Hi there,
We forgot one thing: to register for the G-Research Coding Challenge, please
email graduates(a)gresearch.co.uk detailing whether you are registering as an
individual or a team and, if you have any, what dietary requirements you
have.
See you then!
Edward Hart
President - Oxford University Computer Society
president(a)ox.compsoc.net
On Mon, 26 Nov 2018 at 17:22, Joe Gardiner <secretary(a)ox.compsoc.net> wrote:
> Good evening, CompSoc!
>
> And a merry (belated) Oxmas to you all. This upcoming Wednesday is the
> final event of term: a *coding challenge* with Silver sponsor *G-Research*!
> See below for details.
>
> The trip to Bletchley Park and TNMoC yesterday (two days ago) went very
> well! A huge thank you to everyone who was able to make it.
>
> Ed’s going to be in Oxford these next three weeks, so there’ll be an
> unofficial Geek Night running as normal this Saturday for anyone who’s
> still around!
>
> Good evening, CompSoc.
>
> *The CompSoc Committee - Joe G, Edward H, Ben S*
> Events
>
> *G-Research Coding Challenge*
> <https://www.facebook.com/events/351205168786461/> - 6:30 pm 28th
> November, UGSA, Department of Computer Science
>
> This challenge is for Computer Sciences/Computer Sciences + Maths students
> in any year of your degree.
>
> The challenge - Building a natural language processing engine!
>
> A series of increasingly difficult challenges based on small teams or
> individuals, building a natural language calculation engine. The challenges
> will cover aspects such as evaluation of arithmetic expressions to unit
> conversions and equation solving. Decided by a point system, prizes will be
> given to groups who come 1st and 2nd place. There will be food and
> refreshments provided. We will allocate teams when you arrive, you don’t
> need to find a team beforehand, you are welcome to work alone or bring your
> own team if you like.
>
> Languages for the challenges - .NET Core 2, Java and Maven or Python 3
> with client starter kits provided when you login. Any coding background is
> welcome.
>
> Please also bring a laptop per team.
> ------------------------------
> Sponsor Notices
>
> *The following notices are from Semmle.*
>
> Thank you very much to the CompSoc committee for hosting me and my
> colleagues for the talk and hackathon at the beginning of term, and thank
> you to those that came. It was great to talk to you about finding variants
> of security vulnerabilities by writing program analyses as queries.
>
> If any of you are interested in more examples of variant analysis, or
> missed the talk, one of our security researchers recently published an
> account of how he found a “ping of death” style vulnerability in XNU (the
> kernel of macOS, iOS, and watchOS):
>
> https://lgtm.com/blog/apple_xnu_icmp_error_CVE-2018-4407
>
> Thanks again, and if any of you are looking for an internship or job,
> Semmle is always hiring <http://semmle.com/careers>.
> [image: Semmle logo]Semmle logo
>
> Have you always wanted to be a security researcher? Are you a big believer
> in open source? Do you love program analysis and compilers? Do you have a
> knack for machine learning and data science?
>
> If any or all of the above apply to you then you definitely need to drop
> us a message about an internship or career at Semmle!
>
> Based around the world and in the centre of Oxford, we’re the team behind
> LGTM.com and the QL query technology for variant analysis. By crunching
> millions of commits from over 100,000 open source repositories, we’ve
> uncovered critical security vulnerabilities in the Apple kernel, Apache
> code (including Hadoop and Struts), the Microsoft Edge browser, Spring, and
> many other codebases. The full list of CVEs is here:
> https://lgtm.com/security/disclosures
>
> We’re always looking for security researchers, compiler engineers, UX
> designers, ML/DM experts, software engineers, and developer advocates.
> Talent and enthusiasm are much more important to us than experience! We
> have a large team of talented people (including many from Oxford) who will
> support you from day one.
>
> Interested? Have a look at https://semmle.com/careers and drop us a line
> on careers(a)semmle.com. You’re very welcome to join us for lunch any day
> (or drinks on Friday evening) and a game of pool, foosball, or table
> tennis! Want to try out our tech first? Have a look at https://lgtm.com,
> and don’t forget to check out the blog: https://lgtm.com/blog.
>
> *The following notice is from JP Morgan.*
>
> *Featured Program:*
>
> *2019 Tech Connect Program - Full-time - Bournemouth & Glasgow*
>
> Launch your career with Tech Connect, a program tailor-made for aspiring
> software engineers without backgrounds in computer science.
>
> Our global team of 50,000 technologists creates the technical innovations
> that fuel our firm’s future – and yours. We need diverse and bright minds
> to help bring us fresh perspectives and innovative thinking.
>
> Are you interested in coding but haven’t studied it before? If so, we
> created our Tech Connect program for motivated students, like you, who want
> to learn how to code and are interested in becoming a part of our
> Technology business.
>
> Find out how technology drives our business and impacts the lives of
> customers, clients and businesses around the world. Visit our website to
> discover more.
>
> http://www.jpmorgan.com/techconnect
>
> Application deadlines:
>
> - EMEA Application Deadline – November 25 2018
>
> Register: http://www.jpmorgan.com/careers
>
> We look forward to seeing how far your thinking can go.
>
> The J.P. Morgan Campus Recruitment Team
> ------------------------------
> Other Notices Idea Exploration - Building the ecosystem around the
> business
>
> 26th November 18.00-20.00, The Oxford Foundry
>
> This workshop, delivered by Katrina Cruz from Anthemis
> <https://www.anthemis.com/people/katrina-cruz/> will help you to
> understand WHY building a business ecosystem is so important in the early
> stages of developing an idea as well as WHO matters when it comes to
> helping you build a successful, resilient business from scratch.
>
> Katrina will also introduce the concept of the ‘network effect’ and help
> you to understand how you can harness the ‘network effect’, effectively.
>
> Link to sign up:
> https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/idea-exploration-building-the-ecosystem-arou…
> Mindfulness and Resilience
>
> 26th November 18.00-19.30, The Oxford Foundry
>
> Wondering how you could use mindfulness to boost your resilience?
>
> Mindfulness is a well-researched, non-religious and effective means of
> alleviating stress, anxiety and depression and further to this, enhancing
> personal and professional growth. This introductory workshop will introduce
> mindfulness – in theory, practice and research - and offer a few tips to
> keep you grounded and steady in the midst of a busy schedule. It will also
> focus specifically on how you can use the practise to help boost your
> resilience.
>
> Link to sign up:
> https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/mindfulness-and-resilience-tickets-505272664…
> Digital Design and Making: Get started with the tools!
