Stanford University Department of Electrical Engineering
Computer Systems Colloquium (EE380) Schedule
Spring 2008-2009
Wednesdays, 4:15-5:30PM in Gates B03

Stanford EE Computer Systems Colloquium meets on Wednesdays 4:15PM-5:30PM throughout the academic year. Talks are given before a live audience in Gates B03 (Fall) or Gates B01 (Winter and Spring).
The Colloquium may also be viewed live on the web (click the "join the live presentation" link), or it may be viewed on demand over the web an hour or so (sometimes longer) after the lecture completes (click the video button on the schedule). Colloquium talks are also distributed on iTunes and YouTube The schedule for these channels is highly variable since it depends upon how much time SCPD staff has available outside of critical class related work.

The Forrest Warthman & Martin Morf lecture (October 7th) should be attended live if at all possible. We will live stream video and audio during the live talk, but it will not be archived for on-demand viewing. However, you will be able to listen to the audio on-demand. For enrolled students who cannot watch or attend the talk in the 4:15-5:30PM slot, an archival talk by Christopher Alexander may be substituted.

[Join Talk]  Click here to join the live presentation  
Apr 1, 2009Trevor Blackwell
Anybots
Learning in Humans and Robots
Apr 8, 2009Michael C. Mace
Principal, Rubicon Consulting
App stores and software ecosystems
Apr 15, 2009Chris Grier
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
The Gazelle Browser
Apr 22, 2009Jim Morris
CMU West
Can Hi-tech hitchhiking work?
Apr 29, 2009Eric Weinstein
Systems Architecture, Kabuki Capitalism, and the Economic Manhattan Project
May 6, 2009Volker Strumpen
IBM Austin Research Laboratory
The Spiral Cache: A self-organizing memory architecture
May 13, 2009Mike Flynn
Maxeler (and Stanford emeritis)
Accelerating computation with FPGAs with a seismic data processing example
May 20, 2009Bob Metcalfe
Internet Lessons for Solving Energy
May 27, 2009John Sosoka
Vita Robotica (past CTO of Ubobe Lifeforms)
The Rise and Fall of a Companion Robot
Lessons Learned from Pleo
Jun 3, 2009Andreas Terzis
Johns Hopkins University
Elements of a wireless sensor architecture
 

Contact EE380 Webmaster