241 If you have ideas, but can't attend, please email them to <a href="mailto:president@csclub.uwaterloo.ca">president@csclub.uwaterloo.ca</a> and they will be read them at the meeting.
2247 <eventitem date="2006-05-25" time="4:00 PM" room="MC 4060" title="Eighteen Years in the Software Tools Business">
2248 <short>Eighteen Years in the Software Tools Business at Microsoft, a talk by Rico Mariani, (BMath CS/EEE 1988)</short>
2251 Rico Mariani, (BMath CS/EEE 1988) now an (almost) 18 year Microsoft veteran but then a CSC president comes to talk to us about the
2252 evolution of software tools for microcomputers. This talk promises to be a little bit about history and perspective (at least from
2253 the Microsoft side of things) as well as the evolution of software engineers, different types of programmers and their needs, and what
2254 it's like to try to make the software industry more effective at what it does, and sometimes succeed!
2257 A video of the talk is available for download in our <a href="media/">media</a> section.
2262 <eventitem date="2006-05-14" time="1:00 PM" room="CSC" title="Unix 101 and 102 Recording">
2263 <short>Unix 101 and 102 recording</short>
2266 Have you heard of our famous Unix 101 and Unix 102 tutorials. We've decided to try
2267 and put them on the web. This Sunday we will be doing a first take.
2268 At the same time, we're going to be looking at adding new material
2269 that we haven't covered in the past. </p>
2271 Why should you come out? Not only will you get to hang out with a wonderful group of people,
2272 you can help impart your knowledge to the world. Don't know anything about Unix? That's cool too,
2273 we need people to make sure its easy to follow along and hopefully keep us from leaving something
2279 <eventitem date="2006-05-13" time="1:00 PM" room="CSC" title="Video 4 Linux Day">
2280 <short> We don't know enough about V4L</short>
2283 We don't know Video 4 Linux, but increasingly people are wanting to do interesting stuff with our webcam which
2284 could benefit from a better understanding of Video 4 Linux. So, this Saturday a number of us will be trying to learn
2285 as much as possible about Video 4 Linux and doing weird things with webcam(s).
2290 <eventitem date="2006-05-08" time="4:30 PM" room="The Comfy Lounge" title="CSC
2292 <short>Come out and vote for the Spring 2006 executive!</short>
2295 The Computer Science Club will be holding its elections for the Spring 2006
2296 term on Monday, May 8th. The elections will be held at 4:30 PM in the
2297 Comfy Lounge, on the 3rd floor of the MC. Please remember to come out and
2301 We are accepting nominations for the following positions: President,
2302 Vice-President, Treasurer, and Secretary. The nomination period continues
2303 until 4:30 PM on Sunday, May 7th. If you are interested in running for
2304 a position, or would like to nominate someone else, please email
2305 cro@csclub.uwaterloo.ca before the deadline.
2310 <!-- Winter 2006 -->
2312 <eventitem date="2006-03-06" time="4:45 PM"
2313 room="Physics 145" title="Creating Killer Applications">
2314 <short>A talk by Larry Smith</short>
2317 A discussion of how software creators can identify application opportunities
2318 that offer the promise of great social and commercial significance. Particular
2319 attention will be paid to the challenge of acquiring cross domain knowledge
2320 and setting up effective collaboration.
2326 <eventitem date="2006-02-09" time="5:30 PM" room="Bombshelter Pub" title="Pints With Profs">
2327 <short>Come out and meet your professors. Free food provided!</short>
2329 <p>Come out and meet your professors! This is a great opportunity to
2330 mingle with your professors before midterms or find out who you might
2331 have for future courses. All are welcome!</p>
2333 <p>Best of all, there will be <strong>free food!</strong></p>
2335 <p>You can pick up invitations for your professors at the Computer Science
2336 Club office in MC 3036.</p>
2338 <p>Pints with Profs will be held this term on Thursday, 9 February 2006
2339 from 5:30 to 8:00 PM in the Bombshelter.</p>
2345 <eventitem date="2005-11-29" time="5:30 PM"
2346 room="TBA" title="Programming Contest">
2347 <short>Come out, program, and win shiny things!</short>
2350 The Computer Science club is holding a programming contest open to all students on Tuesday the 29th of November at 5:30PM. C++,C,Perl,Scheme* are allowed. Prizes totalling in value of $75 will be distributed.
2354 <p>And best of all... free food!!!</p>
2359 <eventitem date="2005-10-17" time="5:30 PM"
2360 room="Fishbowl" title="Party with Profs!">
2361 <short>Get to know your profs and be the envy of your
2365 Come out and meet your professors!! This is a great opportunity to
2366 meet professors for Undergraduate Research jobs or to find out who
2367 you might have for future courses. One and all are welcome!
2370 <p>And best of all... free food!!!</p>
2375 <eventitem date="2005-10-11" time="4:30 PM" room="MC 2037" title="UNIX 103: Scripting Unix">
2376 <short>You Too Can Be a Unix Taskmaster</short>
2379 This is the third in a series of seminars that cover the use of the
2380 UNIX Operating System. UNIX is used in a variety of applications, both
2381 in academia and industry. We will provide you with hands-on experience
2382 with the Math Faculty's UNIX environment in this tutorial.
2384 Topics that will be discussed include:
2386 <li>Shell scripting</li>
2387 <li>Searching through text files</li>
2388 <li>Batch editing text files</li>
2391 If you do not have a Math computer account, don't panic; one will be lent to
2392 you for the duration of this class.