>
> 27th November 18.00-21.00, The Oxford Foundry
>
> Join Robot Wars judge, and Guild of Makers founder, Dr Lucy Rogers at Make
> Oxford, one of the area’s best equipped creative spaces, for an evening of
> 3D printing, Laser cutting, micro:bit coding and a general convivial
> conversation about turning your ideas into physical prototypes! This
> session is suitable for attendees of earlier Make Oxford events, if you are
> looking for a potential place to carry out projects or just curious about
> entrepreneurial making.
>
> Link to sign up:
> https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/digital-design-and-making-get-started-with-t…
> Building Programmes with Python
>
> 28th November 18.00-21.00, The Oxford Foundry
>
> Do you have beginner experience in Python? Would you like an opportunity
> to practise your skills with the support of experienced coders?
>
> Join us at the Oxford Foundry where CodeSoc will be running a session
> which will give you the opportunity to build python programs from scratch.
> Come along and work through a python tutorial together, guided by members
> of CodeSoc. You can choose from building a tweetbot, automate email
> sending, a program to play web games, or writing personal schedulers!
>
> Link to sign up:
> https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/building-programmes-with-python-tickets-5295…
> ------------------------------
>
> The Oxford University Computer Society (CompSoc) aims to organise meetings
> and events for our members to use and further their computing interests.
> See all of our upcoming events on our Facebook Page
> <https://facebook.com/oxcompsoc/> or visit our Website
> <https://ox.compsoc.net> for more information about the society.
>
> Want to unsubscribe or manage your subscription preferences? Go to
> http://lists.ox.compsoc.net/mailman/listinfo/.
>
Good evening, CompSoc!
And a merry (belated) Oxmas to you all. This upcoming Wednesday is the
final event of term: a *coding challenge* with Silver sponsor *G-Research*!
See below for details.
The trip to Bletchley Park and TNMoC yesterday (two days ago) went very
well! A huge thank you to everyone who was able to make it.
Ed’s going to be in Oxford these next three weeks, so there’ll be an
unofficial Geek Night running as normal this Saturday for anyone who’s
still around!
Good evening, CompSoc.
*The CompSoc Committee - Joe G, Edward H, Ben S*
Events
*G-Research Coding Challenge*
<https://www.facebook.com/events/351205168786461/> - 6:30 pm 28th November,
UGSA, Department of Computer Science
This challenge is for Computer Sciences/Computer Sciences + Maths students
in any year of your degree.
The challenge - Building a natural language processing engine!
A series of increasingly difficult challenges based on small teams or
individuals, building a natural language calculation engine. The challenges
will cover aspects such as evaluation of arithmetic expressions to unit
conversions and equation solving. Decided by a point system, prizes will be
given to groups who come 1st and 2nd place. There will be food and
refreshments provided. We will allocate teams when you arrive, you don’t
need to find a team beforehand, you are welcome to work alone or bring your
own team if you like.
Languages for the challenges - .NET Core 2, Java and Maven or Python 3 with
client starter kits provided when you login. Any coding background is
welcome.
Please also bring a laptop per team.
------------------------------
Sponsor Notices
*The following notices are from Semmle.*
Thank you very much to the CompSoc committee for hosting me and my
colleagues for the talk and hackathon at the beginning of term, and thank
you to those that came. It was great to talk to you about finding variants
of security vulnerabilities by writing program analyses as queries.
If any of you are interested in more examples of variant analysis, or
missed the talk, one of our security researchers recently published an
account of how he found a “ping of death” style vulnerability in XNU (the
kernel of macOS, iOS, and watchOS):
https://lgtm.com/blog/apple_xnu_icmp_error_CVE-2018-4407
Thanks again, and if any of you are looking for an internship or job,
Semmle is always hiring <semmle.com/careers>.
[image: Semmle logo]Semmle logo
Have you always wanted to be a security researcher? Are you a big believer
in open source? Do you love program analysis and compilers? Do you have a
knack for machine learning and data science?
If any or all of the above apply to you then you definitely need to drop us
a message about an internship or career at Semmle!
Based around the world and in the centre of Oxford, we’re the team behind
LGTM.com and the QL query technology for variant analysis. By crunching
millions of commits from over 100,000 open source repositories, we’ve
uncovered critical security vulnerabilities in the Apple kernel, Apache
code (including Hadoop and Struts), the Microsoft Edge browser, Spring, and
many other codebases. The full list of CVEs is here:
https://lgtm.com/security/disclosures
We’re always looking for security researchers, compiler engineers, UX
designers, ML/DM experts, software engineers, and developer advocates.
Talent and enthusiasm are much more important to us than experience! We
have a large team of talented people (including many from Oxford) who will
support you from day one.
Interested? Have a look at https://semmle.com/careers and drop us a line on
careers(a)semmle.com. You’re very welcome to join us for lunch any day (or
drinks on Friday evening) and a game of pool, foosball, or table tennis!
Want to try out our tech first? Have a look at https://lgtm.com, and don’t
forget to check out the blog: https://lgtm.com/blog.
*The following notice is from JP Morgan.*
*Featured Program:*
*2019 Tech Connect Program - Full-time - Bournemouth & Glasgow*
Launch your career with Tech Connect, a program tailor-made for aspiring
software engineers without backgrounds in computer science.
Our global team of 50,000 technologists creates the technical innovations
that fuel our firm’s future – and yours. We need diverse and bright minds
to help bring us fresh perspectives and innovative thinking.
Are you interested in coding but haven’t studied it before? If so, we
created our Tech Connect program for motivated students, like you, who want
to learn how to code and are interested in becoming a part of our
Technology business.
Find out how technology drives our business and impacts the lives of
customers, clients and businesses around the world. Visit our website to
discover more.
http://www.jpmorgan.com/techconnect
Application deadlines:
- EMEA Application Deadline – November 25 2018
Register: http://www.jpmorgan.com/careers
We look forward to seeing how far your thinking can go.
The J.P. Morgan Campus Recruitment Team
------------------------------
Other NoticesIdea Exploration - Building the ecosystem around the business
26th November 18.00-20.00, The Oxford Foundry
This workshop, delivered by Katrina Cruz from Anthemis
<https://www.anthemis.com/people/katrina-cruz/> will help you to understand
WHY building a business ecosystem is so important in the early stages of
developing an idea as well as WHO matters when it comes to helping you
build a successful, resilient business from scratch.
Katrina will also introduce the concept of the ‘network effect’ and help
you to understand how you can harness the ‘network effect’, effectively.
