Hi all,
0. This week
------------
Great turnout to the EA talk. I hope you all enjoyed it. Phil, Harvey
and Ian all asked me to mention that if you have any other questions for
them, or happen to be going to the area and want to look around the EA
building, you're welcome to get in touch with them. I have their email
addresses, so drop me a line if you want them. If enough (but not too
many) people are interested, a group of Compsoccers (is that a word?)
could all go down at the same time for a tour and to talk to other EA
people at some point in the future. Again, throw email at me if you're
up for that.
On a related note, Tom Holden sent me the following before the talk:
I worked for EA for a year (now doing postgrad). If any [Compsoc]
members are serious about going into the games industry I'm happy to
give them a slightly different perspective to what I'd imagine
they'd get at that talk.
If you're interested, once again, let me know. He'll send out a mass
email when I've gathered addresses. (I meant to mention this before or
at the talk, but forgot; sorry Tom!)
1. Next week
------------
On Monday, we have Jon Masters from Red Hat talking about the modular
nature of the Linux kernel; in particular, how this helps make porting
the kernel to new platforms easy. This should be an accessible talk,
despite the subject matter, so don't feel put off if you're unfamiliar
with kernel programming and so on.
Venue: Comlab, room 051
Date: Monday 23rd October
Time: 20.00
http://oxford.openguides.org/wiki/?Computing_Laboratory has some
information about Comlab (in case you're not familiar with it). There
is a door into the basement to the left of the door into the main
reception, which we will be using.
Also, some of you might be interested to know that LinuxWorld Expo is in
London on Wednesday 25th and Thursday 26th next week. (In fact, this is
why Jon is able to speak to us next week despite living in the US!) I
know that a few Compsoccers are going along. It's fairly
enterprise-focused (although there is an area of non-corporate stands),
but should be fun. Entry is _free_ if you register on the Expo
website[0] by midnight _today_, so act quickly! You don't have to go to
both days, or all of either day.
[0] http://www.linuxworldexpo.co.uk/
(Yay, I've just noticed that the Tux Games people will be there.)
I should go now. There are old friends and pizza next door!
wjt
--
Will Thompson, Oxford University Computer Society President
<http://www.ox.compsoc.net/>
Greetings, people of Compsoc!
Firstly, good to see a bunch of you at the OUCS tour today. Michael
took a few photos --- they'll be on the net soon.
Okay, this is going to be a long enough email to warrant a table of
contents. I apologise in advance. You're allowed to skim-read it. :-)
0. Electronic Arts talk on Thursday
1. Mailing lists: compsoc-jobs and compsoc-discuss
2. Scientific Society: Computer Vision and the Geometry of Nature
3. An aside about spam
4. Oxford Student Publications seeking technical staff
5. IBM Student Mainframe Contest
6. Outro
0. Electronic Arts talk on Thursday
-----------------------------------
Computer Games Development
Date: Thursday 19th October
Time: 20:00
Location: Keble College, Pusey Room (off Pusey Quad)
A senior engineer from Electronic Arts will present on what he does
on a day to day basis as far as developing on next gen consoles
(i.e. Nintendo Wii etc.) and also gaming career opportunities for
CS grads. In addition, Harvey Wheaton (Senior Development Director)
will show some of what EA are doing with the Harry Potter franchise
and give some insight as to what a development director does.
Want a handy map of Keble? http://www.keble.ox.ac.uk/tour/index.php
Apparently, http://www.keble.ox.ac.uk/support/getimage.php?id=49 was
taken from the lodge, and the Pusey Room is up the staircase a third of
the way from the left edge of the photo. There'll be someone at the
lodge to meet people just before 20.00.
1. Mailing lists: compsoc-jobs and compsoc-discuss
--------------------------------------------------
Later this week, we're going to be (re)creating two mailing lists:
compsoc-jobs and compsoc-discuss.
We receive a lot of emails from companies asking us to advertise
vacancies, graduate career events and so on. A separate mailing list,
compsoc-jobs, will allow us to send them on to those of you who want
them, while not irritating those who don't. Only the committee will be
able to post to it: companies/advertisers will go through us. There are
a couple of items towards the end of this mailing list that really
belong on that list, but I'm including them here to clear the backlog.
compsoc-discuss will just be for general discussion among compsoc
members and followers, so will be open to unmoderated posts by anyone
subscribed to the list (which we'll ensure is (mostly) a subset of
Compsoc members and those subscribed to compsoc-announce). Again, it'll
be opt-in so that those of you who don't want to get that discussion,
uh, won't.