2398 <eventitem date="2005-10-06" time="4:30 PM" room="MC3D 2037" title="UNIX 102">
2399 <short>Fun with Unix</short>
2402 This is the second in a series of seminars that cover the use of the
2403 Unix Operating System. Unix is used in a variety of
2404 applications, both in academia and industry. We will provide you with hands-on
2405 experience with the Math Faculty's Unix environment in this tutorial.
2408 Topics that will be discussed include:
2410 <li>Interacting with Bourne and C shells</li>
2411 <li>Editing text using the vi text editor</li>
2412 <li>Editing text using the Emacs display editor</li>
2413 <li>Multi-tasking and the screen multiplexer</li>
2417 If you do not have a Math computer account, don't panic; one will be lent to
2418 you for the duration of this class.
2423 <eventitem date="2005-10-04" time="4:30 PM" room="MC 2037" title="UNIX 101">
2424 <short>First UNIX tutorial</short>
2427 The CSC UNIX tutorials are intended to help first year CS and other
2428 interested learn UNIX and the CS UNIX environment.
2431 This is the first in a series of two or three tutorials. It will cover basic shell
2432 use, and simple text editors.
2438 <!-- Summer 2005 -->
2439 <eventitem date="2005-06-02" time="3:30 PM" room="DC 1302" title="Programming and Verifying the Interactive Web">
2440 <short>Shriram Krishnamurthi will be talking about continuations in Web Programming</short>
2443 Server-side Web applications have grown increasingly common, sometimes
2444 even replacing brick and mortar as the principal interface of
2445 corporations. Correspondingly, Web browsers grow ever more powerful,
2446 empowering users to attach bookmarks, switch between pages, clone
2447 windows, and so forth. As a result, Web interactions are not
2448 straight-line dialogs but complex nets of interaction steps.
2451 In practice, programmers are unaware of or are unable to handle these
2452 nets of interaction, making the Web interfaces of even major
2453 organizations buggy and thus unreliable. Even when programmers do
2454 address these constraints, the resulting programs have a seemingly
2455 mangled structure, making them difficult to develop and hard to
2459 In this talk, I will describe these interactions and then show how
2460 programming language ideas can shed light on the resulting problems
2461 and present solutions at various levels. I will also describe some
2462 challenges these programs pose to computer-aided verification, and
2463 present solutions to these problems.
2467 <eventitem date="2005-06-07" time="4:00 PM" room="MC 4042" title="UW's CS curriculum: past, present, and future">
2468 <short>Come out to here Prabhakar Ragde talk about our UW's CS curriculum</short>
2471 I'll survey the evolution of our computer science curriculum over the
2472 past thirty-five years to try to convey the reasons (not always entirely
2473 rational) behind our current mix of courses and their division into core
2474 and optional. After some remarks about constraints and opportunities in
2475 the near future, I'll open the floor to discussion, and hope to hear
2476 some candid comments about the state of CS at UW and how it might be
2483 Prabhakar Ragde is a Professor in the School of Computer Science at UW.
2484 He was Associate Chair for Curricula during the period that saw the
2485 creation of the Bioinformatics and Software Engineering programs, the
2486 creation of the BCS degree, and the strengthening of the BMath/CS degree.
2491 <!-- Winter 2005 -->
2492 <eventitem date="2005-03-15" time="4:30 PM" room="MC 4060" title="Oh No! More Lemmings Day!">
2493 <short>Come out for some retro Amiga-style Lemmings gaming action!</short>
2496 Does being in CS make you feel like a lemming? Is linear algebra driving you
2497 into walls? Do you pace back and forth, constantly, regardless of whatever's
2498 in your path? Then you should come out to CSC Lemmings Day. This time, we're
2499 playing the pseudo-sequel: Oh No! More Lemmings!
2502 <li>Old-skool retro gaming, Amiga-style (2 mice, 2 players!)</li>
2503 <li>Projector screen: the pixels are man-sized!</li>
2504 <li>Live-Action Lemmings (the rules are better this time)</li>
2505 <li>Lemmings look-alike contest</li>
2506 <li>Enjoy classic Lemmings tunes</li>
2511 <eventitem date="2005-02-01" time="4:30 PM" room="MC 2037" title="UNIX 102">
2512 <short>Fun with Unix</short>
2515 This is the second in a series of seminars that cover the use of the
2516 Unix Operating System. Unix is used in a variety of
2517 applications, both in academia and industry. We will provide you with hands-on
2518 experience with the Math Faculty's Unix environment in this tutorial.
2521 Topics that will be discussed include:
2523 <li>Interacting with Bourne and C shells</li>
2524 <li>Editing text using the vi text editor</li>
2525 <li>Editing text using the Emacs display editor</li>
2526 <li>Multi-tasking and the screen multiplexer</li>
2530 If you do not have a Math computer account, don't panic; one will be lent to
2531 you for the duration of this class.
2537 <eventitem date="2005-01-25" time="4:30 PM" room="MC 2037" title="UNIX 101">
2538 <short>First UNIX tutorial</short>
2541 The CSC UNIX tutorials are intended to help first year CS and other
2542 interested learn UNIX and the CS UNIX environment.
2545 This is the first in a series of two or three tutorials. It will cover basic shell
2546 use, and simple text editors.
2552 <eventitem date="2005-01-13" time="4:30 PM" room="The Comfy Lounge" title="CSC
2554 <short>Come out and vote for the Winter 2005 executive!</short>
2557 The Computer Science Club will be holding its elections for the Winter 2005
2558 term on Thursday, January 13. The elections will be held at 4:30 PM in the
2559 Comfy Lounge, on the 3rd floor of the MC. Please remember to come out and
2563 We are accepting nominations for the following positions: President,
2564 Vice-President, Treasurer, and Secretary. The nomination period continues
2565 until 4:30 PM on Wednesday, January 12. If you are interested in running for
2566 a position, or would like to nominate someone else, please email
2567 cro@csclub.uwaterloo.ca before the deadline.