Link to sign up:
https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/idea-exploration-building-the-ecosystem-arou…
Mindfulness and Resilience
26th November 18.00-19.30, The Oxford Foundry
Wondering how you could use mindfulness to boost your resilience?
Mindfulness is a well-researched, non-religious and effective means of
alleviating stress, anxiety and depression and further to this, enhancing
personal and professional growth. This introductory workshop will introduce
mindfulness – in theory, practice and research - and offer a few tips to
keep you grounded and steady in the midst of a busy schedule. It will also
focus specifically on how you can use the practise to help boost your
resilience.
Link to sign up:
https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/mindfulness-and-resilience-tickets-505272664…
Digital Design and Making: Get started with the tools!
27th November 18.00-21.00, The Oxford Foundry
Join Robot Wars judge, and Guild of Makers founder, Dr Lucy Rogers at Make
Oxford, one of the area’s best equipped creative spaces, for an evening of
3D printing, Laser cutting, micro:bit coding and a general convivial
conversation about turning your ideas into physical prototypes! This
session is suitable for attendees of earlier Make Oxford events, if you are
looking for a potential place to carry out projects or just curious about
entrepreneurial making.
Link to sign up:
https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/digital-design-and-making-get-started-with-t…
Building Programmes with Python
28th November 18.00-21.00, The Oxford Foundry
Do you have beginner experience in Python? Would you like an opportunity to
practise your skills with the support of experienced coders?
Join us at the Oxford Foundry where CodeSoc will be running a session which
will give you the opportunity to build python programs from scratch. Come
along and work through a python tutorial together, guided by members of
CodeSoc. You can choose from building a tweetbot, automate email sending, a
program to play web games, or writing personal schedulers!
Link to sign up:
https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/building-programmes-with-python-tickets-5295…
------------------------------
The Oxford University Computer Society (CompSoc) aims to organise meetings
and events for our members to use and further their computing interests.
See all of our upcoming events on our Facebook Page
<https://facebook.com/oxcompsoc/> or visit our Website
<https://ox.compsoc.net> for more information about the society.
Want to unsubscribe or manage your subscription preferences? Go to
http://lists.ox.compsoc.net/mailman/listinfo/.
Hello, CompSoc!
Goodness me! Is that the time? But what is time, and what does it taste
like? <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1dwu4iVA1yo>
It’s LAN Night tonight. We’ll be up late playing games of your choice.
Tomorrow is Film Night! Don’t forget to vote for a tech-y film you’d like
to see!
Gold sponsor *Semmle* have a notice for careers. If you’re into open
source, security and program analysis and compilers, do check them out!
Gold sponsor *JP Morgan* has dropped a reminder that the deadline for all
their intern and graduate applications is *25 November*, which is fast
approaching.
Silver sponsor *Ensoft* have done the same, with their deadline at *midnight
21 November*. Their opportunities include grad positions (£40k p.a.),
summer internships (£25k pro rata) and micro-internship this vac (£100 per
day).
Silver sponsor and startup builder *EF* have also done the same, with their
early application deadline *18 November*.
Discord. <https://discord.gg/xA9PFvy> Give your full name when join - most
of the channels are for members only.
Adieu, CompSoc.
*The CompSoc Committee - Joe G, Edward H, Ben S*
Events
*LAN Night* <https://www.facebook.com/events/899957480209674/> - 7:00 pm
16th November, UGSA (expect to stay very, very late!)
LAN Night returns to Fridays! (At least for this term.) We’re going to
perform our termly ritual of staying up all night and playing any sorts of
games of your choosing!
Bring your laptop, any game controllers and/or consoles, and we’ll provide
the nosh.
The Geek Night *directly after this* is a film night, to wash away the
fatigue of staying up all night playing LAN games.
*Geek Night 6: Film Night*
<https://www.facebook.com/events/1076012762567772/?event_time_id=10760127859…>
-
7:00 pm 17th November, LTA
Here’s a poll for what films we’re going to be watching.
<https://goo.gl/forms/CfNuVxXW11N76zWc2>
A list of things on the poll:
- Kung Fury
- Terminator
- The Matrix
- Hackers
- Ready, Player One
- TRON (the original!)
We aim to wash away the fatigue of a long, long LAN night from the night
before. Come, and watch a film in our very own beloved Lecture Theatre A.
We’ll provide the pizza, which may be consumed within the undergraduate
social area (eating pizza in a lecture theatre is not permitted).
We may watch some 1950s-60s films about computers, which could be
interesting too.
*Coding Pub Quiz with TPP*
<https://www.facebook.com/events/1983823405012224/> - 7:00 pm 21st
November, The Mitre pub, 17 High Street
TPP is excited to announce a Coding Challenge on Wednesday 21st November,
in collaboration with CompSoc!
Unlike a typical pub quiz, you’ll need to exercise your problem solving
skills to tackle the range of challenges set instead of applying your
general knowledge.
There will be free food and drinks, both soft and alcoholic, available for
attendees throughout the whole event. There will also be great prizes on
offer for the winning teams (Such as Raspberry Pi Computers and a Hotel
Chocolat hamper).
We recommend teams of about 5-6 people, but smaller groups are welcome too,
and if you’re unsure who to come with then we’ll be happy to match you up
with other keen problem solvers on the day. Some questions require specific
knowledge so you will want a programmer on your team!
Entry is free of charge and doesn’t require a ticket, so feel free to just
show up on the day!
*CS Essentials: Session 6*
<https://www.facebook.com/events/735287826805251/> - 7:00 pm 22nd November,
LTA
*This week’s session is the final session, and the second of a two-part
series on LaTeX!*
CS Essentials is a brand new course that CompSoc organises for beginners.
If you are into either exploring the Linux command line or learning how to
create a beautiful document using LaTeX, this is just the course for you!
You do not need any prior experience, just come along and have some fun!
All you need is a laptop to get through the exercises. What we will be
teaching is:
- basic and more advanced Linux commands;
- Bash scripting;
- Vim text editor;
- LaTeX.
If you need directions to the department, send us a message and we’ll be
more than happy to help!
The course is open to all members of the University of Oxford.
P.S. If you have any experience in any of the topics and a little spare
time, you can volunteer to help during the event.
*Bletchley Park Trip* <https://www.facebook.com/events/644067932656384/> -
9:00 am 24th November, Keble Road
CompSoc is visiting Bletchley Park, home of World War 2 codebreakers and of
the National Museum of Computing.