We'll mass-invite everyone who is on compsoc-members or compsoc-announce
to both when we create them. If you don't want to be on one or both
lists, you can just ignore the relevant invitation and nothing more will
appear in your inbox.
We're not sure how much use -discuss will see. That's up to you. Time
will tell. :-)
2. Scientific Society: Computer Vision and the Geometry of Nature
-----------------------------------------------------------------
I was asked by the Scientific Society to pass this on. It looks like it
might interest some of you. I attended a lecture on something similar
last year, and it was awesome.
Computer Vision and the Geometry of Nature
Dr. Andrew Fitzgibbon
Date: Wednesday 18th October 2006
Time: 8:15pm
Location: Inorganic Chemistry Lecture theatre on South Parks Road
Map: http://users.ox.ac.uk/~science/sci_map.gif
Free to Scientific Society members; £2 for anyone else.
Computer vision is the search for mathematical models and algorithms
which can explain and emulate the tremendous visual abilities that
most of us rarely notice we possess: we can easily recognize
thousands of objects, follow complicated movements, and almost
subconsciously build a three dimensional view of the world through
stereo vision.
When a camera captures a movie of some scene in the world, the rich
visual complexity of the scene is not lost - we can still enjoy the
images and recognize the film's contents - but the visual patterns
are translated to complex numerical arrangements which current
mathematics and statistics strives to represent and understand.
Although science is far from having a complete understanding of the
processes of vision, the last decade has seen applications of
artificial vision move out of the lab into the real world.
The talk will talk mainly be about the use of computer vision in
obtaining a 3D representation of the world, and the application of
these techniques to cinematic special effects in movies such as the
"Harry Potter" and "Lord of the Rings" series.
The lecture will begin by looking at some aspects of the human
visual system, trying to answer the question of whether it is even
reasonable to expect to emulate human vision without first building
an artificial intelligence: "Is vision AI-hard?".
Several classic experiments which suggest that not all tasks require
AI. Applications where these tasks arise will be considered, for
example robot navigation and special effects and show how a
combination of engineering and geometry gives us reliable solutions
in real scenes. After looking at how a man- made world simplifies
the solutions to these problems.
Dr. Andrew Fitzgibbon has twice received the IEEE's Marr Prize, the
highest in computer vision; and software based on his work won an
Engineering Emmy Award in 2002 for significant contributions to the
creation of complex visual effects.
He studied Mathematics and Computer Science at University College
Cork and at Heriot-Watt University, and received his PhD from
Edinburgh University in 1997. Until June 2005 he held a Royal
Society University Research Fellowship at Oxford University's
Department of Engineering Science, and at New College, Oxford and
presently is a Senior Researcher at Microsoft Research Cambridge.
3. An aside about spam
----------------------
A few people mentioned that a spam titled "chuffautocratbluish" reached
compsoc-members on Sunday. That's entirely my fault: sorry. I ticked
the wrong box when confirming that my own mail to the list _wasn't_
spam.
4. Oxford Student Publications seeking technical staff
------------------------------------------------------
Oxford Student Publications Limited (OSPL), publishers of Cherwell
and ISIS, are looking for new technical staff. With an annual
turnover of nearly £90,000 OSPL is one of the most exciting student
companies in Oxford. New staff can expect to gain invaluable
communication and organisational skills and we welcome applications
from students of all levels of technical expertise. Most new staff
will be set a short-term 'project', whereby OSPL will present you
with one of its ongoing problems, which we will give you
responsibility to complete according to how you see fit. Previous
technical staff have gone on to become Editors of both Cherwell,
Cherwell24, Mays Anthologies, and being a member of the Board of
Directors. Please contact Josh Sasto on chairman(a)ospl.org for more
details.
5. IBM Student Mainframe Contest
--------------------------------
IBM UK are running a competition involving students working with
mainframes (which is cunningly called the UK Student Mainframe Contest)
this autumn:
The main idea of the contest is to try and give current students,
with no mainframe experience, some appreciation of the platform
through a series of "hands-on" exercises. If the lure of using the
technology with a chance to enhance your CV isn't a big enough
incentive to take part, then there are also a series of prizes that
you can win along the way:
Part 1 - a few hundred IBM Mainframe t-shirts
Part 2 - 25 Sony PSPs
Part 3 - 3 Lenovo Thinkpads and a trip to Hursley
It looks like it might be good fun. I spoke to some students who worked
with System Z over the summer, and they said that they had completely
different challenges and experiences to what they would gain by writing
C++ to be run on x86 machines, or similar.
