Archive for the 'ICT Events' Category

The 2nd UP ACM Programming Competition

Wednesday, March 1st, 2006
UP ACM

Want to win THREE iPod Shuffles plus Php 1,000 in cash? If you think you have the brains, then join the 2nd UP ACM Programming Competition!

What is the 2nd UP ACM Programming Competition?

The 2nd UP ACM Programming Competition will test the contestants’ problem solving and computer programming skills under time pressure. The contest will serve as a simulation for the ACM International Collegiate Programming Competion 2006, to be held in November this year.

Venue: MH 215, Melchor Hall, UP Diliman
Date: Thursday March 2, 2006 (Part of Silver Flame, the 25th Anniversary of the UPD DCS)
Time: 8:30am-12:00pm

Qualifications
1) Non-graduating UP undergraduate students (students with at least one year to stay in the University) from any course or college
2) No prior ACM-ICPC (International) experience
3) Contestants should form at most three members per team. Well, if you want to hog the three iPods…
4) The organizers are not allowed to join (doh!)

Prizes
1st prize
** THREE Ipod shuffles
** Php 1,000 (for the whole team)
** Internship opportunites from Pusit.com, a Friendster affiliate company

2nd prize
** Php 1,000
** Internship opportunites from Xackup, a Friendster affiliate company

3rd prize
** Php 500

For more information, visit http://2ndpc.upacm.org

Interested parties, contact Ardee Aram (09186951341), Mai Sibayan (09216484928) or TJ Roque (09224956730)

Sponsors
Pusit.com
Xackup
Hardware Magazine

Silver Flame Sets UP Diliman Ablaze

Wednesday, March 1st, 2006
Opening Ceremonies

Great talks, great exhibits, great food, and Paco Sandejas to boot! Definitely, what a great way to start the week!

Students and faculty alike trooped to the Engineering Theater yesterday as UP Diliman bore witness to the inauguration of Silver Flame, the week-long celebration of the Department of Computer Science’s 25th anniversary.

The day kicked off with the Opening Ceremonies, with DCS Chair Dr. Cedric Angelo Festin giving the welcome remarks. The CS Representatives gave a preview of the week’s great line-up of events, while the candidates for the next batch of CS Representatives presented their platform.

The Student-Teacher Dialogue followed, where the DCS Faculty, led by Dr. Festin, addressed the issues and concerns of the Department and its student body. Several points raised were the imminent transfer of the DCS to the new COELACS Building, laboratory fees, the selection process for competition-bound students, curriculum changes, and the relevancy of non-high-level CS subjects.

Lunch was served in the Grand Pakain, held at the College of Engineering Fourth Floor Lobby. CS Week revelers were treated to lechon and other great servings.

Paco Sandejas giving a talk

The afternoon was graced by the presence of two dignitaries, namely Dr. Rowena Guevara, Dean of the College of Engineering, and Dr. Paco Sandejas, renowned venture capitalist, executive, and co-inventor of the world’s first Grating Light Valves. GLV is a technology being used by Sony and Silicon Light Machines.

Dean Guevara gave an inspirational message to DCS students, after which she introduced Dr. Sandejas. The latter gave a talk on Career Paths, sharing his experiences and insights on careers for CS students, entrepreneurship, venture capital companies, and technologies which appeal most to investors.

Paco Sandejas (red shirt) and Emerson Tan (orange shirt) perusing Computer Graphics projects

Exhibits showcasing the Department and the various organizations comprising the UP CS Network were set-up in the 2nd Floor Lobby, along with posters of CS 192 User Interface Design projects and CS 176 (Computer Graphics) animations and stills.

Logistical problems were encountered due to the suspension of classes last February 27, which was supposed to be the opening day of the CS Week. However, the Department and the CS Week organizers decided to push through with the celebrations.

CS Week Revised Sked

Monday, February 27th, 2006

Due to the (unfortunate) suspension of classes today, some events in UP Diliman’s Computer Science Week 2006 have been shuffled.