During World War 2, codebreakers including Alan Turing worked to defeat the
Enigma and Lorenz cyphers. For this, they developed Colossus, the world’s
first programmable, electronic digital computer, and Bombe, a huge
electro-mechanical computer to bruteforce Enigma. The work at Bletchley
Park was secret for many years, but is now thought to have shortened the
war by two years. The National Museum of Computing holds a huge range of
devices spanning the history of computing: from WITCH, the world’s oldest
working digital computer, to the sprawling ICL 2996 mainframe, to the
gallery of 80’s microcomputers you can play with. Also in Bletchley Park is
the National Radio Centre.
We have 50 spaces in total, *nearly all of which are filled*; CompSoc
members can go free, non-members can come for £10. Sign up now!
Our trip is generously supported by Silver sponsor Ensoft.
Transport and lunch will be provided!
Here’s a tentative schedule for the day:
- 09:00. Coach pick up outside the Computer Science Department on Keble
Road. Please arrive at least 15 minutes beforehand.
- 10:30. Arrive at Bletchley Park.
- 12:30. Lunch at the National Museum of Computing.
- 16:00. Coach pick up at Bletchley Park.
- 17:30. Arrive back at Keble Road.
We’ll let you know if any times change.
*Geek Night 7 - Oxmas Eve Turing wind-down*
<https://www.facebook.com/events/1076012762567772/?event_time_id=10760127825…>
-
7:00 pm 24th November, UGSA, Department of Computer Science
Since many of us will have spent a full day in Bletchley, this geek night
will be a very chill Oxmas wind-down, people are free to code or chat as
they please. If there’s anything anyone would particularly like to do,
please let us know!
Since we’ll be landing back right at the department from the Bletchley Park
trip,
Bring your laptops if you want to, pizza will commence as usual. We’ll also
be doing mince pies and various Oxmassy treats!
*G-Research Coding Challenge*
<https://www.facebook.com/events/351205168786461/> - 6:30 pm 28th November,
UGSA, Department of Computer Science
This challenge is for Computer Sciences/Computer Sciences + Maths students
in any year of your degree.
The challenge - Building a natural language processing engine!
A series of increasingly difficult challenges based on small teams or
individuals, building a natural language calculation engine. The challenges
will cover aspects such as evaluation of arithmetic expressions to unit
conversions and equation solving. Decided by a point system, prizes will be
given to groups who come 1st and 2nd place. There will be food and
refreshments provided. We will allocate teams when you arrive, you don’t
need to find a team beforehand, you are welcome to work alone or bring your
own team if you like.
Languages for the challenges - .NET Core 2, Java and Maven or Python 3 with
client starter kits provided when you login. Any coding background is
welcome.
Please also bring a laptop per team.
------------------------------
Sponsor Notices
*The following notice is from JP Morgan.*
Hello,
We just wanted to give you a reminder that the deadline for all JP Morgan
intern and graduate applications is 25 November 2018, and is fast
approaching. For more information on how to apply, as well as other helpful
job search hints, please visit our website
<http://careers.jpmorgan.com/student/jpmorgan/careers?jp_cmp=en/jpm_program_…>
.
We look forward to hearing from you soon.
The J.P. Morgan Campus Recruitment Team
*The following notice is from Semmle.*
[image: Semmle logo]Semmle logo
Have you always wanted to be a security researcher? Are you a big believer
in open source? Do you love program analysis and compilers? Do you have a
knack for machine learning and data science?
If any or all of the above apply to you then you definitely need to drop us
a message about an internship or career at Semmle!
Based around the world and in the centre of Oxford, we’re the team behind
LGTM.com and the QL query technology for variant analysis. By crunching
millions of commits from over 100,000 open source repositories, we’ve
uncovered critical security vulnerabilities in the Apple kernel, Apache
code (including Hadoop and Struts), the Microsoft Edge browser, Spring, and
many other codebases. The full list of CVEs is here:
https://lgtm.com/security/disclosures
We’re always looking for security researchers, compiler engineers, UX
designers, ML/DM experts, software engineers, and developer advocates.
Talent and enthusiasm are much more important to us than experience! We
have a large team of talented people (including many from Oxford) who will
support you from day one.
Interested? Have a look at https://semmle.com/careers and drop us a line on
careers(a)semmle.com. You’re very welcome to join us for lunch any day (or
drinks on Friday evening) and a game of pool, foosball, or table tennis!
Want to try out our tech first? Have a look at https://lgtm.com, and don’t
forget to check out the blog: https://lgtm.com/blog.
*The following notice is from Ensoft.*
We are a small UK company that writes software that connects the world. Our
70 engineers specialise in developing all aspects of networking software.
Ensoft-developed technology is a critical part of many of the largest
routers that make up the Internet.
Graduate positions available, September 2019, starting salary £40,000.
2019 summer internships, £25,000 pro-rata
Week-long micro-internship
<https://ensoft.us13.list-manage.com/track/click?u=8658f71b95ede053e3ff45ea9…>,
£100/day w/c Mon 3rd Dec 2018
To apply for any of these available positions, upload a CV here
<https://ensoft.us13.list-manage.com/track/click?u=8658f71b95ede053e3ff45ea9…>
by
midnight on Wednesday 7th week (21st Nov 18).
More details via our website
<https://ensoft.us13.list-manage.com/track/click?u=8658f71b95ede053e3ff45ea9…>
, Twitter
<https://ensoft.us13.list-manage.com/track/click?u=8658f71b95ede053e3ff45ea9…>
or Facebook
<https://ensoft.us13.list-manage.com/track/click?u=8658f71b95ede053e3ff45ea9…>
.
*The following notice is from EF.*
The early application deadline to join EF’s 11th cohort (beginning in April
2019) is on November 18th!
Entrepreneur First are Europe’s leading startup builder, and always looking
for innovative, talented individuals to support in building their first
technology company - they are especially really keen to bring in those who
haven’t previously considered founding their own startup, but who have
skills and enthusiasm and just need the right environment to flourish.
They’re also encouraging more women to apply, and try to narrow the gender
gap between male and female founders.
The uniqueness of EF comes from the fact that they build companies
pre-team, and pre-idea; they select individuals based on pure talent, then
work with them to develop teams, ideas, technology, and help them raise
funding. If this sounds like an opportunity which interests you then please
please apply and you could be building your startup with us in April 2019!
It’s a really exciting time to be at Entrepreneur First too, as they’ve
recently closed a $12.4 million round of funding, with LinkedIn founder
Reid Hoffman, and a handful of EF alumni from earlier cohorts also
investing, including the founders of Magic Pony Technology, who built the
company through EF and exited eighteen months later for $150 million.