There's some more information on the contest wobsite[1]. It's already
started, but entry has not closed. IBM also provided a presentation[1]
and a poster[2]. (I had some problems viewing the poster. If you're a
Linux user, try xpdf or gpdf rather than evince, which displays a blank
page. On other platforms, you're on your own!)
[0] http://www-03.ibm.com/systems/uk/z/mainframecontest/
[1] http://www.ox.compsoc.net/ibm_mainframe/presentation.pdf
[2] http://www.ox.compsoc.net/ibm_mainframe/poster.pdf
6. Outro
--------
Okay, this was even longer than I anticipated. Sorry about that.
Enough! Time to leave the house!
See you on Thursday,
wjt
--
Will Thompson, Oxford University Computer Society President
<http://www.ox.compsoc.net/>
Hi all,
Thanks to everyone who gave up a night of the ever-busy first week of
term to come to the pub with Compsoc --- the turnout was great, and fun
was had. (I hope!)
Right, onwards to second week. There are two events for your attending
pleasure this week! The first was not on your termcards, but it's on
the wobsite:
Tour of OUCS
============
When? Tuesday 17th October, 18.00.
Where? OUCS, Banbury Road.
A tour of the University Computing services, with a chance to see
the computers that run the network, some shiny bits of networking
kit, and meet the people who keep it all running smoothly.
I particularly like the existence of a machine named
"poke-it-with-a-stick". (I hope they haven't got rid of it since last
year. That would disappoint me.) It's surprisingly good fun to see
what exactly powers Herald and kin. You should come along.
We're meeting at the reception of OUCS for 18.00. If you need
directions, http://www.oucs.ox.ac.uk/about/travel.xml should help.
Computer Games Development
==========================
When? Thursday 19th October, 20:00.
Where? Keble College (to be confirmed).
A senior engineer from Electronic Arts will present on what he does
on a day to day basis as far as developing on next gen consoles
(i.e. Nintendo Wii etc.) and also gaming career opportunities for CS
grads. In addition, Harvey Wheaton (Senior Development Director)
will show some of what EA are doing with the Harry Potter franchise
and give some insight as to what a development director does.
I'm told that they might bring some free stuff to give away. I like
free stuff.
I'll let you know the venue for certain soon!
The observant among you may have noticed another extra talk on
http://www.ox.compsoc.net/events/termcards/current/ compared to the
draft termcards we gave out at the fair. For those of you who didn't,
Murray Stokely of Google is coming to speak in week seven. Add it to
your diary with the rest of the events!
Right, that's enough from me. I think I'll slide back into the ethereal
shadows of the Internet...
wjt
--
Will Thompson, Oxford University Computer Society President
<http://www.ox.compsoc.net/>
Hi,
Firstly, to all those who joined the mailing list at Freshers' Fair,
welcome! I hope that we've arranged events that interest you. (If not,
let us know what you'd like to see instead.)
This Thursday, we're meeting at the Lamb and Flag (a pub on St Giles')
at 20.00. This is a chance for freshers (and others new to Compsoc) to
meet existing members and find out about the society. We'll be there
all evening, so drop by whenever you're free. We shouldn't be too hard
to find. :-)
Google map for the Lamb and Flag:
http://maps.google.co.uk/maps?q=OX1+3JS&spn=0.005,0.02&hl=en
Oxford Guide page on the Lamb and Flag:
http://oxford.openguides.org/wiki/?Lamb_And_Flag
See you there!
Also, if you didn't get a draft termcard at the fair, you can check out
http://www.ox.compsoc.net/events/termcards/current/ for the most
up-to-date list of events. I should probably take this opportunity to
mention an error on the draft: Thursday 8th November doesn't actually
exist, and in fact Andy Stanford-Clark's talk in fifth week is on
Wednesday 8th. (Thanks to the several people who pointed this out. The
worst thing is that I originally tried to arrange the talk for Wednesday
7th.)
I'm off to drink honey and lemon tea. I appear to have freshers' flu
despite not being a fresher. It's a cruel world...
wjt
--
Will Thompson, Oxford University Computer Society President
<http://www.ox.compsoc.net/>