Events for tomorrow (Tuesday, February 28):

10:00 - 11:00 - Opening Ceremonies
11:00 - 12:00 - Student-Teacher Dialogue
12:00 - 01:00 - Grand Pakain
01:00 - 02:00 - Inspirational Message from the Dean followed by a Talk by Dr. Paco Sandejas: Career Paths

The Undergraduate Research Symposium is tentatively moved to March 6-7, following the same symposium schedule. Events for the other days will still follow the original schedule.

Silver Flame: The UP Diliman Computer Science Week 2006

Friday, February 24th, 2006
The DCS Firefoxes

UP Diliman’s Department of Computer Science celebrates 25 years of excellence in computing diversity in its week-long Silver Flame, to be held from February 27 to March 3. Everyone’s invited to a week filled with symposia, company talks, various competitions, and a culminating night -– all of which showcase the intelligence, innovativeness, and flair that UP DCS students have been known for.

The theme Silver Flame honors the silver anniversary of the Department while highlighting the fiery fervor for the Department’s pursuit of excellence; rightfully so, for DCS students are known within the College of Engineering as the DCS Firefoxes.

Incidentally, this is going to be the last time that the UPD DCS shall celebrate its anniversary in Melchor Hall. The department is slated to move to a new, larger building early next year; one can also think of Silver Flame as the Department’s grand farewell to the historic edifice.

Inquiries can be made through email (upcsnetwork@gmail.com). The week’s packed lineup of great events:

February 27, Monday

Engineering Theater

8:30 - Opening Ceremonies

10:00 - Undergraduate Research Symposium: Networking and Distributed Systems

12:00 - Grand Pakain

1:00 - Company Talk by Accenture: Accenture Education Program (Summer Intership)

2:00 - Undergraduate Research Symposium: Computer Security

4:00 Student-Teacher Dialogue

February 28, Tuesday

Engineering Theater

8:30 - Undergraduate Research Symposium: Artificial Intelligence and Bioinformatics

12:00 - Lunch break

1:00 - Talk by Dr. Paco Sandejas: Career Paths

2:00 - Undergraduate Research Symposium: Biomedical Informatics

March 1, Wednesday

UPD DCS

8:30 - Distinguished Alumni Lecture by Prof. Peter Valdes (Engineering Theater)

- CS 32 Quiz Bee (MH 233A)

- Java Cup (MH 209, MH 215)

- Siemens Company Exam for Batch 1(MH 515)

12:00 - Break

- Accenture Company Exam (BE AVR)

1:00 - Company Talk by Innove: WiFi / Globelines Broadband (BE AVR)

2:00 - CS 12 Programming Competition (MH 209)

- Quizzardry (Engineering Theater)

March 2, Thursday

8:30 - 2nd UP ACM Programming Competition (MH 215)

- Webmaster’s Challenge (NEC AVR)

- Siemens Company Exam for Batch 2 (MH 525)

12:00 - Lunch Break

1:00 - Awarding Ceremonies (Engineering Theater)

March 3, Friday

8:30 - The UP Parser Editorial Exam (MH 233A)

10:00 - Company Talk by Gametel: Mobile Games (Engineering Theater)

11:00 - Company Talk by Siemens (Engineering Theater)

12:00 - Lunch Break

1:00 - CS 196 Presentation (BE AVR)

2:00 - Company Talk by Anxa: Introduction to Mobile Application Development
(Engineering Theater)

5:30 - Flame On!: The CS Night (Blue Onion, Eastwood)

Attn: Mobile Game Developers!

Wednesday, November 23rd, 2005

Ever wanted to create your own mobile phone game? Or itching to get known and rewarded for your mad game development skills?

Then drop by the Mobigame 2005 Seminar to be held this Friday at UP Diliman. Mobigame is a mobile game development competition and training sponsored by MMOG Philippines and DLSU. Get to ask the questions which matter, get the facts straight about this unique test of talents. Hear from the personalities behind the competition. And of course, freebies await!