2575 <eventitem date="2004-12-08" time="4:30 PM" room="Mongolian Grill"
2577 <short> This semesters CTRL-D (or the club that really likes
2578 dinner) is going to be at Mongolian grill. Be there or be square</short>
2581 Come to the end of term CTRL-D (club that really likes dinner) meeting.
2582 Remember : food is good
2588 <eventitem date="2004-12-01" time="2:30 PM" room="MC 4058" title="Knitting needles, hairpins and other tangled objects">
2589 <short>In this talk, I'll study linkages (objects built from sticks that are connected with flexible joints), and explain some
2590 interesting examples that can or cannot be straightened out</short>
2593 In this talk, I'll study linkages (objects built from sticks that are connected with flexible joints), and explain some
2594 interesting examples that can or cannot be straightened out</p>
2600 <eventitem date="2004-11-24" time="4:30 PM" room="MC 2066" title="Eclipse">
2601 <short>How I Stopped Worrying and Learned to Love the IDE</short>
2604 How I stopped worrying and Learned to Love the IDE
2607 Audience: anyone who as ever used the Java programming language to do anything. Especially if you don't like
2608 the IDEs you've seen so far or still use (g)Vi(m) or (X)Emacs.
2612 I'll go through some of the coolest features of the best IDE (which stands for "IDEs Don't Eat" or
2613 "Integrated Development Environment") I've seen. For the first year and seasoned almost-grad alike!
2620 <eventitem date="2004-11-18" time="5:00 PM" room="MC 2066" title="GracefulTavi">
2621 <short>Wiki software in PHP+MySQL</short>
2624 GracefulTavi is an open source wiki programmed by Net Integration
2625 Technologies Inc. It is used internally by more than 25 people, and is
2626 the primary internal wiki for NITI's R&D and QA.
2629 I'll start with a very brief introduction to wikis in general, then
2630 show off our special features: super-condensed formatting syntax,
2631 hierarchy management, version control, highlighted diffs, SchedUlator,
2632 the Table of Contents generator. As part of this, we'll explain the
2633 simple plugin architecture and show people how to write a basic wiki
2638 As well, I will show some of the "waterloo specific" macros that have
2639 been coded, and explain future plans for GracefulTavi.
2643 If time permits, I will explain how gracefulTavi can be easily used
2644 for a personal calendar and notepad system on your laptop.
2651 <eventitem date="2004-11-12" time="2:30 PM" room="MC 4063" title="Lemmings Day!">
2652 <short>Everyone else is doing it!</short>
2655 Does being in CS make you feel like a lemming? Is linear algebra driving you into walls? Do you pace back and forth , constantly ,
2656 regardless of whatever's in your path? Then you should come out to CSC Lemmings Day!
2659 <li>Play some old-skool Lemmings, Amiga-style</li>
2660 <li>Live-action lemmings</li>
2661 <li>Lemmings look-alike contest</li>
2662 <li>Enjoy classic Lemmings tunes</li>
2665 Everyone else is doing it!
2671 <eventitem date="2004-10-23" time="11:00 PM" room="MC 2037" title="CSC Programming Contest">
2672 <short>CSC Programming Contest</short>
2675 The Computer Science Club will be hosting a programming competition.
2676 You have the entire afternoon to design and implement an AI for a simple
2677 game. The competition will run until 5pm.
2683 <eventitem date="2004-10-18" time="4:30 PM" room="MC 2037" title="UNIX 103: Scripting Unix">
2684 <short>You Too Can Be a Unix Taskmaster</short>
2687 This is the third in a series of seminars that cover the use of the
2688 UNIX Operating System. UNIX is used in a variety of applications, both
2689 in academia and industry. We will provide you with hands-on experience
2690 with the Math Faculty's UNIX environment in this tutorial.
2692 Topics that will be discussed include:
2694 <li>Shell scripting</li>
2695 <li>Searching through text files</li>
2696 <li>Batch editing text files</li>
2699 If you do not have a Math computer account, don't panic; one will be lent to
2700 you for the duration of this class.
2705 <eventitem date="2004-10-04" time="4:30 PM" room="MC 2037" title="UNIX 102">
2706 <short>Fun with Unix</short>
2709 This is the second in a series of seminars that cover the use of the
2710 Unix Operating System. Unix is used in a variety of
2711 applications, both in academia and industry. We will provide you with hands-on
2712 experience with the Math Faculty's Unix environment in this tutorial.
2715 Topics that will be discussed include:
2717 <li>Interacting with Bourne and C shells</li>
2718 <li>Editing text using the vi text editor</li>
2719 <li>Editing text using the Emacs display editor</li>
2720 <li>Multi-tasking and the screen multiplexer</li>
2724 If you do not have a Math computer account, don't panic; one will be lent to
2725 you for the duration of this class.
2730 <!-- Spring 2004 -->
2732 <eventitem date="2004-09-27" time="4:30 PM" room="MC 2037" title="UNIX 101">
2733 <short>First UNIX tutorial</short>
2736 The CSC UNIX tutorials are intended to help first year CS and other
2737 interested learn UNIX and the CS UNIX environment.
2740 This is the first in a series of three tutorials. It will cover basic shell
2741 use, and simple text editors.
