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Research
Seminars
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P.G. Sorenson Distinguished Graduate Lecture
1988 marked the inception of the Distinguished Graduate Lecture. As
of June 1989, this lecture series became know as the
Paul G. Sorenson Distinguished Graduate Lecture. It was so named to
acknowledge Paul's effort in establishing this series as well as his numerous
contributions to the Department during the seventeen years he was with the
Department.
Paul left the Department in 1989 to accept the position of Chairman of the
Department of Computer Science at the University of Alberta.
Dr. Barbara Wasson, University of Bergen, Norway
From ARIES to iTELL: Technology Enhanced Lifetime Learning
Barbara Wasson (Ph.D, University of Saskatchewan 1990) is Professor of Pedagogical Information Science at the Department of Information Science and Media Studies, University of Bergen, Norway, a Senior Researcher at InterMedia, and a founding partner of eNOVATE AS. She is one of the founders of Kaleidoscope, a European Network of Excellence on Technology Enhanced Learning, and has been leader of its CSCL SIG with over 400 members. Barbara is an associate editor of the new International Journal of Computer Supported Collaborative Learning, and she is on the board of the ICT Programme VERDIKT at the Norwegian Research Council. In 2003 she obtained the contract for InterMedia to develop the ICT-based National test in English for the Norwegian Ministry of Education. In December 2004 she attended, by invitation only, a research summit to launch the international research initiative on Youth, Technology and Learning at the UN Headquarters in New York. Barbara´s research interests include computer support for collaborative learning, socio-cultural theories of learning, design-based research, methodologies for studying virtual environments, and pedagogical agents. Her speciality is the design and evaluation of collaborative learning in distributed settings.
2005 - Dr. Hazel Everett, Professor, University of Nancy, France
Effective Geometric Algorithms for Graphics and Solid Modeling
Hazel Everett is a Professor at Université Nancy 2 in Nancy,
France and a researcher at
LORIA, the Lorraine laboratory for research in computer science and its
applications.
She is a founding member of project Vegas, a research team of INRIA, the French
national institute for research in computer science. Hazel graduated from the
University of Saskatchewan with a B. Comm. in 1984 and a M.Sc. in 1986
and received a Ph.D. from
the University of Toronto in 1990. Prior to moving to France, she spent two
years at McGill University
as a postdoctoral fellow, six years on faculty at the Université du
Québec à Montréal, and
passed a delightful sabbatical year at the Hong Kong University of Science and
Technology.
Hazel's current research focus is on the design and implementation of effective
geometric algorithms.
2004 - Dr. Gordon Kurtenbach, Director of Research, Alias
Seven Weird Ideas That Work
Gordon Kurtenbach is the director of research at Alias where he
oversees a group whose focus is research on 3D interactive graphics in
the areas of input technologies, manipulation, modeling, animation and
rendering. Prior to Alias, Gordon was a researcher at Xerox's Palo
Alto Research Center working on pen based user interfaces for
wall-sized display systems. Before Xerox, Gordon was a member of Apple
Computer's Advanced Technology Group researching gesture-based input
techniques for graphical user interfaces. Gordon received a B.Sc. from
University of Saskatchewan in 1984, a M.Sc. from University of Toronto
in 1988, and a Ph.D. from University of Toronto in 1993 in Computer
Science. Gordon's Ph.D. work on "marking menus" is a patented feature
used broadly in all Alias products. His research interests in the
field human-computer interaction include input devices, bi-manual
input, high degree of freedom input, menuing systems, UI for 3d
graphics, human motor control and perception. Gordon has many
research publications and eighteen granted patents.
2003 - Dr. Steven Woods, CEO of Kinitos, Inc.
"In a software company, timing is
everything - and today the timing is perfect for you to start a
software company!"
Steven Woods obtained a B.Sc. Honours with Distinction from the
University of Saskatchewan in 1987, and M.Sc., and Ph.D. degrees form
the University of Waterloo, the latter in 1996. Following a position
at Carnegie Mellon University's Software Engineering Institute, he
co-founded Quack.com, which was bought out by America Online (AOL) in
2000. In May 2002, Dr. Woods left his position as a Vice-President at
AOL to co-found the software company Kinitos, where he is currently
the CEO.
2002 - Dr. Carey Williamson
The Role of "Awareness" in Internet Protocol Performance
Carey Williamson is a Professor in the Department of Computer
Science at the University of Calgary and an iCORE Senior Research
Fellow in "Broadband Wireless Networks, Protocols, Applications, and
Performance". He holds a B.Sc.(Honours) degree in Computer Science
from the University of Saskatchewan, and a Ph.D. in Computer Science
from Stanford University. Prior to joining the University of Calgary,
he spent 10 years on faculty at the University of Saskatchewan,
winning a University Master Teacher award in October 2000.