Mobigame 2005 Seminar
10am - 12noon
Friday, November 25, 2005
Engineering Theater, Melchor Hall
University of the Philippines Diliman

This leg of the Mobigame 2005 school tour is proudly hosted by the Philippines’ one and only award-winning Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) chapter, UP ACM.

UPDATE (11/24/05): Competition mechanics can be found here.

ACM Webcast a Blast!

Thursday, August 25th, 2005

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The Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) A. M. Turing Award Lecture titled “Assessing the Internet: Lessons Learned, Strategies for Evolution, and Future Possibilities” was held at the University of Pennsylvania last August 22, 6PM Eastern Standard time, and was webcast live to various gatherings of geeks and geekettes all over the world.

For the Philippines, local chapter UP ACM paid gracious host to the historic event at the College of Engineering Theater, University of the Philippines - Diliman, on August 23, 6 to 7:50AM Philippine time. UP ACM members and UP Diliman Department of Computer Science faculty were in attendance.

After Eduardo Glandt, Dean of UPenn’s School of Engineering and Applied Science, kicked off the event, ACM President David Patterson gave an overview of ACM, its distinguished history, its stature as the world’s first and largest society for computing, and the “Nobel Prize of Computer Science”, the A.M. Turing Award.

Patterson then wasted no time in introducing the night’s main attractions — Vinton Cerf and Robert Kahn, recipients of the 2004 A.M. Turing Award and developers of the TCP/IP architecture, which basically allows the existence of the Internet and should be showered by ‘hallelujahs’ from Net addicts the world over.

“Vint” Cerf and “Bob” Kahn presented their lecture as what most (lay)men would call a “geeky” chat (I’d prefer “intellectual” conversation) between them, with ACM SIGCOMM Chairman Lyman Chapin moderating the talk. The wizardly duo proved to be engaging speakers, displaying the wit which absolutely made the lecture a lot lot more entertaining than I believe it should’ve been. (After all, academic lectures are meant to inform, not entertain.)

Several key points in the lecture which this relatively computer networks neophyte found to be interesting:

* Layering, while a very effective implementation strategy, isn’t exactly a fundamental requirement for networks. Also, the Open Systems Interconnection (OSI) architecture’s distinct lack of an Internet layer was mentioned by the speakers. Ah, the good ol’ OSI vs. TCP/IP match-up…

* The end-to-end nature of TCP/IP spawned a lot of creativity. It allowed P2P connections, for example, to flourish, because the two endpoints need only to know what the heck they’re trying to accomplish, never mind the medium between them. Cerf also touched on his idea of “the Edge” of the Net.

* SIGCOMM Chair Chapin broached the idea that innovation can spawn from any point, whether it’s from “the Edge” or from different interfaces.

* The environment/structure of the Internet today doesn’t allow for a big architectural change to occur, unlike the research environment of the past (uh, sandbox mode, anyone?). Nowadays it isn’t the logical structure of the Net which is being thoroughly understood by people — it’s the business models.

* Cerf and Kahn were one in stating their idea of “creeping incrementalism”; the Internet is incrementally evolvable and improvable. Kahn also expressed his belief that even incremental change can be very hard to attain in a distributed system. The mobile nature of today’s networks were also contrasted against the fixed terminals of the old, thus illustrating the need for file persistence.

* Kahn gave an analogy with Physics: like in Computer Science, the Physics timeline has key points where major upheavals had occured. The good ideas behind these upheavals not only needed to be damn good, but were strongly backed up by credibility.

* Other trains of thought were on “uniqueness and commonality”, and interplanetary Internet (oh yeah, baby).

After a standing ovation signified the end of the lecture, an open forum took place. Several interesting points raised:

* After being asked, “Is there a way to shut down the Internet?” (analogous to the emergency situation of shutting down a nuclear power plant going critical), Kahn responded that we have no compelling reason to suddenly put the entire Net in the freezer. Not his exact words, but you get my drift.