2745 <eventitem date="2004-09-17" time="4:00 PM" room="The Comfy Lounge" title="CSC
2747 <short>Come out and vote for the Fall 2004 executive!</short>
2750 The Computer Science Club will be holding its elections for the Fall 2004
2751 term on Friday, September 17. The elections will be held at 4:00 PM in the
2752 Comfy Lounge, on the 3rd floor of the MC. Please remember to come out and
2756 We are accepting nominations for the following positions: President,
2757 Vice-President, Treasurer, and Secretary. The nomination period continues
2758 until 4:30 PM on Thursday, September 16. If you are interested in running
2759 for a position, or would like to nominate someone else, please email
2760 cro@csclub.uwaterloo.ca before the deadline.
2765 <eventitem date="2004-07-27" time="4:30 PM" room="MC 2065"
2766 title="Game Complexity Theorists Ponder, by Jonathan Buss">
2767 <short>Attention AI buffs: Game Complexity presentation</short>
2770 Why are some games hard to play well? The study of computational
2771 complexity gives one answer: the games encode long computations.</p>
2773 <p>Any computation can be interpreted as an abstract game. Playing the
2774 game perfectly requires performing the computation. Remarkably, some
2775 natural games can encode these abstract games and thus simulate
2776 general computations. The more complex the game, the more complex the
2777 computations it can encode; games that can encode intractable problems
2778 are themselves intractable.</p>
2781 I will describe how games can encode computations, and discuss some
2782 examples of both provably hard games (checkers, chess, go, etc.) and
2783 games that are believed to be hard (hex, jigsaw puzzles, etc.).
2788 <eventitem date="2004-07-17" time="11:30 AM" room="RCH 308"
2789 title="Case Modding Workshop!">
2790 <short>Come and learn how to make your computer 1337!</short>
2793 Are you bored of beige?<br />
2794 Tired of an overheating computer?<br />
2795 Is your computer's noise level on par with a jet engine?
2798 Got a nifty modded case?<br />
2802 The Computer Science Club will be holding a Case Modding Workshop
2803 to help answer these questions.
2806 There will be demonstrations on how to make a case window, how
2807 to paint your case, managing cables and keeping your computer
2811 The event is FREE and there will be FREE PIZZA. All are welcome!
2814 To help you on your way to getting a wicked computer case, we have a limited
2815 number of "Case Modding Starters Kits" available. They come with an LED fan,
2816 a fan grill, a sheet of Plexan, thumbscrews, wire ties, and more! They're
2817 only $10 and will be on sale at the event. Here's a <a
2818 href="redkit.jpg">picture</a>.
2821 If you already have a modded case, we encourage you to bring it out
2822 and show it off! There will be a prize for the best case!!
2825 We hope to see you there!
2828 This event is sponsored by Bigfoot Computers.
2833 <eventitem date="2004-06-17" time="4:00 PM" room="MC 2066"
2834 title="``Optical Snow'': Motion parallax and heading computation in densely cluttered scenes. -or- Why Computer Vision needs the Fourier Transform!">
2835 <short>A talk by Richard Mann; School of Computer Science</short>
2838 When an observer moves through a 3D scene, nearby surfaces move faster in the
2839 image than do distant surfaces. This effect, called motion parallax, provides
2840 an observer with information both about their own motion relative the scene,
2841 and about the spatial layout and depth of surfaces in the scene.
2844 Classical methods for measuring image motion by computer have concentrated on
2845 the cases of optical flow in which the motion field is continuous, or layered
2846 motion in which the motion field is piecewise continuous. Here we introduce a
2847 third natural category which we call ``optical snow''. Optical snow arises in
2848 many natural situations such as camera motion in a highly cluttered 3-D scene,
2849 or a passive observer watching a snowfall. Optical snow yields dense motion
2850 parallax with depth discontinuities occurring near all image points. As such,
2851 constraints on smoothness or even smoothness in layers do not apply.
2854 We present a Fourier analysis of optical snow. In particular we show that,
2855 while such scenes appear complex in the time domain, there is a simple
2856 structure in the frequency domain, and this may be used to determine the
2857 direction of motion and the range of depths of objects in the scenes. Finally
2858 we show how Fourier analysis of two or more image regions may be combined to
2859 estimate heading direction.
2862 This talk will present current research at the undergraduate level. All are
2869 <eventitem date="2004-05-26" time="5:30 PM"
2870 room="DC 1350" title="Computing's Next Great Empires: The True Future of Software">
2871 <short>A talk by Larry Smith</short>
2874 Larry will challenge conventional assumptions about the directions of
2875 computing and software. The role of AI, expert systems, communications
2876 software and business applications will be presented both from a
2877 functional and commercial point of view. The great gaps in the
2878 marketplace will be highlighted, together with an indication of how
2879 these vacant fields will become home to new empires.
2883 <eventitem date="2004-05-12" time="4:30 PM"
2884 room="The Comfy Lounge" title="CSC Elections">
2885 <short>Come out and vote for the Spring 2004 executive!</short>
2888 The Computer Science Club will be holding its elections for the Spring
2889 2004 term on Wednesday, May 12. The elections will be held at 4:30 PM in
2890 the Comfy Lounge, on the 3rd floor of the MC. Please remember to come out
2894 We are accepting nominations for the following positions: President,
2895 Vice-President, Treasurer, and Secretary. The nomination period continues
2896 until 4:30 PM on Tuesday, May 11. If you are interested in running
2897 for a position, or would like to nominate someone else, please email
2898 cro@csclub.uwaterloo.ca before the deadline.
