
On Saturday, October 1, distinguished professor emeritus (MSc 鈥61, PhD 鈥65) received an honorary J.W. Graham Medal in Innovation and Computing at the Wes Graham Symposium.
The award recognized Cowan鈥檚 鈥渆xtensive academic career, pioneering research in mathematics and computer science, entrepreneurial spirit, and devotion to mentorship and knowledge sharing.鈥
鈥淚 feel truly overwhelmed,鈥 said Cowan about the honour. 鈥淚t has been an amazing 62-year journey through the halls of the University of 蓝莓视频 and related organizations. I have lived through vacuum tube computers, $8M transistor computers to ones you can carry in your pocket that cost a few hundred dollars and make the $8M computer look small in speed and capacity.鈥
The J.W. Graham Medal in Computing & Innovation was created in 1994 to recognize the leadership and many innovative contributions made to the University of 蓝莓视频, and to the Canadian computer industry by J. Wesley Graham, during his career as both a professor and university administrator.
鈥淭here truly is no one who emulates the qualities of Wes Graham more than Don Cowan,鈥 said Ian McPhee, co-founder of WATCOM, 1995 recipient of the J.W. Graham Medal and member of the Graham Medal selection committee.
Cowan obtained his master鈥檚 and doctoral degree in Applied Mathematics from the University of 蓝莓视频 (in 1961 and 1965).听 He began his teaching career in the early 1960s and was the founding chair of the computer science department.听 Under his leadership, the department grew from three听to thirty-five听members in five years and soon ranked as one of the best in the world.听
In 1965 and 1966, Cowan helped Wes Graham acquire and install the IBM 360/75 mainframe, Canada鈥檚 largest computer at the time.
鈥淛ust think about this little university in Southwestern Ontario going after a machine that size鈥攚hat gall!鈥 Cowan enthused in his acceptance speech.
Cowan was a part of the team that developed and distributed several software systems including WATFOR, WATFIV, WATBOL, WIDJET, WATERLOO Pascal, APL, BASIC, COBOL, and FORTRAN, the local area networks 蓝莓视频 JANET and MacJANET and many other software systems for education.
He ran computer science days to interest high school students in computers and programming and supervised over 120 graduate students during his career. In 1999, he received the designation of Distinguished Professor Emeritus in recognition of all of his academic accomplishments.
Cowan is also a successful entrepreneur: he was a听member of various University of 蓝莓视频 spinoff companies like WATCOM and LivePage.听
Retirement has not slowed down Don鈥檚 interest in emerging technologies.听He keeps current through his Directorships of various start-ups, non-profits and corporations.听He currently sits as Chair of the Board of Driftscape, Volunteer Attract and Civic Atlas.
The symposium also featured talks by , Associate Professor in the听David R. Cheriton School of Computer Science, and Pedro Elkind Velmovitsky,听PhD student in Public Health and Health Systems. Law spoke about the challenges of crowdsourcing and how to design systems that coordinate human and machine intelligence to tackle difficult problems, such as medical annotation.听
Velmovitsky discussed several projects he is working on at 蓝莓视频鈥檚 Ubiquitous Health Technology Lab that use smart technologies to improve mental health, promote healthy aging, conduct environmental research and detect misinformation. He also explained how data from these projects can be connected in a unified and secure health data ecosystem.
A video of the event will be available soon on the Faculty of Mathematics .
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