Entrepreneur First is on the hunt for its next cohort of exceptional people
who are ready to become founders of their own deep-tech company. If you
have rare technical skills or deep industry experience, and want to build a
globally important tech company, we will help you build a company from
scratch - no need for an idea, just your skills, ambition and commitment.
The cohort starts in April 2019. To be fast-tracked through the Admissions
process, apply by this Sunday (18th Nov) https://lnkd.in/dY2W2nT. This
might be particularly relevant if you are finishing your PhD or recently
left university.
If you have any questions or want to get in touch with EF, send an email
over to ali(a)joinef.com. You can also find more details on the programme
here https://www.joinef.com/
------------------------------
Other Notices
*The following notice is from Oxford Foundry.*
*Idea Exploration: What is the value proposition?*
*19th November 18.00-20.00, The Oxford Foundry*
This workshop a part of the wider ‘Idea Exploration’ series focuses on step
one of that journey, and will help you work with your idea to gain an in
depth understanding of who your customer is. You have an idea and you have
a strong understanding of who your customer is. Having an in depth
understanding of the value you are adding to your customers is vital in
effectively communicating about your product or service.
Link to sign up:
https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/idea-exploration-what-is-the-value-propositi…
*The following notice regards a talk at St Catherine’s College, and is a
transcription of a poster describing such.*
Mathematics and its Applications: The Alan Tayler Lecture
*The Mathematics behind the AI Revolution*: Prof. Christopher Bishop,
Microsoft Research Cambridge.
- Monday 19 November, 5:00 pm.
- Bernard Sunley Theatre, St Catherine’s College
- Tea from 4:15 pm.
The Alan Tayler lecture is sponsored by the Smith Institute.
------------------------------
The Oxford University Computer Society (CompSoc) aims to organise meetings
and events for our members to use and further their computing interests.
See all of our upcoming events on our Facebook Page
<https://facebook.com/oxcompsoc/> or visit our Website
<https://ox.compsoc.net> for more information about the society.
Want to unsubscribe or manage your subscription preferences? Go to
http://lists.ox.compsoc.net/mailman/listinfo/.
Hello CompSoc,
Lately my emails sent from secretary(a)ox.compsoc.net have been going to everyone's Junk Email folders. Please check there to see vital info about upcoming events today and in the upcoming week - there are lots of them - and I've cc'd IT services here so that they can hopefully resolve this issue.
Regards,
Joe
*CAPTAIN’S LOG, NOVEMBER 10th, 2018*
Many days have passed. I don't know when the last time I saw daylight
was, but all I am certain of is that it is far too late to turn back.
There is no leaving this place.
I hear the corpses of RedCode warriors hurtling through space and I
pray that the Dread King of pMARS doesn't launch one of those foul,
impish crafts in my direction. I see them. They are wretched scum that
will speed by at full pelt, turning everything it meets into a copy of
itself. I pray that Dread King does not find me. Even if he doesn't...
the imps will. My DWARF unit covering my back can only hold up for so
long.
Wait. Here it comes. BRACE FOR IMPACT-
MOV 0 1
MOV 0 1
MOV 0 1
...
*END LOG.*
Today sees the return of Core Wars. Please familiarise yourself with the basics
of RedCode <http://vyznev.net/corewar/guide.html> - you’ll need them! In
the coming week, we’ve got a grand old Tech Talk in the Maths Institute
(L2) with the almighty *Silver sponsor, Google!* Please RSVP via their form.
<https://goo.gl/MjUnMB> The talk now has a title and abstract! We also have
the penultimate session of CS Essentials coming up, ending on a two-part
series on LaTeX, *LAN Night* on Friday, followed by *Film Night* on
Saturday! Make sure you get enough sleep early enough in the week ;) If you
scroll down a little, perhaps you’ll find a *poll* for which films people
want to see?
Silver sponsor *Ensoft* has a lecture coming up on Tuesday and a
micro-internship scheme you may be interested in. Check them out!
*The Bletchley trip sign-ups are all full and finalised now. Thanks for
signing up, hope people are looking forwards to a nice long trip in a
couple of weeks!* Silver sponsor Ensoft has long been a supporter of the
National Museum of Computing and its educational goals, which you can learn
about here.
<http://www.tnmoc.org/news/news-releases/ensoft-boosts-learning-opportunitie…>
Here’s the link to our Discord, because you’re worth it.
<https://discord.gg/xA9PFvy> Give me your full name when you’re in. Members
get full member access.
DEPLOYING FIGHTERS…
*The CompSoc Committee - Joe G, Edward H, Ben S*
Events
*Geek Night 5: Core War*
<https://www.facebook.com/events/1076012762567772/?event_time_id=10760127792…>
-
7:00 pm 10th November, Undergraduate Social Area, Department of Computer
Science
This is the best thing ever. No really, it is.
Core War <http://vyznev.net/corewar/guide.html> is a game played between
two or more programs written in Redcode, a low-level language similar to
assembly. Players write a program to eliminate all opponents in the memory
of the MARS virtual computer. Core War can also be used as a platform to
experiment with genetic programming. I *highly* recommend checking the link
as it contains a guide to the instruction set. Here’s another link
<https://www.corewars.org/information.html> to an information homepage.
The MARS (Memory Array Redcode Simulator) executes one instruction at a
time, proceeding to the next unless a JMP specified where to jump to.
Addresses are all relative, so an OpCode may not know where *specifically* it
is in memory, though it may affect, say, the Kth cell in front or behind it.
There are nineteen operations used in Redcode: DAT, MOV, ADD, SUB, MUL,
DIV, MOD, JMP, JMZ, JMN, DJN, SPL, CMP, SEQ, SNE, SLT, LDP, STP and NOP. An
instruction (OpCode) will be of the form OP A B, with A being the source
address and B being the target address.
To get the ball rolling, let’s take a look at the “Hello, world!” of this
thing, the *imp*:
MOV 0 1
This pesky little warrior will simply roll along the memory, overwriting
everything in its path with its own OpCode. MOV A B simply moves
instruction A to B. Since addressing is relative, it moves current
instruction to the next cell in memory, then the warrior’s instruction
pointer moves to that new instruction and repeats. It alone cannot
*kill* another
warrior, however. If an imp catches up to and overwrites the next
instruction another warrior was going to execute, then that will become an
imp, the whole memory will fill with MOV 0 1 and they’ll all continue to
run around the memory ad infinitum.