2903 <!-- Winter 2004 -->
2905 <eventitem date="2004-03-29" time="6:00 PM"
2906 room="MC 4058" title="LaTeXing your work report">
2907 <short>A talk by Simon Law</short>
2910 The work report is a familiar chore for any co-op student. Not only is
2911 there a report to write, but to add insult to injury, your report is
2912 returned if you do not follow your departmental guidelines.
2916 Fear no more! In this talk, you will learn how to use LaTeX and a
2917 specially developed class to automatically format your work reports.
2918 This talk is especially useful to Mathematics, Computer Science,
2919 Electrical & Computer Engineering, and Software Engineeering co-op
2920 students about to go on work term.
2925 <eventitem date="2004-03-30" time="5:30 PM"
2926 room="The Grad House" title="Pints with Profs!">
2927 <short>Get to know your profs and be the envy of your
2931 Come out and meet your professors!! This is a great opportunity to
2932 meet professors for Undergraduate Research jobs or to find out who
2933 you might have for future courses. One and all are welcome!
2936 <p>And best of all... free food!!!</p>
2940 <eventitem date="2004-03-23" time="6:00 PM"
2941 room="MC4058" title="Extending LaTeX with packages">
2942 <short>A talk by Simon Law</short>
2945 LaTeX is a document processing system. What this means is you describe
2946 the structure of your document, and LaTeX typesets it appealingly.
2947 However, LaTeX was developed in the late-80s and is now showing its age.
2951 How does it compete against modern systems? By being easily extensible,
2952 of course. This talk will describe the fundamentals of typesetting in
2953 LaTeX, and will then show you how to extend it with freely available
2954 packages. You will learn how to teach yourself LaTeX and how to find
2955 extensions that do what you want.
2959 As well, there will be a short introduction on creating your own
2960 packages, for your own personal use.
2965 <eventitem date="2004-03-16" time="6:00 PM"
2966 room="MC4058" title="Distributed programming for CS and Engineering
2968 <short>A talk by Simon Law</short>
2971 If you've ever worked with other group members, you know how difficult
2972 it is to code simultaneously. You might be working on one part of your
2973 assignment, and you need to send your source code to everyone else. Or
2974 you might be fixing a bug in someone else's part, and need to merge in
2975 the change. What a mess!
2979 This talk will explain some Best Practices for developing code in a
2980 distributed fashion. Whether you're working side-by-side in the lab, or
2981 developing from home, these methods can apply to your team. You will
2982 learn how to apply these techniques in the Unix environment using GNU
2983 Make, CVS, GNU diff and patch.
2988 <eventitem date="2004-03-15" time="5:30 PM"
2989 room="MC4040" title="SPARC Architecture">
2990 <short>A talk by James Morrison</short>
2993 Making a compiler? Bored? Think CISC sucks and RISC rules?
2997 This talk will run through the SPARC v8, IEEE-P1754, architecture.
2998 Including all the fun that can be had with register windows and the
2999 SPARC instruction set including the basic instructions, floating
3000 point instructions, and vector instructions.
3005 <eventitem date="2004-03-09" time="6:00 PM"
3006 room="MC4062" title="Managing your home directory using CVS">
3007 <short>A talk by Simon Law</short>
3010 If you have used Unix for a while, you know that you've created
3011 configuration files, or dotfiles. Each program seems to want its own
3012 particular settings, and you want to customize your environment. In a
3013 power-user's directory, you could have hundreds of these files.
3017 Isn't it annoying to migrate your configuration if you login to another
3018 machine? What if you build a new computer? Or perhaps you made a
3019 mistake to one of your configuration files, and want to undo it?
3023 In this talk, I will show you how to manage your home directory using
3024 CVS, the Concurrent Versions System. You can manage your files, revert
3025 to old versions in the past, and even send them over the network to
3026 another machine. I'll also discuss how to keep your configuration files
3027 portable, so they'll work even on different Unices, with different
3033 <eventitem date="2004-03-02" time="6:00 PM"
3034 room="MC4042" title="Graphing webs-of-trust">
3035 <short>A talk by Simon Law</short>
3038 In today's world, people have hundreds of connexions. And you can
3039 express these connexions with a graph. For instance, you may wish to
3040 represent the network of your friends.
3044 Originally, webs-of-trust were directed acyclic graphs of people who had
3045 identified each other. This way, if there was a path between you and
3046 the person who want to identify, then you could assume that each person
3047 along that path had verified the next person's identity.
3051 I will show you how to generate your own web-of-trust graph using Free
3052 Software. Of course, you can also use this knowledge to graph anything
3058 <eventitem date="2004-02-18" time="7:00 PM"
3059 room="DC2305" title="KW Perl Mongers">
3060 <short>Perl Modules: A look under the hood</short>
3063 <p>In Perl, a module is the basic unit of code-reuse. The talk will be
3064 mostly a look into GD::Text::Arc, a module written to draw TrueType text
3065 around the edge of a circle. The talk will consider:</p>
3068 <li>using and writing object-oriented perl code</li>
3069 <li>the Virtue of Laziness: or, reusing other peoples' code.</li>
3070 <li>writing tests while coding</li>
3071 <li>beer coasters</li>
3077 <eventitem date="2004-02-05" time="3:30 PM"
3078 room="MC4041" title="Constitutional Change">
3079 <short>Vote to change the CSC Constitution</short>
3082 <p>During the General Meeting on 19 January 2004, a proposed constitution
3083 change was passed around. This change is in response to a change in the
3084 MathSoc Clubs Policy (Policy 4, Section 3, Sub-section f).</p>
3086 <p>This general meeting is called to vote on this proposed change. We must
3087 have quorum of 15 Full Members vote on this change. The following text was
3088 presented at the CSC Winter 2004 Elections.</p>
3090 <pre>We propose to make a Constitutional change on this day, 19 January 2004.
