Recent News & Accomplishments

 2013

LeafSnap app screensho (14839)
Amateur botany just got easier with the LeafSnap application, one of the top 10 science apps. The first of the revolutionary nature-guide mobile apps mentioned in a recent New York Times article, Computer Science Department Professor David Jacob’s impressive LeafSnap app allows anyone to identify flora with their mobile phones.  read more
photo of Jon Katz (14834)
Professor Jonathan Katz has been named Director of the Maryland Cybersecurity Center (MC2) for a three year term. Katz is an international leader in cryptography, secure communication and authentication protocols, and game-theoretic analysis of cryptographic systems. He has an outstanding publication record with over 100 papers in conferences and 20 papers in journals. Out of these, over 25 papers havereceived more than 100 citations each. In addition, he has co-authored the best-selling textbook “Introduction to Modern Cryptography” that has beenadopted for cryptography courses at over 50...  read more
The Department has announced several openings at all ranks for tenure-track faculty positions effective July 1, 2014 or earlier. For more information, visit https://www.cs.umd.edu/job/2013/f0004075-tenure-track-faculty . To view all employment opportunities, visit https://www.cs.umd.edu/about/employment/all .  read more
Terrapin Hackers team (14827)
The Terrapin Hackers, a dynamic group of over 150 Computer Science, Engineering and other students from the University of Maryland have claimed first place in the Major League Hacker Standings.  read more
CBCB researchers Héctor Corrada Bravo, Joseph Paulson, and Mihai Pop together with their colleague O. Colin Stine from the University of Maryland School of Medicine publish a new statistical package for performing differential analysis in metagenomic data. The new package, metagenomeSeq, implemented as part of the Bioconductor package, appeared today in as advanced online publication in the journal Nature Methods. This package addresses several challenges specific to metagenomic data, including the high level of sparsity due to insufficient sequence coverage, and provides accurate and robust...  read more
Professor Ben Bederson was recently quoted by the Baltimore Business Journal (subscription required) for an article about Massively Open Online Courses (MOOCs). Bederson's involvement in the recent Coursera collaboration with Vanderbilt University was also mentioned.  read more
The 1st Annual Silver Spring Maker Faire was recently held on September 29. Jon Froehlich was selected as one of the event's four "Inventors in our Midst". His research focused on interactive technology, sustainability, computer accessibility, and personalized health and wellness was highlighted. Maker Faire Program: http://caralesser.files.wordpress.com/2013/09/ssmmf_program_final_lr.pdf  read more
In the symbolic launch of a five-year initiative to transform undergraduate computer science education at the University of Maryland College Park, Professor Emeritus Bill Pugh has pledged to make a $500,000 donation, seed money for a $1 million fund to help use technology to innovate in the classroom.  read more
Descriptive Image for Bill Pugh Receives ACM/IEEE Supercomputing
Emeritus Professor Bill Pugh has received the first ACM/IEEE Supercomputing "Test of Time" award for his paper in Supercomputing 91: "The Omega test: a fast and practical integer programming algorithm for dependence analysis". The paper was selected from all the papers published at the Supercomputing conference between 1988 (the first Supercomputing conference) and 2003. This is the first time the award has been granted, in celebration of Supercomputing's 25th anniversary. Bill will receive the award and give an award talk at Supercomputing 2013 on November 21st. The “Test of Time” award...  read more
android robot mascot in front of easel with mobile phone (14657)
UMD and Vanderbilt University will introduce a significant, new wrinkle in Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs) next year – a two-part, two-semester collaboration offered through Coursera. It begins with Maryland faculty and concludes with Vanderbilt's. "Programming Handheld Systems with Android," will be taught by Professor Adam Porter. Then, the sequence continues with Vanderbilt computer science professor Douglas Schmidt and electrical and computer engineering professor Jules White, who will teach "Pattern-Oriented Software Architecture." This will focus on connecting mobile applications to...  read more