* The speakers expressed their belief that the “Everything is connected!” nature of the Net works both ways — it has a good side and a bad side. The latter rears its ugly head when organizations want to isolate parts of their own networks from the whole (e.g. internal networks). This is one of the driving reasons for the proliferation of Virtual Private Networks (VPNs).

* Kahn issued a challenge to the audience: Throw away the basics of Computer Science (yes, those early stuff you get to learn in BS CS). Can you identify the really major ideas that have popped out in the recent roll of years?

A second (and well-deserved) standing ovation marked the lecture’s conclusion, with everybody ending up a lot more geeky and brighter. Count me in as one of those guys. Truly, an informative session.

And of course, UP ACM didn’t fail to take care of its ranks, providing free food delivered hot straight from Jollibee. Boo-yeah!

Here’s one looking forward to the next ACM Webcast!

[Watch out for a possible re-run of the Turing Lecture Webcast (recorded) in the upcoming Gee!CS event of the Department this September 14, 2005.]

Perl-Python-PHP Knowledge Sharing Session

Tuesday, August 16th, 2005

http://p3.upacm.org

The Association for Computing Machinery - UP Student Chapter (UP ACM), in collaboration with the UP Linux Users’ Group (UnPLUG) and UP Computer Center, will hold a FREE tutorial on the programming languages Perl, Python, and PHP. This is OPEN TO ALL interested parties.

When:
24 August 2005, 12:00pm - 6:00pm
PHP, 12:00pm - 2:00pm
Python, 2:00pm - 4:00pm
Perl, 4:00pm - 6:00pm

Where: 1st floor UP Computer Center, UPAE Building, University of the Philippines - Diliman, Quezon City

Course Outline

* Language Basics
o overview
o variables
o operators
o loop control
o conditionals
o data structures/types
o functions/procedures/methods

* HTML Forms
o overview
o POST and GET
o form creation
o form processing

* File Interaction
o open/close operations
o reading/writing
o permissions

Only 20 slots are available per language. Registration is on a first-come first-serve basis.

For reservations, you can post a comment on this entry, or contact:
Ardee Aram ardee.aram@gmail.com
Waldemar Bautista waldemarbautista@gmail.com

or go to

http://p3.upacm.org

The 2005 ACM Turing Lecture Live Webcast

Monday, August 15th, 2005

For all members of UP ACM and the faculty of UP Diliman’s College of Engineering:

The Association for Computing Machinery - University of the Philippines Student Chapter (UP ACM) will be holding for the first time the live webcast of the ACM Alan M. Turing Award Lecture at the ACM SIGCOMM 2005 (Data Communications Conference) delivered at the Irvine Auditorium, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.

Vinton G. Cerf and Robert E. Kahn, recipients of the 2004 A.M.Turing Award and pioneers of the Internet, will lecture on “Assessing the Internet: Lessons Learned, Strategies for Evolution, and Future Possibilities.”

The Turing Award, named after the British mathematician considered to be one of the fathers of modern computer science, is dubbed as the “Nobel Prize of Computing.”

ACM, through its award-winning Philippine Chapter, UP ACM, in partnership with the Department of Computer Science, will be sponsoring this rare event here in the College of Engineering. Since the lecture will begin in the US at 6:00 PM Eastern Standard Time on August 22, 2005, we will be able to view the webcast live at 6:00 AM, August 23, 2005 here in the Philippines. Tentative event venue will be the College of Engineering Theater. Refreshments will be provided to all attendees who make reservations on or before Friday, August 19, 2005.

The official press release on the 2004 Turing Award from ACM International can be found here.

For more information about the Turing lecture and the live webcast, please visit this link.

Read more about the A. M. Turing Award.

Brought to you by the UP ACM Executive Council.

