Hi everyone,
We're halfway through the term already! We still have plenty of events
lined up to take the pressure off of exams. We hope everyone enjoyed last
week’s talk on algorithmic biology. If you’d like to read more, Artem’s
paper can be found here
<https://www.genetics.org/content/212/1/245?fbclid=IwAR3e4y_KEgSQrYQaNPo6YEh…>
.
Tonight’s Geek Night finally has a theme: *Bring your own hardware*! Bring
along whatever cool tech you have to show off to the rest of the society.
Bonus points for absurd RGB lighting schemes.
This week we have another great talk lined up. *Ian Hardingham* will be
joining us this Wednesday to talk about his experience in the world of
start-ups, and to share tips and advice on how to get into the tech
start-up scene yourself.
Just beyond that, it’s nearly time for this term’s LAN Night. The format is
simple: you bring along a laptop or other gaming device, we provide
ethernet connections and plenty of food. Can’t wait to see you there!
Have a great week,
*The CompSoc committee*
------------------------------
Events Geek Night 4: Bring your own hardware
<https://www.facebook.com/events/434565307312079/?event_time_id=434565333978…>
*19:00 Saturday, Week 4, UGSA, Department of Computer Science*
This Saturday’s Geek Night theme is BYOH - bring your own hardware. What
this means is that you can either come check out other people’s fun stuff
and/or show off your cool hardware.
Rumor has it that there will be mechanical keyboards, VR headsets, eGPUs
and many more!
Entrepeneurship in Computing - a different path
<https://www.facebook.com/events/863083830691097/>
*19:00 Wednesday, Week 5, Lecture Theatre A, Department of Computer Science*
Oxford alumnus Ian Hardingham joins CompSoc to talk about his experience
with start-ups. Pizza and drinks provided.
Abstract: It’s a better time than ever to be a software engineer - they are
in high demand and companies are constantly improving the quality of life
of their developers. You can earn a good salary and have a great work/life
balance. But there is a different way - you can work more, earn less, and
deal with difficult interpersonal issues without a professional HR
department. Also known as living the dream. Every computer science student
at Oxford has likely at least considered being part of a start-up. I’ll
talk about my experiences working in every stage of the start-up process;
try and help you work out if it’s for you; and tell you where to focus your
efforts if you would like to lead or join a new team.
Bio: Ian founded Mode 7 Ltd after graduating from Oriel college in Computer
Science in 2003, boot-strapping it to a company with a six-figure turnover
and a high degree of name recognition around the gaming industry. To fund
Mode 7’s second stage, he worked a large contract for broadcast TV; writing
a content management and streaming system still used by many shows today.
After moving on from Mode 7, he is now Chief Technology Officer for Oxford
Brain Diagnostics, an Oxford University spin-out doing research and
development in detection of Alzheimer’s and other brain disorders.
LAN Night <https://www.facebook.com/events/828334617528528/>
*19:00 Saturday, Week 5, UGSA, Department of Computer Science*
Bring along your laptops and games, we’ll provide the ethernet and food.
Tech talk: Disruptive Innovation at Ocado Technology
<https://www.facebook.com/events/399290510917760/>
*19:00 Wednesday, Week 6, Room 051, Department of Computer Science*
Oxford alumnus Joseph Zammit joins us from Ocado Technology. Joseph studied
Mathematics and Computer Science at Keble college, and is now an Innovation
Engineer in Ocado’s 10x Team. Pizza and drinks provided.
Abstract: Join us for a guided virtual tour of the latest swarm robotics,
AI, and automation technology to discover how Ocado powers the future of
grocery eCommerce, logistics and fulfilment. With hundreds of bots working
collaboratively to assemble customer orders, robotic picking arms and smart
demand forecasting systems, take a peek into Ocado’s innovation factory and
discover a culture of serial disruption.