2001 - Dr. Tim Brecht
Towards an Environment for Parallel, Distributed and Mobile
Applications
Tim Brecht learned everything he knows about Computer Science at the
University of Saskatchewan, where he graduated with a B.Sc. in
1983. He obtained an M.Math from the University of Waterloo in 1985
and a Ph.D. from the University of Toronto in 1994. He is currently an
Associate Professor at the University of Waterloo and is enjoying a
sabbatical in the Internet and Mobile Systems Lab and the Hewlett
Packard Labs in Palo Alto, CA.
2000 - Dr. Larry Aupperle
Human Modeling in Computer Graphics
Larry Aupperle is a technical director at Pixar Animation
Studios. He was born and raised in Saskatoon , Saskatchewan where he
received a B.Sc. (High Honours) in Computer Science in Computer
Science and Mathematics from the University of Saskatchewan in
1986. He receieved an M.Sc. in Computer Science from the U of S in
1987, studying computational geometry under Dr. Mark Keil. He received
a Ph.D. from Princeton University in 1993, working in computer
graphics under Dr. Pat Hanrahan. After graduation, he joined the Pixar
shorts group as a technical director, working on commercials for
clients such as Levis, Coca-Cola, and Life Savers. He was a member of
the lighting crew on on the first Toy Story feature and did the
lighting for the first shot of that film. Larry joined the Toy
Story 2 team in 1996 as one of two Associate Technical Directors,
and led teams tackling a variety of complex models and
characters. Larry has also served as the instructor for the computer
graphics training courses given at Pixar to new technical personnel.
1999 - Mr. Berni Schiefer
e-business and DB2: Transforming the Role of the Internet
Berni Schiefer is a Senior Technical Staff Member and manager of DB2
Universal Database Performance and Advanced Technology. He joined IBM
in 1985 after graduating from the University of Saskatchewan with a
B. Sc. (Hounours) and has worked on a wide range of database
development projects, including SQL/DS and the Starburst experimental
relational databse at the IBM Almaden Research Lab, prior to working
on DB2. Since 1990, he has been working on introducing advanced
technology into DB2 UDB with particular emphasis on performance.
Berni has written and presented extensively on DB2 and has been
awarded several patents related to query optimization. He also chaired
the Transaction Processing Performance Council's TPC-D benchmark
subcommittee in 1995 and 1996. In 1996, Berni joined the DB2
management team and let the team that delivered TPC-D results using
DB2 PE and DB2 UDB. In 1999, his team released the industry's first
1TB TPC-D benchmark result on a cluster of 32 4-way Netfinity servers.
1998 - Ms. Dorothy Josephson
A New General Insurance System for SGI
Dorothy Josephson received her B. Sc. from the University of
Saskatchewan, majoring in Computer Science. She continued her
education in regina, where she obtained her M.Admin degree in Business
Management in 1990. Her research interests lie in the areas of
Electronic Data Interchange in the Insurance Industry, which led to
the development of SGI CANADA's strategy in this area. Currenty
Dorothy is the Underwriting Program Sponsor for the General Insurance
(GIS) System. In this rols, she has coordinated the business
activities required in moving the SGI General Business Systems off the
mainfram and onto client-server technology.
1997 - Dr. Keith Geddes
The Maple System: Symbolic Math and the Hybrid Symbolic-Numeric Paridigm in Scientific Computation
Keith Geddes received his B.A. from the University of Saskatchewan in 1968, majoring in Mathematics with a concentration in Computer Science to an extent possible at that time. He continuted his education in Toronto where he obtained his Ph.D. degree in Computer Science in 1973. His research interests lie in the areas of algebraic algorithms, computer algebra systems, and scientific computation. He is one of the original developers of the Maple computer algebra system and one of the founders of Waterloo Maple Inc. He is co-author of the textbook "Algorithms for Computer Algebra". He is currently Associate Dean for Computing in the Faculty of Mathematics at the University of Waterloo, where he is a Professor of Computer Science.
1996 - Dr. Deborah Fowler
The Making of Toy Story
Deborah R. Fowler was born and raised in Saskatoon. She received her B.Sc. and M.Sc. at the University of Saskatchewan, and her Ph.D. from the University of Regina, where the focus of her research was spiral patterns in plants and seashells. After post-doctoral studies at the University of Calgary, she went to work with PIXAR in Richmond California on Toy Story, the world's first full-length computer-generated movie. She is now an animation scientist in their feature film division. Her publications include two papers in the annual ACM SIGGRAPH Conference Proceedings in 1992, contributions to two books, The Algorithmic Beauty of Plants (1990) and The Algorithmic Beauty of Sea Shells (1995), as well as published images in both technical and popular magazines.
