Computer Science Seminar Series, Texas State University

Computer Science Seminar Series, Texas State University

  1. Data Centers: Big, Hungry and Proliferating by Dr Tom W. Keller, IBM Distinguished Engineer, IBM Research Division, Austin Research Laboratory, May 2nd, 2008.

  2. Clear and Precise Definitions of Scientific processes to Facilitate the Conduct of Science by Dr Rodion Podorozhny, Assistant Professor, Department of Computer Science, Texas State University, April 4th, 2008.

  3. Model-guided Automatic Performance Tuning by Dr Apan Qasem, Assistant Professor, Department of Computer Science, Texas State University, February 29th, 2008.

  4. Modeling and Resource Management in Wireless Networks by Dr Rong Zheng, Assistant Professor, Department of Computer Science, University of Houston, January 25th, 2008.

  5. Realizing seamless observation, orientation, decision and action with agile technologies by Dimitrios Geogakopoulos Senior Scientist, Telcordia Austin Research Laborartory, December 7th,2007.

  6. Computational and Applied Graph Theory by Nathaniel DeanProfessor, Department of Mathematics, Texas State University-San Marcos on November 2nd,2007.

  7. Liberating TCP: The Free and the Stunts by Mina Guirguis, Department of Computer Science, Texas State University-San Marcos on October 5th, 2007.

  8. ActionItem.com - Collaboration through Social Tasking and Workflow Reuse by Mark Robert, President, ActCentric Corporation, Austin, Texas on August 31st, 2007.

  9. On the Validity of Multi-Resolution Non-Supervised Training Algorithms by Dr Dan Tamir, Department of Computer Science, Texas State University-San Marcos on March 30th, 2007.

  10. Generating Structurally Complex Tests from Declarative Constraints by Dr Sarfraz Khurshid, Department of Electeical and Computer Engineering, University of Texas at Austin on February 23rd, 2007.

  11. Where Have All The IT Jobs Gone? There, There, and Right Here by Professor Moshe Y. Vardi, Department of Computer Science, Rice University on January 26th, 2007.

  12. On a Network Sensing Problem by Xingde Jia, Department of Mathematics, Texas State University-San Marcos on December 1st, 2006.

  13. Two General Alternators by Dr Furman Haddix, Department of Computer Science, Texas State University-San Marcos on September 29th, 2006.

  14. Flexible Scientific Workflows with Dynamic Embedding by Nicholas Haasch, Department of Computer Science, Texas State University-San Marcos on September 15th, 2006.

  15. GIS and Its Applications in Transportation and Environmental Health Research by Professor Benjamin Zhan, Department of Geography, Texas State University-San Marcos on April 28th, 2006.

  16. Software Engineering from a Performance Perspective by Dr Jerry Kilpatrick on March 31st, 2006.

  17. Slander-Resistant Attacker Isolation in Ad Hoc Networks by Qijun Gu, Department of Computer Science, Texas State University-San Marcos on February 24th, 2006.

  18. Geographic Profiling by Professor Kim Rossmo, Department of Criminal Justice, Texas State University-San Marcos on January 27th, 2006.

  19. A Mathematical Model for Quantum Communication by R. D. Ogden, Texas State University-San Marcos on September 30th, 2005.

  20. Advance resource allocation in optical networks by Jawad Drissi, Texas State University-San Marcos on October 28th, 2005.

  21. Automatic Discovery and Classification of Web Sources by Dr Anne Ngu, Texas State University-San Marcos on April 1st, 2006.

  22. Negotiation mechanisms for multi-agent systems by Rodion Rodorozhny, Texas State University-San Marcos on February 25th, 2005.

  23. Diverse Firewall Design by Alex Liu, University of Texas, Austin on October 29th, 2004.

  24. Comprehensive Scalable Security Mechanism For Large-scale Component-based application systems by Mark Grechanik, University of Texas, Austin on September 24th, 2004.

  25. Several Topics in Ad Hoc Wireless Networks by Dr Xiao Chen, Texas State University-San Marcos, April 29th, 2004

  26. LCMRMG Routing for Mobile ad hoc Networks by Dr Wuxu Peng, Texas State University-San Marcos, April 2nd, 2004

  27. Modeling and Solving Jobshop Scheduling Problems using ASPPS, by Dr Deborah East, Texas State University-San Marcos, February 27th, 2004.