3091 The proposed change is to section 3.1 of the constitution which
3094 In compliance with MathSoc regulations and in recognition of the
3095 club being primarily targeted at undergraduate students, full
3096 membership is open to all undergraduate students in the Faculty of
3097 Mathematics and restricted to the same.
3099 Since MathSoc has changed its requirements for club membership, we
3100 propose that it be changed to:
3102 In compliance with MathSoc regulations and in recognition of the
3103 club being primarily targeted at undergraduate students, full
3104 membership is open to all Social Members of the Mathematics Society
3105 and restricted to the same.</pre>
3109 <eventitem date="2004-01-12" time="3:00 PM"
3110 room="DC1301" title="InstallFest">
3111 <short>See <a href="http://uw-dig.uwaterloo.ca/installfest/">http://uw-dig.uwaterloo.ca/installfest/</a></short>
3114 <p>An Installfest is an opportunity to install software on your computer.
3115 People come with computers. Other people come with experience. The people
3116 get together and (when all goes well) everybody leaves satisfied.</p>
3118 <p>You are invited to our first installfest of the year. Come to get some
3119 software or to learn more about Open Source Software and why it is relevant
3120 to your life. The event is free, but you may want to bring blank CDs and/or
3121 money to purchase some open source action for your computer at home.</p>
3123 <p>See the <a href="http://uw-dig.uwaterloo.ca/installfest/">UW-DIG
3124 website</a> for more details.</p>
3131 <eventitem date="2003-12-01" time="7:00 PM"
3132 room="RCH 101" title="Jon 'maddog' Hall: Free and Open Source: Its uses in Business and Education">
3133 <short> Free and Open Source software has been around for a long
3134 time, even longer then shrink-wrapped code.</short>
3136 <p>Free and Open Source software has been around for a long time, even
3137 longer then shrink-wrapped code. It has a long and noble history in the annals
3138 of education. Even more than ever, due to the drop of hardware prices and the
3139 increase of worldwide communications, Free and Open Source can open new
3140 avenues of teaching and doing research, not only in computer science, but in
3141 other university fields as well.</p>
3142 <p>Learn how Linux as an operating system can
3143 run on anything from a PDA to a supercomputer, and how Linux is reducing the
3144 cost of computing dramatically as the fastest growing operating system in the
3145 world. Learn how other Free and Open Source projects, such as office suites,
3146 audio and video editing and playing software, relational databases, etc. are
3147 created and are freely available.</p>
3149 <p><a href="http://www.csclub.uwaterloo.ca/~cpbell/">Map and directions</a></p>
3150 <h3>Speaker's Biography</h3>
3151 <p>Jon "maddog" Hall is the Executive Director of <a href="http://www.li.org/">Linux International</a>,
3152 a non-profit association of computer vendors who wish to support and promote
3153 the Linux Operating System. During his career which spans over thirty years,
3154 Mr. Hall has been a programmer, systems designer, systems administrator,
3155 product manager, technical marketing manager and educator. He has
3156 worked for such companies as Western Electric Corporation, Aetna Life and
3157 Casualty, Bell Laboratories, Digital Equipment Corporation, VA Linux Systems,
3158 and is currently funded by SGI.</p>
3160 <p>He has taught at Hartford State Technical College, Merrimack College and
3161 Daniel Webster College. He still likes talking to students over pizza and beer
3162 (the pizza can be optional).</p>
3164 <p>Mr. Hall is the author of numerous magazine and newspaper articles, many
3165 presentations and one book, "Linux for Dummies".</p>
3167 <p>Mr. Hall serves on the boards of several companies, and several non-profit
3168 organizations, including the USENIX Association.</p>
3170 <p>Mr. Hall has traveled the world speaking on the benefits of Open Source
3171 Software, and received his BS in Commerce and Engineering from Drexel
3172 University, and his MSCS from RPI in Troy, New York.</p>
3174 <p>In his spare time maddog is working on his retirement project:</p>
3176 <center>maddog's monastery for microcomputing and microbrewing</center>
3181 <eventitem date="2003-11-05" time="4:30 PM - 8:30 PM"
3182 room="Grad House Pub (Green Room)" title="CS Pints With Profs">
3183 <short>Come have a pint with your favourite CS profs!</short>
3185 <p>Come meet CS profs in a relaxed atmosphere this Wednesday at
3186 the Grad House (by South Campus Hall). This is your chance to meet those CS profs
3187 you enjoyed in lectures in person, have a chat with them
3188 and find out what they're doing outside the lecture halls.</p>
3190 <p>We'll be providing free food, including hamburgers and nachos,
3191 and the Grad House offers a great selection of drinks.</p>
3193 <p>If you'd like to invite a particular prof, stop by on the third
3194 floor of the MC (outside of the Comfy) to pick up an invitation.</p>
3196 <p>Persons of all ages are welcome!</p>
3201 <eventitem date="2003-10-21" time="4:30 PM - 5:30 PM" room="MC2065"
3202 title=".NET & Linux: When Worlds Collide">