1995 - Henry Spenser
The Age of Uncontrolled Information Flow
Henry Spenser earned his B.Sc. from the University of
Saskatchewan in 1976 and his M.Sc. from the University of Toronto in
1982. He worked as a Unix systems programmer at University of Toronto for a
number of years before becoming an independent consultant and author.
Henry ran the first Usenet site in Canada (and the first outside
the U.S.), which
was part of the Usenet backbone in its early days. He and Geoff
Collyer wrote C News, one of the two major software packages for network news transport and storage. He and David Lawrence are currently rewriting the Nutshell Handbook on
managing Usenet for O'Reilly and Associates. He's working on a first
draft of the
replacement for RFC 1036, which currently defines the format and
protocols of
network news. He was involved in the early definition of CA*Net (the
Canadian
national research network) and was primary speaker at the Workshop On
NetNews of
the RNP (Brazil's National Research Network) in Rio de Janeiro in August
1992, as a
United Nations technical consultant.
Henry Spencer is also known as the author of various pieces of
freely-available
software -- the public-domain getopt() UNIX library function, the first
redistributable string library, a widely-used regular-expression
library, the 4.4BSD
POSIX regular-expression library, the awk text formatter, etc. -- and as
the author
of The Ten Commandments For C Programmers. He participated in the
public
reviews of the ANSI C standard, contributes to the Standards Council of
Canada
working group that formulates the Canadian position at ISO on C and
related
subjects, and was a member of the POSIX.2 technical working groups on
regular
expressions and awk. He wrote the Regular expressions chapter for
Software Solutions in C (ed. Dale Schumacher, Academic Press). He is
also a
founding member and past board member of the Canadian Space Society, a
Fellow of the British Interplanetary Society, and an occasional
consultant to the Canadian
Space Agency, and was head of mission planning for the now-dormant
Canadian Solar Sail Project.
1994 - Judith Escott
Successful and Usable Software: How To Get There From Here
Judy received her first degree in Home Economics in 1971 from
the University of Saskatchewan. Subsequently she completed two Master's
degrees: one in Community Nutrition at the University of Guelph in 1976,
and one in Computational Science at the University of Saskatchewan in
1988. Ms. Escott received the Governor General's Award from
the University of Saskatchewan in 1988 as the top post-graduate student.
Prior to moving into the field of computer science, Judy
worked as a CUSO volunteer teaching high school science
in Malawi; as a researcher on a CIDA rural development study project in
Indonesia and on a University of Guelph nutrition project; and finally
as coordinator of a school nutrition program for the Saskatoon
Community Health Unit.
Judy joined the Toronto IBM Development Lab in April, 1988
subsequent to her graduation from the University of Saskatchewan.
While there, she has risen from team leader to manager, holding
a variety of different positions on database and application development
tools projects. She has been the recipient of several awards for
her work, most notably an IBM Canada Achievement Award in 1991
and a Special Contribution Award in 1992 for her technical and project
leadership. In 1993 she completed a special assignment as technical
assistant to the Director of the Lab. Ms. Escott is currently Manager
of DB2 Client/Server Software Developer Kits for OS/2, AIX, and DOS.
1993 - Darwyn Peachey
Making An Animated Film Using Computer Graphics
Born and raised in the Saskatoon area, Darwyn attended the University
of Saskatchewan receiving the B.Sc. with High Honours in Computational
Science in 1978 and winning the Governor-General's Gold Medal. He
received the M.Sc. in Computational Science from the U. of. S. in
1983. Before joining Pixar in 1988, he spent three years working on
the UNIX operating system development at the Hospital Systems Study
Group, and five years as a member of the research lab staff in the
Dept. of Computational Science at the U. of S.
Darwyn has been active in the computer graphics research community. He
was a member of the program committees of the ACM SIGGRAPH 92 and 93,
and the Graphics Interface 86, 88, 89, 90 and 91, and was Program
Chair of Graphics Interface 88. He has lectured in five course at
SIGGRAPH conferences and has published eight research papers in
computer graphics, performance evaluation and AI. In march 1993, he
(along with six coworkers) received a Scientific and Engineering
Academy Award for the RenderMan rendering software from the Academy of
Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.
Pixar is a San Francisco Bay area computer graphics company whose
products include software packages and animated TV commercials. Pixar
is currently producing the world's first 3D computer graphics animated
feature film, funded and distributed by Walt Disney Pictures. Darwyn
described his work at Pixar, focusing on the technical challenges of
computer animation production: geometric modeling, parametric keyframe
animation, inverse kinematics and dynamics simulation, shading,
texturing, rendering, compositing, and recording.