UP Diliman ICT Roadshow 2005

Monday, August 8th, 2005

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ICT ROADSHOW 2005
UP Diliman
College of Engineering (Melchor Hall), 3rd Floor, August 9-11 2005

presented by:

PC Buyer’s Guide
UP Diliman Department of Computer Science (DCS)
UP Parser, Official Student Publication of the DCS
UP Association of Computer Science Majors (UP CURSOR)
CS Representatives 05-06
Association for Computing Machinery - UP Student Chapter (UP ACM)
UP Linux Users’ Group (UnPLUG)

Three days jampacked with Exhibits and Symposia on exciting ICT Trends and Technologies!
Freebies to be claimed, and prizes to be won!

ICT Roadshow
Main Event
August 10, 2005

7:30 AM to 8:30 AM - Registration*
8:30 AM to 9:00 AM - Opening Ceremonies (Invocation and National Anthem)
9:00 AM to 9:45 AM - Government Initiatives on CICT (Dondi Mapa, CICT Commissioner)
9:45 AM to 10:00 AM - New Gadgets 1 (Epson)
10:00 AM to 10:30 AM - Open Source (TBA) / Talk (Dr. Jaime Caro, UP AVP for Development)
10:30 AM to 11:00 AM - Piracy (TBA)
11:00 AM to 11:15 AM - New Gadgets 2 (Redwood)
11:15 AM to 11:45 AM - New Cellphones and 3G Services (TBA)
11:45 AM TO 12:00 AM - New Gadgets 3 (Microdata)

12:00 PM to 1:00 PM Break

1:00 PM to 1:30 PM - Broadband Intenet Access/VoIP (Richard Dequiña)
1:30 PM to 1:45 PM - New Gadgets 4 (TBA)
1:45 PM to 2:15 PM - E-commerce/Blogging Trends and Issues (Janette Torral, Executive Director, DigitalFilipino)
2:15 PM to 2:30 PM - New Gadgets 5 (TBA)
2:30 PM to 3:00 PM - How to Get Hired as an IT Professional (Roselyn Santos)
3:00 PM to 3:15 PM - New Gadgets 6 (TBA)
3:15 PM to 4:00 PM - Call Centers (Selwyn Alojipan)

*registration is open all day

For inquiries, contact Phillip Kimpo Jr. (09172779456, pykimpo@gmail.com), Geo Lubaton (09154017953, gclubaton@gmail.com), or Ia Lucero (09202974104, sofimi@gmail.com)

The Halalan Convention

Tuesday, June 28th, 2005

Ibahin mo ang kabataan.

Even if the government wasn’t able to implement an automated voting system for the national elections, students of UP Diliman are ready to prove that they can computerize their own university elections.

Presenting…Halalan: Ograsiah!, courtesy of the UP Linux Users’ Group (UnPLUG).

Anyone who’s interested can drop by the Halalan Convention on Thursday. Here’s the official press release of UnPLUG, freely lifted from Prem’s weblog:

The University of the Philippines Linux Users’ Group (UnPLUG)
presents

The Halalan Convention

A public consultation on the specifications of the new Halalan (codename: Ograsiah!), next year’s mobile-based voting system

this 30th of June, 2005
at the National Engineering Center Audio-Visual Room (AVR),
University of the Philippines, Diliman, Quezon City
1-4pm

If you want to contribute to Halalan’s design, please come. This is a special call to all UP parties, organizations, fraternities, sororities, etc.

The University of the Philippines Linux Users’ Group (UnPLUG) is a duly recognized student organization dedicated in promoting the use of Free and Open Source Software (FOSS) and in advocating its philosophy through seminars, trainings, and software development.

In line with our purpose, we will be holding a convention, entitled “The Halalan Convention”, to allow the whole UP Community to participate in the drafting of the specification of the new Halalan codenamed “Ograsiah!” and to answer different issues the UP Community might want to raise about it. Halalan is an open-source voting system designed for student elections. It aims to automate the manual processes of elections such as counting, archiving and voting. It is designed to be lightweight, portable and secure.