3203 <short>A talk by James Perry</short>
3206 <p>.NET is Microsoft's new development platform, including amongst
3207 other things a language called C# and a class library for various
3208 operating system services. .NET aims to be portable, although it is
3209 currently mostly only used on Windows systems.</p>
3211 <p>With the full backing of Microsoft, it seems unlikely that .NET
3212 will disappear any time soon. There are several efforts underway to
3213 bring .NET to the GNU/Linux platform. Hosted by the Computer Science
3214 Club, this talk will discuss a number of the issues surrounding .NET
3220 <eventitem date="2003-10-22" time="4:30 PM - 5:30 PM" room="MC4061"
3221 title="Real-Time Graphics Compilers">
3222 <short>Sh is a GPU metaprogramming language developed at the UW
3223 Computer Graphics Lab</short>
3226 <p>Sh is a GPU metaprogramming language developed at the University of
3227 Waterloo Computer Graphics Lab. It allows graphics programmers to
3228 write programs which run directly on the GPU (Graphics Processing
3229 Unit) using familiar C++ syntax. Furthermore, it allows
3230 metaprogramming of such programs, that is, writing programs which
3231 generate other programs, in an easy and natural manner.</p>
3233 <p>This talk will give a brief overview of how Sh works, the design of
3234 its intermediate representation and the (still somewhat simplistic)
3235 optimizer that the current reference implementation has and problems
3236 with applying traditional compiler optimizations.</p>
3238 <p>Stefanus Du Toit is an undergraduate student at the University of
3239 Waterloo. He is also a Research Assistant for Michael McCool from the
3240 University of Waterloo Graphics Lab. Over the Summer of 2003 Stefanus
3241 reimplemented the Sh reference implementation and designed and
3242 implemented the current Sh optimizer.</p>
3246 <eventitem date="2003-10-17" time="3:00 PM" room="MC3001 (Comfy)"
3247 title="Poster Team Meeting">
3248 <short>More free pizza from the Poster Team</short>
3250 <p>Are you interested in getting involved in the Computer Science
3253 <p>Come on out to the second meeting of our Poster Team, a bunch of
3254 students helping out with promotion for our events. The agenda for
3255 this meeting will include painting posters, designing event
3256 invitations, and organizing poster runs. Once again, we will be
3257 serving free pizza!</p>
3259 <p>See you there!</p>
3263 <eventitem date="2003-10-16" time="4:00 PM - 5:30 PM" room="MC2037"
3264 title="UNIX 103: Development Tools">
3265 <short>GCC, GDB, Make</short>
3267 <p>This tutorial will provide you with a practical introduction to GNU
3268 development tools on Unix such as the gcc compiler, the gdb debugger
3269 and the GNU make build tool.</p>
3271 <p>This talk is geared primarily at those mostly unfamiliar with these
3272 tools. Amongst other things we will introduce:</p>
3275 <li>gcc options, version differences, and peculiarities</li>
3276 <li>using gdb to debug segfaults, set breakpoints and find out what's
3278 <li>tiny Makefiles that will compile all of your 2nd and 3rd year CS
3282 <p>If you're in second year CS and unfamiliar with UNIX development it
3283 is highly recommended you go to this talk. All are welcome, including
3284 non-math students.</p>
3286 <p>Arrive early!</p>
3290 <eventitem date="2003-10-02" time="4:00 PM - 5:30 PM" room="MC2037"
3291 title="UNIX 101: Text Editors">
3292 <short>vi vs. emacs: The Ultimate Showdown</short>
3295 Have you ever wondered how those cryptic UNIX text editors work? Have you
3296 ever woken up at night with a cold sweat wondering "Is it CTRL-A, or CTRL-X
3297 CTRL-A?" Do you just hate pico with a passion?</p>
3299 <p>Then come to this tutorial and learn how to use vi and emacs!</p>
3301 <p>Basic UNIX commands will also be covered. This tutorial will be especially
3302 useful for first and second year students.</p>
3307 <eventitem date="2003-10-06" time="4:00 PM" room="MC3001 (Comfy)"
3308 title="Poster Team Meeting">
3309 <short>Join the Poster Team and get Free Pizza!</short>
3312 <li>Do you like computer science?</li>
3313 <li>Do you like posters?</li>
3314 <li>Do you like free pizza?</li>
3316 <p>If the answer to one of these questions is yes, then come
3317 out to the first meeting of the Computer Science Club Poster Team! The
3318 CSC is looking for interested students to help out with promotion and
3319 publicity for this term's events. We promise good times and free
3324 <eventitem date="2003-09-17" time="4:30 PM" room="MC3001 (Comfy)"
3325 title="CSC Elections">
3326 <short>CSC Fall 2003 Elections</short>
3328 <p>Elections will be held on Wednesday, September 17, 2003 at 4:30 PM in the
3330 Comfy Lounge, MC3001.</p>
3332 <p>I invite you to nominate yourself or others for executive positions,
3333 starting immediately. Simply e-mail me at cro@csclub.uwaterloo.ca
3334 with the name of the person who is to be nominated and the position
3335 they're nominated for.</p>
3337 <p>Nominees must be full-time undergraduate students in Math. Sorry!</p>
3339 <p>Positions open for elections are:</p>
3341 <ul><li>President: Organises the club, appoints committees, keeps everyone busy.