------------------------------
Other Notices Oxford Foundry pre-accelerator programme for female-led
startups
If you’re an Oxford female student or alum with an early-stage start-up,
check out the Oxford Foundry’s L.E.V8 women pre-accelerator programme,
where you can skill up and develop your business ideas this summer! You’ll
also get direct guidance and advice from the incredible L.E.V8 Women
Ambassadors, a strong and diverse network of business leaders from a range
of backgrounds and industries. Applications close June 9th . Go for it!
https://www.oxfordfoundry.ox.ac.uk/about-lev8-women-pre-accelerator
Negotiation 101 workshop
*Wednesday 5th June 2019, 18:00 - 20:00*
The art of negotiation is one of the most valued skills in all walks of
life. If you understand the processes that lie beneath the language and
communication of negotiation, you can negotiate more effectively and
fairly. This workshop investigates the importance of perception and
subconscious judgements, and reveals how these have a direct impact on our
communication and negotiating skills. Sign up now to attend.
<https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/negotiation-101-tickets-59960881611>
The Truth, according to Wikipedia - a conversation with Jimmy Wales,
Founder of Wikipedia
*Friday 7th June 2019, 17:30-18:30*
The Foundry are delighted to welcome to our stage internet and technology
entrepreneur Jimmy Wales (Founder of Wikipedia) for a fireside chat and
Q&A! Jimmy has been named in Time magazine’s ‘100 Most Influential People
in the World’ for his role in creating Wikipedia. In conversation with a
moderator, Jimmy will discuss the origins of Wikipedia, how apparent
failures set him up for later success, the role of Wikipedia in overcoming
current challenges to humanity, and much more! Sign up now to attend.
<https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/the-truth-according-to-wikipedia-a-conversat…>
------------------------------
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 everyone,
I’m sure some of you have noticed the rain falling this afternoon. We’ve
decided to move the CompSoc picnic *indoors*. You can join us in the UGSA
this afternoon to play some board games and relax.
Next week we’ll be hosting our *first talk of the term*, by DPhil candidate
Artem Kaznatcheev. Artem will be speaking about how he has applied
computational complexity theory to analyse the process of evolution. This
should be very interesting for computer scientists and biologists alike, so
we very much hope you’ll join us on Wednesday. Of course, you’ll have a
chance to chat with Artem after the talk over pizza.
For those interested in graduate positions or internship opportunities,
gold sponsor *TPP* are holding *logic & reasoning tests* later this term.
Have a great week,
*The CompSoc committee*
------------------------------
Events INDOOR CompSoc Picnic
<https://www.facebook.com/events/308555580062533/>
*17:00 Saturday, Week 3 The University Parks UGSA, Department of Computer
Science*
Join us in the Uni Parks UGSA for a few hours of connecting with nature
each other, playing football and frisbee board games, enjoying some food
and finally in the UGSA for pizza.
We will be in the parks UGSA from 5pm, so join us whenever you can!
Algorithmic Biology: Evolution is an algorithm; let us analyze it like one
<https://www.facebook.com/events/2599467160082564/>
*19:00 Wednesday, Week 4, Lecture Theatre A, Department of Computer Science*
CompSoc welcomes Oxford DPhil candidate Artem Kaznatcheev to talk about his
exciting work at the interface between computer science and biology. Pizza
and drinks provided.
Abstract: Evolutionary biology and theoretical computer science are
fundamentally interconnected. In the work of Charles Darwin and Alfred
Russel Wallace, we can see the emergence of concepts that theoretical
computer scientists would later hold as central to their discipline. Ideas
like asymptotic analysis, the role of algorithms in nature, distributed
computation, and analogy from man-made to natural control processes. By
recognizing evolution as an algorithm, we can continue to apply the
mathematical tools of computer science to solve biological puzzles – to
build an algorithmic biology.
Bio: Artem Kaznatcheev is a DPhil Candidate at the Department of Computer
Science and a Graduate Teaching and Research Scholar at Oriel College. He
is also affiliated with the Department of Translational Hematology &
Oncology Research at the Cleveland Clinic in Cleveland, OH, USA. Prior to
coming to Oxford, Artem was at McGill University, University of Waterloo,
and the Moffitt Cancer Center. He uses theoretical computer science and
experimental cancer biology to understand and further the role of
theoretical and experimental abstraction in evolution.