Boring right? Don’t you want to make a warrior who will win? Let’s take a
quick look at a simple warrior who can fight somewhat, the *dwarf*.
ADD #4, 3 ; execution begins here
MOV 2, @2
JMP -2
DAT #0, #0
If you think hard about what this is doing, you can see that it’s
essentially throwing a “DAT bomb” in increments of 4 in front of itself.
The idea is that if you can overwrite a part of someone’s warrior with a
DAT instruction, they’ll try to read it and terminate. The # symbol is used
for immediate addressing, and @ for indirect addressing. In fact, there are
eight such addressing modes.
Please read this - it’s vital to understanding this game!
<http://vyznev.net/corewar/guide.html>
Bring your laptops, get coding these brave warriors, and we’ll provide the
pizza!
*Tech talk with Google: Clean Coding at Google*
<https://www.facebook.com/events/273264239996714/> - 7:00 pm 14th November,
L2 Andrew Wiles Building
Why does “clean code” matter? Join us for this interactive workshop with
Peter, a software engineer at Google London, to learn about Google’s
approach to coding. We will explain what coding at Google is like, and
share best practices for coding to help you with your projects and
coursework, as well as with your internship and full-time engineering
futures.
Please RSVP here! https://goo.gl/MjUnMB
*CS Essentials: Session 5*
<https://www.facebook.com/events/735287826805251/> - 7:00 pm 15th November,
LTA
*This week’s session is the first of a two-part series on LaTeX!*
CS Essentials is a brand new course that CompSoc organises for beginners.
If you are into either exploring the Linux command line or learning how to
create a beautiful document using LaTeX, this is just the course for you!
You do not need any prior experience, just come along and have some fun!
All you need is a laptop to get through the exercises. What we will be
teaching is:
- basic and more advanced Linux commands;
- Bash scripting;
- Vim text editor;
- LaTeX.
If you need directions to the department, send us a message and we’ll be
more than happy to help!
The course is open to all members of the University of Oxford.
P.S. If you have any experience in any of the topics and a little spare
time, you can volunteer to help during the events.
*LAN Night* <https://www.facebook.com/events/899957480209674/> - 7:00 pm
16th November, UGSA (expect to stay very, very late!)
LAN Night returns to Fridays! (At least for this term.) We’re going to
perform our termly ritual of staying up all night and playing any sorts of
games of your choosing!
Bring your laptop; any game controllers and/or consoles, and we’ll provide
the nosh.
The Geek Night *directly after this* is a film night, to wash away the
fatigue of staying up all night playing LAN games.
*Geek Night 6: Film Night*
<https://www.facebook.com/events/1076012762567772/?event_time_id=10760127859…>
-
7:00 pm 17th November, LTA
Here’s a poll for what films we’re going to be watching.
<https://goo.gl/forms/CfNuVxXW11N76zWc2>
A list of things on the poll:
- Kung Fury
- Terminator
- The Matrix
- Hackers
- Ready, Player One
- TRON (the original!)
We aim to wash away the fatigue of a long, long, long, long LAN night from
the night before. Come, and watch a film in our very own beloved Lecture
Theatre A. We’ll provide the pizza, which may be consumed within the
undergraduate social area (eating pizza in a lecture theatre is not
permitted).
We may watch some 1950s-60s films about computers, which could be
interesting too.
*Coding Pub Quiz with TPP*
<https://www.facebook.com/events/1983823405012224/> - 7:00 pm 21st
November, The Mitre pub
TPP is excited to announce a Coding Challenge on Wednesday 21st November,
in collaboration with CompSoc!
Unlike a typical pub quiz, you’ll need to exercise your problem solving
skills to tackle the range of challenges set instead of applying your
general knowledge.
There will be free food and drinks, both soft and alcoholic, available for
attendees throughout the whole event. There will also be great prizes on
offer for the winning teams (Such as Raspberry Pi Computers and a Hotel
Chocolat hamper).
We recommend teams of about 5-6 people, but smaller groups are welcome too,
and if you’re unsure who to come with then we’ll be happy to match you up
with other keen problem solvers on the day. Some questions require specific
knowledge so you will want a programmer on your team!
Entry is free of charge and doesn’t require a ticket, so feel free to just
show up on the day!
------------------------------
Sponsor Notices
*The following notice is from JP Morgan.*
Hello,
If you want to be a leader in this industry, who better to learn from than
the women who are already driving our business forward?
Meet with some of our most influential and inspirational leaders at our
Winning Women Front office Insight Day in London. Listen to their stories
and get their advice – after all, they were once in your shoes. Be part of
it.
You’ll participate in panel discussions, hear from our senior female
leaders, learn about personal branding and interview skills and develop an
interactive insight into our front office lines of business:
- Asset Management
- Investment Banking
- Markets
- Wealth Management
Winning Women <http://tinyurl.com/yadj69w2> is being hosted at our London
offices. Come see for yourself how we build diverse and inclusive teams
that will make you feel valued and motivated. Places are limited. Apply
<http://tinyurl.com/yadj69w2> by *12th November* – all majors welcome!
This event is open to female students graduating in 2020 with an interest
in applying to our 2019 summer internship programmes.
Successful applicants will be notified of full details in advance of the
event.
We look forward to hearing from you.
The J.P. Morgan Campus Recruitment Team
*The following notices are from Ensoft.*
Ensoft Technical Lecture: How to Break the Internet
- Date: Tuesday 13th November 2018 (6th week)
- Time: 1pm
- Venue: Lecture Theatre A, Wolfson Building, Department of Computer
Science
- Speaker: Simon Chatterjee (Ensoft Ltd)
- Title: How to Break the Internet Abstract: The Internet itself is
under constant attack from hating hackers, authoritarian agencies, boring
bugs and annoying accidents. Core routers stand alone in the hurricane, far
beyond the capacity of any protective firewall, left to defend themselves.
How can they do this? And how safe is the Internet really? This talk will
reveal all.
- Bio: The presenter is Director & CTO of Ensoft, whose experience
includes helping to bring into existence the Guinness Book of Records’
“World’s Highest Capacity Internet Router”.
- Free food and drink will also be provided, at 12.45pm in the social
area, for those attending the lecture.
Ensoft Micro-Internship
<https://www.ensoft.co.uk/pdfs/2018_Nov_Micro-Intern.pdf>
-
Placement date: w/c Mon 3rd Dec 2018
-
Pay: £100/day
-
Summary: Through this micro-internship you will integrate Ensoft’s VoIP
phone system with an internal web application, allowing the phone system to
be automatically updated simply by using the app.
