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Dr Dave Barnes, Reader in Planetary and Space Robotics at Aberystwyth University contemplates one of the research protoype models for the ill-starred British mars rover project during the TAROS 2007 conference at Aberystwyth.

 

Aberystwyth University's Intelligent Robotics Group is one of the largest in the UK.

 

Original DSC03554

Malcolm Atkinson's Data Curator project. OS was Peter Robertson's Mouses. Ran on a PE3200

Assistant Professor, Computer Science and Engineering

 

CAREER: Trustworthy Machine Learning from Untrusted Models

 

Award: www.nsf.gov/awardsearch/showAward?AWD_ID=1846151

 

Story: engineering.lehigh.edu/news/article/compsci-researcher-ti...

Math & CompSci Graduation Party 2012.

Apples and a Terak UCSD P-System (first system we had with soft fonts, I think)Argus

Charles graphics device. 512x512 non-square pixels. Designed by Charles Minter.

Patrick Roche ('75 CompSci, '75 Sci, '77 CompSci M.S.) with wife Cynthia.

Legos system (baby interdata), and a Spinwriter

Notice MG flashing the compsci gang signal. It is a binary 1 (the finger) shifted 1 bit to the left (the thumb). It is a sign language version of the "There are only 10 types of people who understand binary. Those who do and those who don't" joke.

Patrick Roche ('75 CompSci, '75 Sci, '77 CompSci M.S.) with wife Cynthia.

A UW-Madison student speaks with a recruiter from Google during the Madison Area Computer Sciences Job Fair on October 1, 2015 in Union South. Nearly 40 companies participated in this year’s event, ranging from local software giant Epic to California-headquartered Google, which opened a Madison office in 2008.

 

Students in the College of Letters & Science utilize a host of opportunities to enhance their career prospects every year.

 

Photo by Sarah Morton, College of Letters & Science

The UW-Madison Department of Computer Sciences hosted the Madison Area Computer Sciences Job Fair on October 1, 2015 in Union South. Nearly 40 companies participated in this year’s event, ranging from local software giant Epic to California-headquartered Google, which opened a Madison office in 2008.

 

Participating companies must have an IT presence in the Madison area or be members of the computer sciences department’s Industrial Affiliates Program, which promotes ties between the university and private industry.

 

Students in the College of Letters & Science utilize a host of opportunities to enhance their career prospects every year.

 

Photo by Sarah Morton, College of Letters & Science

A UW-Madison students speak with recruiters from Raven Software (affiliated with Activision) during the Madison Area Computer Sciences Job Fair on October 1, 2015 in Union South. Nearly 40 companies participated in this year’s event, ranging from local software giant Epic to California-headquartered Google, which opened a Madison office in 2008.

 

Students in the College of Letters & Science utilize a host of opportunities to enhance their career prospects every year.

 

Photo by Sarah Morton, College of Letters & Science

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