Geek Night 4
<https://www.facebook.com/events/434565307312079/?event_time_id=434565333978…>
*19:00 Saturday, Week 4, UGSA, Department of Computer Science*
We haven’t quite finalised our plans for this one, but expect the usual
social night with some added bonuses!
Entrepeneurship in Computing - a different path
<https://www.facebook.com/events/863083830691097/>
*19:00 Wednesday, Week 5, Lecture Theatre A, Department of Computer Science*
Oxford alumnus Ian Hardingham joins CompSoc to talk about his experience
with start-ups. Pizza and drinks provided.
Abstract: It’s a better time than ever to be a software engineer - they are
in high demand and companies are constantly improving the quality of life
of their developers. You can earn a good salary and have a great work/life
balance. But there is a different way - you can work more, earn less, and
deal with difficult interpersonal issues without a professional HR
department. Also known as living the dream. Every computer science student
at Oxford has likely at least considered being part of a start-up. I’ll
talk about my experiences working in every stage of the start-up process;
try and help you work out if it’s for you; and tell you where to focus your
efforts if you would like to lead or join a new team.
Bio: Ian founded Mode 7 Ltd after graduating from Oriel college in Computer
Science in 2003, boot-strapping it to a company with a six-figure turnover
and a high degree of name recognition around the gaming industry. To fund
Mode 7’s second stage, he worked a large contract for broadcast TV; writing
a content management and streaming system still used by many shows today.
After moving on from Mode 7, he is now Chief Technology Officer for Oxford
Brain Diagnostics, an Oxford University spin-out doing research and
development in detection of Alzheimer’s and other brain disorders.
------------------------------
Sponsor Notices TPP holding logic & reasoning tests for graduate roles and
internships
TPP is holding logic & reasoning tests in the Said Business School in
Oxford on 28th May for a number of our graduate roles.
TPP is a UK based IT company, dedicated to delivering world class
healthcare software through our innovative products. We’re currently hiring
for seven different graduate roles and for our 2019 summer intern
programme. We’re looking for the brightest minds from the UK’s top
universities who have a passion for problem solving. No experience is
required and we accept applicants from all disciplines.
If you are interested in applying, you can book into a slot that suits you.
Please visit our website here; https://tpp-careers.com/aptitude-test/
------------------------------
Other Notices Oxford Foundry pre-accelerator programme for female-led
startups
Do you have an early-stage female-led startup? The Oxford Foundry have
launched applications for this year’s L.E.V8 Women pre-accelerator programme
<https://www.oxfordfoundry.ox.ac.uk/about-lev8-women-pre-accelerator> which
will take you through a combination of intensive, immersive learning
workshops and 1:1 mentoring from our incredible L.E.V8 Women Ambassadors
<https://www.oxfordfoundry.ox.ac.uk/lev8-women-ambassadors>. You will come
away from the experience with the tools you need to take your venture
forward with confidence and purpose. Applications close on 9th June. APPLY
NOW <https://oxfordsaid.eu.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_5yxUtvXdaX3KNzD>!
------------------------------
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 everyone,
Thank you to everyone who came to the Quiz Night last Saturday! We hope you
all enjoyed yourselves as much as we did. If you’re sad that it’s over,
fear not because gold sponsor *TPP* are holding their very own coding pub
quiz at the Royal Oak this Wednedsay. Tickets are currently sold out, but
if you’re interested you can still join the waiting list!
Continuing the theme of exciting new Saturday socials, we’ll be hosting our
very own *picnic* at the University Parks next week. Come down from 17:00
to enjoy the fresh air and (hopefully) good weather! We’ll be retiring to
the UGSA in the evening for pizza.
Just after that, our first talk of the term is on the horizon.