-
Applicant profile: Familiarity with Python programming and administering
Linux systems is highly desirable.
------------------------------
Other Notices
*The following notices are from Oxford Foundry.*
*Idea Exploration: Who is your customer?*
*12th November 18.00-20.00, The Oxford Foundry*
This workshop a part of the wider ‘Idea Exploration’ series focuses on step
one of that journey, and will help you work with your idea to gain an in
depth understanding of who your customer is. You will build an end-user
profile so that you can start to define your target audience and understand
specifically how your idea addresses their needs. You will then look at how
to size and segment that market and which segment you should focus on
first. Link to sign up:
https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/idea-exploration-who-is-your-customer-ticket…
*Introduction to Design and Making: Getting started with microcomputers*
*13th November 19.00-21.00*
Get Creative, Get Connected, Get Coding What is a is a microcomputer? Why
should you learn to use them? This session will introduce you to the
rapidly expanding world of the microcomputer; a crucial tool in learning to
code and prototype devices to achieve real world solutions. Understanding
this small but powerful kit is essential learning.
Register now:
https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/digital-design-and-making-getting-started-wi…
*Idea Exploration: What is the value proposition?*
*19th November 18.00-20.00, The Oxford Foundry*
This workshop a part of the wider ‘Idea Exploration’ series focuses on step
one of that journey, and will help you work with your idea to gain an in
depth understanding of who your customer is. You have an idea and you have
a strong understanding of who your customer is. Having an in depth
understanding of the value you are adding to your customers is vital in
effectively communicating about your product or service.
Link to sign up:
https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/idea-exploration-what-is-the-value-propositi…
*The Foundry is hosting a film screening of General Magic on Wednesday 14
Nov from 12pm-2pm.*
“General Magic is a feature documentary about how great vision and epic
failure changed the world as we now know it - from the smartphones that sit
in our pockets to an array of technologies we now take for granted today.” *If
you would like to come, please sign up on Eventbrite:*
https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/silicon-valley-comes-to-the-uk-oxford-screen…
*The following notice is from the Geography Society.*
The Geography society are running this event about what3words- a digital
mapping start up where the founders coded the entire world into 3x3m grids
each labelled by 3 words- he’ll be disucssing some of the computing behind
it as well as it’s applications:
https://www.facebook.com/events/755326061481995/
*The following notice regards a talk at St Catherine’s College, and is a
transcription of a poster describing such.*
Mathematics and its Applications: The Alan Tayler Lecture
*The Mathematics behind the AI Revolution*: Prof. Christopher Bishop,
Microsoft Research Cambridge.
- Monday 19 November, 5:00 pm.
- Bernard Sunley Theatre, St Catherine’s College
- Tea from 4:15 pm.
The Alan Tayler lecture is sponsored by the Smith Institute.
------------------------------
The Oxford University Computer Society (CompSoc) aims to organise meetings
and events for our members to use and further their computing interests.
See all of our upcoming events on our Facebook Page
<https://facebook.com/oxcompsoc/> or visit our Website
<https://ox.compsoc.net> for more information about the society.
Want to unsubscribe or manage your subscription preferences? Go to
http://lists.ox.compsoc.net/mailman/listinfo/.
Hi all,
I'm just emailing to remind you that our *talk with EF is cancelled*. We
aim to reschedule it for next Hilary. We meant to say so in the last
newsletter; the *TGM is now tonight instead* (agenda attached). Sorry for
the short notice.
By the way, our Gold sponsor *Bloomberg* still has plenty of space at
their *CodeCon
programming contest* this Friday!
- Register here to attend: http://tinyurl.com/y946efnk
- Date: Friday 9th November
- Time: 17:30–20:30
- Location: Saïd Business School, Classroom 2 – West Wing Entrance
(i.e., by the train station taxi rank)
- Food and drink provided
Finally, we have *two spaces left on the Bletchley Park trip*. Sign up now!
<https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSeuKjz4u0cYcyzIi_rTdDNfOCysqsYY3x-…>
(The form is now working.)
Best of luck with the last half of 5th week,
Edward Hart
President - Oxford University Computer Society
president(a)ox.compsoc.net
Tired of marking this email as spam? Find the unsubscribe pages here.
<http://lists.ox.compsoc.net/mailman/listinfo/>
+++++++[>++++++++++<-]>++.---.+++++++..+++.<+++++++[>-------<-]>+++...
Oh, sorry! I hope you're excited as we are for *esoteric programming
languages* (a.k.a. esolangs) tonight! (Personally, I think this is the best
thing ever.) Prepare to twist your mind into some topologically weird
contortion as you, for example, write code entirely using whitespace
characters.
<http://web.archive.org/web/20150623025348/http://compsoc.dur.ac.uk/whitespa…>
I'd also recommend you start having a look at Core War
<http://vyznev.net/corewar/guide.html> before we do that next week. By the
way, the *Michaelmas TGM* is coming up this Wednesday!!
Gold sponsor Bloomberg is advertising CodeCon, a global programming contest
developed by Bloomberg Engineers on Friday 9th November in Said Business
School - do check it out.
In two weeks time, Gold sponsor Google will be giving a talk with us at the
Maths Institute. The title is pending, but expect a fascinating view into
what they're working on.
*Some more LAST MINUTE SPACES have reopened* for our all-day Bletchley Park
trip on Saturday of 7th week, *kindly sponsored by Silver sponsor
Ensoft!* Bletchley
Park, once the top-secret home of the World War Two codebreakers is now a
vibrant heritage attraction. Explore, experience and enjoy the once
top-secret world of iconic codebreaking Huts and Blocks set within an
atmospheric Victorian estate. We're also visiting the National Museum of
Computing on that trip. *Free for members*, and *£10 for non-members* - so
you've got a pretty good deal regardless! *FIRST COME FIRST SERVED!!!* The
trip is right around the corner - only 3 weeks 'til we go!
Here's the form; *please* make sure you're free!
<https://goo.gl/forms/IaoSgoD51W7iHO212>
Here's the link to our Discord. You use Discord, right? Right? Ehhhh???
<https://discord.gg/xA9PFvy> Please let me know who you are when you join
(like, your name and surname).
+++++++[>++++++++++<-]>+.++++++++..-----------.--.<+++++[>+++++<-]>--.<++++[>-----<-]>.<+++++[>-----<-]>.
