Priyank Jainireceives prestigious 2019 Borealis AI Graduate Fellowship
PhD candidateis one of 10 recipients nationally to receive a.
PhD candidateis one of 10 recipients nationally to receive a.
Xi He joined the David R. Cheriton School of Computer Science as an assistant professor in March 2019. She received her BS in computer science and applied mathematics from the University of Singapore in 2012 and her PhD in computer science from Duke University in 2018. Her research is on privacy and security for big-data management and analysis.
Quacquarelli Symonds (QS) released its 2019 World University Rankings and once again ݮƵ finds itself amongst the best universities in Canada and around the world. Building on momentum,, up nine spots relative to the 2018 ranking.
Cheriton School of Computer Science spoke about cybersecurity, privacy and ethics in the age of machine learning and artificial intelligence to high school students at the, held this year on February 4 to 5, 2019 in Toronto.
University Professor M. Tamer Özsu has received the from.
PhD candidateHemant Surale is one of 11 recipients globally and the only candidate from Canada to receive a prestigious. These fellowships wereestablished to foster collaboration betweenand exceptional doctoral students across the world.
Back in 2016, on a sticky late-August day,a guy named Mark walked through the streets of Yaba, a historic neighbourhood in Lagos, Nigeria. He was keeping it low key. Just a few handlers and security guards sweating buckets in the heat as they all made the two-kilometre journey on foot.
Making your house “smart” could soon become cheaper and easier, thanks to new technology developed by researchers at the David R. Cheriton School of Computer Science.
Their recent study describes an approach that can be used to deploy, for the first time, battery-free sensors in a home using existing WiFi networks. Previous attempts to use battery-free sensors ran into some obstacles, making the efforts impractical. These hurdles include the need to modify existing WiFi access points, challenges with security protocols, and the need to use energy-hungry components.
Maura R. Grossman is a Research Professor and Director of Women in Computer Science at the David R. CheritonSchool of Computer Science, as well as an eDiscovery attorney and consultant in Buffalo, New York.
A team of five students from the University of ݮƵ has won the CBC Digital Products Award at , the public broadcaster’s first-ever national bilingual hackathon held simultaneously at the CBC Broadcast Centre in Toronto and at Maison de Radio-Canada in Montreal.