Oxford’s own *Artem
Kaznatcheev* will be joining us to talk about the work he’s been doing
on *Algorithmic
Biology*. Check below for more details.
In other news, the MPLS division is running focus groups next week for
students who identify as *BAME*. Looking further ahead, the *margins*
conference for people from marginalised backgrounds in tech is running in
Nottingham towards the end of June, and they are looking for both attendees
and volunteers. Finally, the Oxford Artificial Intelligence society is
running a *workshop on Project Management* next Saturday. You can find more
details on all of these below.
Have a great week,
*The CompSoc committee*
------------------------------
Events Coding Pub Quiz with TPP
<https://www.facebook.com/events/2356337424434094/>
*19:00, Wednesday, Week 3, Royal Oak, Woodstock Road*
TPP is excited to announce a Coding Challenge on Wednesday 15th May, in
collaboration with the Oxford Computer Society!
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 (Raspberry Pis 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.
Eventbrite link for tickets
<https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/coding-pub-quiz-with-tpp-tickets-61178203654>
Tickets are already fully allocated, so if you can’t make it then please *free
up your slot as soon as you know* for those on the waiting list.
CompSoc Picnic <https://www.facebook.com/events/308555580062533/>
*17:00 Saturday, Week 3 University Parks*
Join us in Uni Parks for a few hours of connecting with nature, playing
football and frisbee, enjoying some food and finally in the UGSA for pizza.
We will be in the parks from 5pm, so join us whenever you can!
Algorithmic Biology: Evolution is an algorithm; let us analyze it like one
<https://www.facebook.com/events/2599467160082564/>
*19:00 Wednesday, Week 4, Lecture Theatre A, Department of Computer Science*
CompSoc welcomes Oxford DPhil candidate Artem Kaznatcheev to talk about his
exciting work at the interface between computer science and biology. Pizza
and drinks provided. Please see the Facebook event for a full abstract and
more details.
------------------------------
Other Notices BAME student focus groups in MPLS
The Mathematical, Physical and Life Sciences Division (MPLS) is running
focus groups for students who identify as Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic
(BAME) to hear about student experiences in the University and feed into
our race equality work in MPLS. The University has attained a Race Equality
Charter Bronze Award
<https://www.admin.ox.ac.uk/eop/race/raceequalitychartermark/> (one of only
10 UK institutions that have an award), and there are a number of action
items that the University has committed to. At the divisional level, we
would like to gather information from BAME students about their experiences
in our science and maths departments to help inform our equality and
diversity activities. The available sessions are as follows, and all will
be held in the MPLS Divisional Office (9 Parks Road, OX1 3PD). Please come
join us to share your experiences and meet others from around the division.
Undergraduates:
-
13 May from 12:30 – 1:30pm (lunch provided)
-
13 May from 4:00 – 5:00pm (tea/coffee/cake provided)
Postgraduates:
-
15 May from 12:30 – 1:30pm (lunch provided)
-
15 May from 4:00 – 5:00pm (tea/coffee/cake provided)
The discussion will be facilitated by Machilu Zimba (Equality and Diversity
Unit, Policy Advisor) and Daisy Hung (MPLS Equality and Diversity
Facilitator).
Hi everyone,
Thank you to everyone who came to the Quiz Night last Saturday! We hope you
all enjoyed yourselves as much as we did. If you’re sad that it’s over,
fear not because gold sponsor *TPP* are holding their very own coding pub
quiz at the Royal Oak this Wednedsay. Tickets are currently sold out, but
if you’re interested you can still join the waiting list!
Continuing the theme of exciting new Saturday socials, we’ll be hosting our
very own *picnic* at the University Parks next week. Come down from 17:00
to enjoy the fresh air and (hopefully) good weather! We’ll be retiring to
the UGSA in the evening for pizza.
Just after that, our first talk of the term is on the horizon.
Oxford’s own *Artem
Kaznatcheev* will be joining us to talk about the work he’s been doing
on *Algorithmic
Biology*. Check below for more details.