*The CompSoc Committee - Joe G, Edward H, Ben S*
Events
*Geek Night 4: Esoteric Languages*
<https://www.facebook.com/events/1076012762567772/?event_time_id=10760128025…>
-
7:00 pm 3rd November, Undergraduate Social Area, Department of Computer
Science
Tired of things making sense? Want to try a language that breaks *all* the
conventions and destroys the very foundations of what you think it means to
write a program?
How about a language that's Turing complete (can do anything computable)
with only eight symbols? <https://esolangs.org/wiki/brainfuck> What about
six? <https://esolangs.org/wiki/JSFuck> (I mean, it's just JavaScript.)
What about one?? <https://esolangs.org/wiki/Unary> Tired of writing your
code line-to-line? How about it be flowing about in two dimensions?
<https://esolangs.org/wiki/Befunge>
What about the source file being a MIDI score?
<https://esolangs.org/wiki/Velato> Or a recipe?
<https://esolangs.org/wiki/Chef> Or a Shakespeare play?
<http://shakespearelang.sourceforge.net/> The possibilities do not end!
<https://esolangs.org/wiki/MarioLANG>
Use any skills you learned from the CodeGolf geek night last week to your
advantage, you might find they prove useful!
*Maybe you've even got an idea for an esolang of your own?* Perhaps you
could define an implementation, make an interpreter...
Bring your laptops, we'll provide the pizza.
*Michaelmas Termly General Meeting*
<https://www.facebook.com/events/249948445681070/> - 7:00 pm 7th November,
Undergraduate Social Area, Department of Computer Science
Hey all! We've got the Michaelmas termly general meeting coming up. The
agenda is attached. Come along for democracy! If you've anything you'd like
to propose, please e-mail it to us.
*CS Essentials Session 4* <https://www.facebook.com/events/735287826805251/> -
7:00 pm 1st November, Lecture Theatre A, Department of Computer Science
*This week's CS Essentials session is the second of a two-part series on
Bash.*
CS Essentials is a brand new course that CompSoc organises for beginners.
If you are into either exploring the Linux command line or learning how to
create a beautiful document using LaTeX, this is just the course for you!
You do not need any prior experience, just come along and have some fun!
All you need is a laptop to get through the exercises. What we will be
teaching is:
- basic and more advanced Linux commands;
- Bash scripting;
- Vim text editor;
- LaTeX.
If you need directions to the department, send us a message and we'll be
more than happy to help!
The course is open to all members of the University of Oxford.
P.S. If you have any experience in any of the topics and a little spare
time, you can volunteer to help during the events.
*Geek Night 5: Core War*
<https://www.facebook.com/events/1076012762567772/?event_time_id=10760128025…>
-
7:00 pm, 8th November, Undergraduate Social Area, Department of Computer
Science
OK, maybe this is actually the best thing ever. Core War
<http://vyznev.net/corewar/guide.html> is a game played between two or more
programs written in Redcode, a low-level language similar to assembly.
Players write a program to eliminate all opponents in the memory of the
MARS virtual computer. Core War can also be used as a platform to
experiment with genetic programming. I *highly* recommend checking the link
as it contains a guide to the instruction set. Here's another link
<https://www.corewars.org/information.html> to an information homepage.
The MARS (Memory Array Redcode Simulator) executes one instruction at a
time, proceeding to the next unless a JMP specified where to jump to.
Addresses are all relative, so an OpCode may not know where *specifically* it
is in memory, though it may affect, say, the Kth cell in front or behind it.
There are nineteen operations used in Redcode: DAT, MOV, ADD, SUB, MUL,
DIV, MOD, JMP, JMZ, JMN, DJN, SPL, CMP, SEQ, SNE, SLT, LDP, STP and NOP. An
instruction (OpCode) will be of the form OP A B, with A being the source
address and B being the target address.
To get the ball rolling, let's take a look at the "Hello, world!" of this
thing, the *imp*:
MOV 0 1
This pesky little warrior will simply roll along the memory, overwriting
everything in its path with its own OpCode. MOV A B simply moves
instruction A to B. Since addressing is relative, it moves current
instruction to the next cell in memory, then the warrior's instruction
pointer moves to that new instruction and repeats. It alone cannot
*kill* another
warrior, however. If an imp catches up to and overwrites the next
instruction another warrior was going to execute, then that will become an
imp, the whole memory will fill with MOV 0 1 and they'll all continue to
run around the memory ad infinitum.
Boring right? Don't you want to make a warrior who will win? Let's take a
quick look at a simple warrior who can fight somewhat, the *dwarf*.
ADD #4, 3 ; execution begins here
MOV 2, @2
JMP -2
DAT #0, #0
If you think hard about what this is doing, you can see that it's
essentially throwing a "DAT bomb" in increments of 4 in front of itself.
The idea is that if you can overwrite a part of someone's warrior with a
DAT instruction, they'll try to read it and terminate. The # symbol is used
for immediate addressing, and @ for indirect addressing. In fact, there are
eight such addressing modes.
Please read this - it's vital to understanding this game!
<http://vyznev.net/corewar/guide.html>
Bring your laptops, get coding these brave warriors, and we'll provide the
pizza!
*Tech talk with Google* <https://www.facebook.com/events/273264239996714/> -
7:00 pm, L2, Mathematical Institute
*Note we will be in a different venue!*
Silver sponsor Google are giving out a talk. Abstract and title pending.
There'll most likely be an interesting tech bit followed by questions.
Come along!
------------------------------
Sponsor Notices
*The following notice is from Bloomberg.*
CodeCon
Open to all coders, CodeCon is a Global programming contest developed by
Bloomberg Engineers. Solve as many problems as you can to win an
all-expenses trip to London for the Finals! Compete in C, C++, Java,
Python, C#, JavaScript, Scala, Rust or Ruby. Push your programming and
problem solving skills to the limit and race against the clock to win the
title of Bloomberg CodeCon Champion!
- Date: Friday 9th November
- Time: 5:30pm - 8:30pm
- Location: Said Business School
- Room: Classroom 2 - West Wing Entrance
- Food and drinks will be served
Register for CodeCon now: http://tinyurl.com/y946efnk
Strategize on purpose.
------------------------------
The Oxford University Computer Society (CompSoc) aims to organise meetings
and events for our members to use and further their computing interests.
See all of our upcoming events on our Facebook Page
<https://facebook.com/oxcompsoc/> or visit our Website
<https://ox.compsoc.net> for more information about the society.
Want to unsubscribe or manage your subscription preferences? Go to
http://lists.ox.compsoc.net/mailman/listinfo/.