3342 If you have lots of ideas about the club in general and like bossing
3343 people around, go for it!</li>
3345 <li>Vice President: Organises events, acts as the president if he's not
3346 available. If you have lots of ideas for events, and spare time, go
3349 <li>Treasurer: Keeps track of the club's finances. Gets to sign cheques
3350 and stuff. If you enjoy dealing with money and have ideas on how to
3351 spend it, go for it!</li>
3353 <li>Secretary: Takes care of minutes and outside correspondence. If you
3354 enjoy writing things down and want to use our nifty new letterhead
3355 style, go for it!</li></ul>
3357 <p>Nominations will be accepted until Tuesday, September 16 at 4:30 PM.</p>
3359 <p>Additionally, a Sysadmin will be appointed after the elections. If you
3360 like working with Unix systems and have experience setting up and
3361 maintaining them, go for it!</p>
3363 <p>I hope that lots of people will show up; hopefully we'll have a great
3364 term with plenty of events. We always need other volunteers, so if you
3365 want to get involved just talk to the new exec after the
3366 meeting. Librarians, webmasters, poster runners, etc. are always
3369 <p>There will also be free pop.</p>
3371 <p>Memberships can be purchased at the elections or at least half an hour
3372 prior to at the CSC. Only undergrad math members can vote, but anyone can
3373 become a member.</p>
3377 <!-- Spring 2003 -->
3379 <eventitem date="2003-07-31" time="4:30 PM" room="MC4064"
3380 title="LaTeX and Work Reports">
3381 <short>Writing beautiful work reports</short>
3384 <p>The work report is a familiar chore for any co-op student. Not only is
3385 there a report to write, but to add insult to injury, your report is
3386 returned if you do not follow your departmental guidelines.</p>
3388 <p>Fear no more! In this talk, you will learn how to use LaTeX and a
3389 specially developed class to automatically format your work reports.
3390 This talk is especially useful to Mathematics, Computer Science,
3391 Electrical & Computer Engineering, and Software Engineeering co-op
3392 students about to go on work term.</p>
3395 href="http://www.eng.uwaterloo.ca/~sfllaw/programs/uw-wkrpt/">http://www.eng.uwaterloo.ca/~sfllaw/programs/uw-wkrpt/</a></p>
3400 <eventitem date="2003-07-24" time="4:30 PM" room="MC2037"
3401 title="vi: the visual editor">
3402 <short>It's not 6.</short>
3405 <p>In 1976, a University of California Berkeley student by the name of
3406 Bill Joy got sick of his text editor, ex. So he hacked it such that
3407 he could read his document as he wrote it. The result was "vi", which
3408 stands for VIsual editor. Today, it is shipped with every modern
3409 Unix system, due to its global influence.</p>
3411 <p>In this talk, you will learn how to use vi to edit documents
3412 quickly and efficiently. At the end, you should be able to:</p>
3415 <li>Navigate and search through documents</li>
3416 <li>Cut, copy, and paste across documents</li>
3417 <li>Search and replace regular expressions</li>
3420 <p>If you do not have a Math computer account, don't panic; one will be lent
3421 to you for the duration of this class.</p>
3426 <eventitem date="2003-07-24" time="3:00 PM" room="CSC Office" title="July
3428 <short> See Abstract for minutes </short>
3431 --paying Simon for Sugar
3434 Expense this to MathSoc in lieu of foreign speaker.
3436 --We currently have (including CD-R and pop-income not
3437 currently in safe) $972.85
3438 -We have $359.02 on budget that we can expense to MathSoc.
3440 --We got MEF money for books and video card. Funding for
3441 wireless microphone is dependent on whether MFCF is
3443 -Funding for casters was denied.
3444 -Shopping for the Video card.
3445 -Expecting it after August (Stefanus shopping for it.)
3446 -Will have to hear back regarding the microphone, best to
3447 delay that now, discuss it with MEF.
3448 -Better to do it this term, so it doesn't get lost.
3449 -Let MFCF know about this concern.
3450 -Regarding books, can be done anytime before September.
3453 -Generally, Jim Eliot talk when really well.
3454 -Apparently he was generally offensive.
3455 -When was the LaTeX talk? End of the month.
3456 -Kegger at Jim's place on the 16th.
3458 --Getting people in on the 6th, 7th, 8th for csc commercials
3460 -Hang out in here, and he'll make a CSC commercial.
3461 -Co-ordinate when everyone should be in here, so we can email Jason.
3464 -CEO needs it's database changed to use ISBN as a primary key.
3465 -Needs functionality to take out/return books.
3467 --Mark just entered financial stuff into GNUcash
3469 --Choose CRO for next term.
3470 -Stefanus has expressed desire not to be CRO.
3471 -Gary Simmons was suggested (and he accepted)
3474 --Mike Biggs has to get here naked.
3475 -Four unanimous votes.
3476 -Nakedness only applies to getting here, not being here.
3480 ACTION ITEM: Biggs and Cass
3481 -get labelmaker tape, masking tape
3482 whiteboard makers, coloured paper, CD sleeves
3483 -keep receipts for CSC office expenses.
3485 How is the progress on allowing executives and voters to be non-math
3487 -The vote is coming up Monday.
3488 -Proposal: Anyone who is a paying member can be a member
3489 -So you can either do two things:
3490 Pay MathSoc fees, or
3491 Get your faculty society to recognize CSC as a club.
3493 Stefanus wanted to mention that we should talk to Yolanda,
3494 Craig or Louie about a EYT event for frosh week.
3496 -Sugar Mountain trying to hook all the Frosh
3500 Reminder for Next Year's executive.
3501 -September 16th @ 5:00pm, get a table for Clubs day, and 17th
3502 and 18th, maintain the booth (full day events).
3505 -There should be executive before then
3507 Note: There needs to be a private section in the CSC Procedures Manual.
3508 (Only accessible by shell)
3513 -Talk to Plantops about:
3515 -Mounting corkboard.
3516 -Talk about CSC Sign
3521 <eventitem date="2003-06-27" time="2:30 PM" room="DC1302"
3522 title="Friday Flicks">
3523 <short> SIGGRAPH Electronic Theatre Showing </short>
3526 SIGGRAPH is the ACM's Special Interest Group for Graphics and
3527 simultaneously the world's largest graphics conference and
3528 exhibition, where the cutting edge of graphics research is presented
3531 With support from UW's Computer Graphics Lab, the CSC invites you to