In other news, the MPLS division is running focus groups next week for
students who identify as *BAME*. Looking further ahead, the *margins*
conference for people from marginalised backgrounds in tech is running in
Nottingham towards the end of June, and they are looking for both attendees
and volunteers. Finally, the Oxford Artificial Intelligence society is
running a *workshop on Project Management* next Saturday. You can find more
details on all of these below.
Have a great week,
*The CompSoc committee*
------------------------------
Events Coding Pub Quiz with TPP
<https://www.facebook.com/events/2356337424434094/>
*19:00, Wednesday, Week 3, Royal Oak, Woodstock Road*
TPP is excited to announce a Coding Challenge on Wednesday 15th May, in
collaboration with the Oxford Computer Society!
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 (Raspberry Pis 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.
Eventbrite link for tickets
<https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/coding-pub-quiz-with-tpp-tickets-61178203654>
Tickets are already fully allocated, so if you can’t make it then please *free
up your slot as soon as you know* for those on the waiting list.
CompSoc Picnic <https://www.facebook.com/events/308555580062533/>
*17:00 Saturday, Week 3 University Parks*
Join us in Uni Parks for a few hours of connecting with nature, playing
football and frisbee, enjoying some food and finally in the UGSA for pizza.
We will be in the parks from 5pm, so join us whenever you can!
Algorithmic Biology: Evolution is an algorithm; let us analyze it like one
<https://www.facebook.com/events/2599467160082564/>
*19:00 Wednesday, Week 4, Lecture Theatre A, Department of Computer Science*
CompSoc welcomes Oxford DPhil candidate Artem Kaznatcheev to talk about his
exciting work at the interface between computer science and biology. Pizza
and drinks provided. Please see the Facebook event for a full abstract and
more details.
------------------------------
Other Notices BAME student focus groups in MPLS
The Mathematical, Physical and Life Sciences Division (MPLS) is running
focus groups for students who identify as Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic
(BAME) to hear about student experiences in the University and feed into
our race equality work in MPLS. The University has attained a Race Equality
Charter Bronze Award
<https://www.admin.ox.ac.uk/eop/race/raceequalitychartermark/> (one of only
10 UK institutions that have an award), and there are a number of action
items that the University has committed to. At the divisional level, we
would like to gather information from BAME students about their experiences
in our science and maths departments to help inform our equality and
diversity activities. The available sessions are as follows, and all will
be held in the MPLS Divisional Office (9 Parks Road, OX1 3PD). Please come
join us to share your experiences and meet others from around the division.
Undergraduates:
-
13 May from 12:30 – 1:30pm (lunch provided)
-
13 May from 4:00 – 5:00pm (tea/coffee/cake provided)
Postgraduates:
-
15 May from 12:30 – 1:30pm (lunch provided)
-
15 May from 4:00 – 5:00pm (tea/coffee/cake provided)
The discussion will be facilitated by Machilu Zimba (Equality and Diversity
Unit, Policy Advisor) and Daisy Hung (MPLS Equality and Diversity
Facilitator).
To sign up or for more information, please email diversity(a)mpls.ox.ac.uk
and let us know which focus group session you’d like to attend.
margins—a free tech conference for and by the marginalised community
*22nd June 2019, University of Nottingham, 9:00-16:00*
Are you a marginalised person working in/with/around technology (or hope to
break into the industry)? *margins* is a free one-day conference for you!
Join us in Nottingham (UK) for a day filled with inspiration, solidarity
and compassion. We want to build a network of and for folks from across the
tech sector whose voices are still looking for a platform.
Whatever you do—research, design, data entry, social media management, if
you perform maintenance on the Hadron Collider or you’re thinking about
writing your first line of code—as long as you work/tinker/dream
with/in/around tech, you’re welcome!
margins has two tracks of workshops and talks that attendees can join! The
conference is centred around making and building inclusive communities in
technology together.