1992 - Dr. David Taylor
Debugging in a Distributed Environment
Dr. Taylor obtained his B.Sc. in Computational Science from the
University of Saskatchewan in 1972 and the Honours Certificate in
1973, M.Math. and Ph.D. from the University of Waterloo in 1974, 1977,
respectively. Dr. Taylor has been on the faculty at Waterloo since
1977, with a sabbatical spent at the Computing Laboratory, University
of Newcastle upon Tyne (1983-84). He is currently on sabbatical at
the IBM Toronto lab. He served as Associate Chairman for
Undergraduate Studies in the computer Science Department from 1987 to
1990. Dr. Taylor's research interests include distributed systems and
fault-tolerant software. He has been performing research in software
for fault-tolerant systems for many years, primarily studying
implementations of data structures suitable for use in a
fault-tolerant environment. More recently, he has focused his
research effort on the area of distributed systems. Work includes
replication issues and protection in remote-procedure-call
environment.
1991 - John K. Johnstone
Lines and Circles in Solid Modeling
Dr. Johnstone graduated from the University of Saskatchewan in 1983
with a B.Sc. Honours in Mathematics. During this time, he maintained
a strong link to the Computational Science Department, taking many
courses and working two summers as a research assistant in the
Department. He graduated from Cornell University in 1987 with an
M.S. (1986) and Ph.D. (1987) in Computer Science. While at Cornell,
he was a member of the Robotics and Solid Modeling Group led by
Prof. John Hopcroft. His Ph.D. thesis is entitled The Sorting of
Points along an Algebraic Curve. He has been and Assistant
Professor in the Department of Computer Science at the Johns Hopkins
University sine 1987. His research, which has been funded by the
National Science Foundation, includes solid modeling, computational
geometry, and robotics.
1990 - Fred Smith
The Care and Feeding of Baby Boomers in the Changing Computer World
Fred Smith received a Bachelor of Commerce degree with Honours in
Computer Science in 1970. He took a position as programmer/analyst
with the Coputer Services Bureau of the Federal Government in Ottawa.
In 1972, Fred joined Quasar Systems Ltd. (now Cognos Inc.) as their
microcomputer specialist. His first project was designing and
implementing a Broadcast Control System for CBC using Datapoint 2200
minicomputers. The first computer used on the project had 8K of
memory, 2 cassette tape drives and a 30 cps printer. In 1980, Fred
returned to Saskatoon to join Buy-Rite Furniture Inc. as their
Vice-President of Finance. In 1985, Fred started a Money Concepts
Financial Planning centre in Saskatoon. In 1990, he was Regional
Vice-President in Saskatchewan for Money Concepts (Canada) Ltd. and
Chairman of the franchise in Saskatoon. Since its inception, it has
received several Internaional awards, including top franchise for
Canada. Fred is a Certified Management Consultant (CMC) and a
Registered Financial Planner (RFP). Fred is President of the
Saskatchewan Chapter of the Canadian Association of Finacial Planners,
Director of the Saskatoon Chamber of Commerce, Past Director of
Tourism Saskatoon, past President of the Bridge City Cosmopolitan
Club, Secretary of the Western Canada Federation, Cosmopolitan
International, Chairman, cartage Division, 1989 Jeux canada Games,
Campaign Chairmang of the 1989 United Way of Saskatoon, Past Chairman
of the U od S Computational Science Fund for Excellence, and a member
of Mensa Canada. Fred writes a monthly column called Money
Matters
for SASK Report magazine and hosts a bi-weekly program called Coping with Finances on TELECABLE 10.
1989 - Chris Thompson
The Myrias SP-2: System Overview and Architecture
Chris Thompson received his B.Sc. with High Honours in Computational
Science from the University of Saskatchewan in 1975. Chris completed
his M.Sc. in 1976 at the University of Alberta. From 1976 to 1983,
Chris worked for the Computing Services Department at the University
of Alberta. At the same time, he founded his own software company,
called Chion Corporation. In 1982, Chris became one of the
co-founders of the Myrias Research Corporation, a company with the
goal of developing a low-cost supercomputer system. Since 1986, Chris
has been System Architect for Myrias Research. He played a major role
in the system integration of SPS-1. He also specified the hardware
architecture, and guided the software architecture and language
development for SPS-2. In 1989 he assumed a leading role in SPS-2
integration, support for marketing activities, and the primary
responsibility for future technology directions at Myrias.
1988 - Dr. Joseph Wald
Scientists' Array Manipulation Language
The first lecture, by Dr. Joseph Wald, was held in conjunction with
the 25th Anniversary Celebrations. Dr. Wald was our first
Ph.D. graduate. After completing his Ph.D, in the area of Database
Systems in July, 1985, Joe joined the Schlumberger-Doll Research Lab
in Ridgfield Conn. to work in the Strobe/Impluse knowledge-base
system. This was one of the first systems ever developed to support
large expert system development.