Free tickets & more info: margins.tech
Workshop on Product Management in tech with OxAI
For CS/maths/stats/engineering people interested in getting into Product
Management side of tech and AI. OxAI’s got a workshop coming next Saturday.
It will be led by the former software engineering lead and product manager
of two of the UK’s top AI startups (Onfido and Multiply.ai) and CEO of
Knowledge Officer. https://www.facebook.com/events/3158460307513101/
------------------------------
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/.
To sign up or for more information, please email diversity(a)mpls.ox.ac.uk
and let us know which focus group session you’d like to attend.
margins—a free tech conference for and by the marginalised community
*22nd June 2019, University of Nottingham, 9:00-16:00*
Are you a marginalised person working in/with/around technology (or hope to
break into the industry)? *margins* is a free one-day conference for you!
Join us in Nottingham (UK) for a day filled with inspiration, solidarity
and compassion. We want to build a network of and for folks from across the
tech sector whose voices are still looking for a platform.
Whatever you do—research, design, data entry, social media management, if
you perform maintenance on the Hadron Collider or you’re thinking about
writing your first line of code—as long as you work/tinker/dream
with/in/around tech, you’re welcome!
margins has two tracks of workshops and talks that attendees can join! The
conference is centred around making and building inclusive communities in
technology together.
Free tickets & more info: margins.tech
Workshop on Product Management in tech with OxAI
For CS/maths/stats/engineering people interested in getting into Product
Management side of tech and AI. OxAI’s got a workshop coming next Saturday.
It will be led by the former software engineering lead and product manager
of two of the UK’s top AI startups (Onfido and Multiply.ai) and CEO of
Knowledge Officer. https://www.facebook.com/events/3158460307513101/
------------------------------
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 everyone,
We’re really looking forward to seeing everyone at CompSoc’s first *Quiz
Night* tomorrow! We’ve worked hard to make it a really fun evening, and
we’ll be ordering *pizza* to go with the quiz. Please make sure to arrive
at 19:00 so we can get started promptly!
*Tomorrow* is your last chance to order stash! You can order CompSoc
hoodies for £10 and CompSoc t-shirts for £5 here
<http://www.customclubclothing.co.uk/shop/index.php?c=259>. You can add an
optional embroidering for a further £1.50. *CompSocks* are also still
available to order by filling in the form here
<https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfhw1noQrYK3ZNP7JyF54DUDAd0R5OxCCr…>
.
Take a look at the Oxford Foundry’s Trinity Term card
<https://www.oxfordfoundry.ox.ac.uk/sites/default/files/learning-guide/2019-…>
for an overview of what they have going on this term. Register now to book
your place!
Remember to follow CompSoc on Instagram
<https://www.instagram.com/ox.compsoc/> for updates from our events!
Have a great week,
*The CompSoc committee*
------------------------------
Events Quiz Night <https://www.facebook.com/events/2611391642222551/>
*19:00, Saturday, Week 1, UGSA, Department of Computer Science*
CompSoc is hosting its first quiz night! You can come with your own small
team, or if you don’t know who to come with then we can match you up on the
day! There are lots of prizes up for grabs and, of course, pizza.
Geek Night 2
<https://www.facebook.com/events/434565307312079/?event_time_id=434565317312…>
*19:00, Saturday, Week 2, UGSA, Department of Computer Science*
Bring your laptop along for an evening of chatting, games and pizza.
Coding Pub Quiz with TPP <https://www.facebook.com/events/2356337424434094/>
*19:00, Wednedsay, Week 3, Royal Oak, Woodstock Road*
TPP is excited to announce a Coding Challenge on Wednesday 15th May, in
collaboration with the Oxford Computer Society!
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 (Raspberry Pis 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.
Eventbrite link for tickets
<https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/coding-pub-quiz-with-tpp-tickets-61178203654>
Tickets are already fully allocated, so if you can’t make it then please *free
up your slot as soon as you know* for those on the waiting list.
------------------------------
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/.