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News & Events ICS students presented at Undergraduate Research and Creative Art Symposium
Seven ICS students presented at Park University 2nd annual Undergraduate
Research and Creative Art Symposium on April 18, 2007.
CS220 class published a paper in Robotic Education Workshop
Wen Hsin, Ph.D, and eight students from CS220 Computer Architecture in spring 2007
semester published a paper in a robotic education workshop. In particular,
Hsin, W.-J., Baker, C., Branscum, J. Bunce, E., Czamanske, A., Kreeger, N., Neri, R., Nganga, P., Warren, A. "Assembly Programming using Simple Lego Mindstorms RCX Robots," in the Workshop on Research in Robots for Education, Robotics Science and Systems. Georgia Tech, Atlanta, Georgia, June 30, 2007. Dr. Hsin presented the paper in the workshop. Park Team Wins Top Award in Cerner I-Television CompetitionEight Park University computer science and business students recently completed the Cerner Software Development Life Cycle course, with a team placing Top Award in the I-Television (I-TV) Category. Park faculty Dr. Steve Hallman of the ICS department, served as the team's advisor and course professor. There were eight student teams representing: Park University, William Jewell College, University of Missouri-Kansas City, Kansas State University, and Kansas State University-Purdue, which participated in the course. The teams objective was to design and develop a working solution, from one of the following categories: Medical PDA application, I-Television, Headboard, or a Rapid Response, these networked solutions had the ability to accessed Cerner's proprietary Millennium Objects Suite. The teams consisted of a project/solutions manager, documenter/tester, software designer/architect, and software programmer. They met weekly with Cerner employees throughout the spring semester to develop their projects into working solutions. During the meetings, students heard from Cerner subject matter experts who provided information regarding their roles and experiences. The student teams also met during the semester with a Cerner pharmacist, doctor, architect, and the company's executives to gather information and to ensure they were meeting the requirements for the software system they were developing. On May 2, 2007, the eight teams presented their solution to the Cerner executives. The executives/judges scored the teams according to eight criteria ranging from solution functionality to the ability to answer questions. Park's BluSozo team performed exceptionally well competing to win the Top Award in the Cerner I-Television Category Competition. The winning Park team received a $300 gift certificate for Amazon for their efforts. Park's Team BluSozo team received top placed in the I-TV category. Congratulations to the BluSozo team!
ICS Student Wins Prominent Scholarship and Internship
Park University senior in Information and Computer Science Nick Kreeger is
the recipient of Apple Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) 2007 Student
Scholarship. ICS Students Participate in Computer Science Conference
ICS Professor, Students Receive Research GrantThe Computing Research Association Committee on the Status of Women in Computing Research (CRA-W) awarded an external undergraduate research grant to Wen Hsin, Ph.D., associate professor in Information and Computer Science, and Park students Virginia Maikweki and Amanda Warren. The National Science Foundation provides the funding for this project. The students will work under Hsin's guidance to complete the project during the 2006-2007 academic year. Park Teams Place First and Third in Cerner Competition
The student teams representing Park University, William Jewell College, the University of Missouri-Kansas City and Baker University participated in the course. The teams' objective was to develop medical application software that can run on a wireless Dell Axim PDA and a web browser from Cerner's proprietary Millennium Objects Suite. Cerner provided to each team a brand new wireless Dell Axim PDA to use for project development.
On May 3, the teams presented their solution to the Cerner executives. The executives scored the teams according to eight criteria ranging from solution functionality to the ability to answer questions. Park's teams performed exceptionally well competing to win the business from the Cerner executives. The winning Park Team Atlas members each received a Dell Axim PDA for their efforts. Park's Team Atlas placed first. Its members include:
Andrew Romer - project manager Park's QPA Team placed third. Its members include:
Denzil Ross - project manager Guest Speaker - Daniel Green From Sun Microsystems
The ICS Department will host a speaker presentation on Wed, Apr 19 11am-12pm in
Science Hall room 16.
Using Windows Media Player (or a compatible player), view the presentation
here. Students Selected to Attend Google Workshop
Google has invited Park University ICS students Virginia Maikweki and Patricia Kengne to attend a
workshop for women engineers at its headquarters in Mountain View, Calif. on Saturday, Jan. 21. ICS Students Win Programming Contest
On Nov. 5, Park's Information and Computer Science Department participated in the annual Association
for Computing Machinery programming contest at the University of Missouri-Kansas City. Guest Speaker - Kevin Speck from the Heart of America Regional Computer Forensics LaboratoryOn November 30 in Science Hall 110, Kevin Speck from the Heart of America Regional Computer Forensics Laboratory (HARCFL) spoke at Park's ACM Club meeting. Using Windows Media Player (or a compatible player), view Kevin Steck's presentation here. Kevin talked about his experiences heading up a forensics lab that works with the FBI. Much of the lab work is computer based, and with a computer-major audience, he'll emphasize the computer-related side of things. Additionally, Kevin talks about a possible future internship program with Park's ICS Department. The following is a detailed description of what he'll talk about. The Heart of America Regional Computer Forensics Laboratory is part of a national network of full-service digital forensic laboratories providing law enforcement with access to cutting-edge electronic equipment, as well as the combined experience and knowledge that only a team of highly trained and experienced Forensic Examiners can provide. The laboratory is located just north of downtown Kansas City, occupies approximately 15,000 square feet of space and houses several million dollars of state-of-the-art digital forensic equipment. Having provided computer forensics is support in cases such as the "BTK Serial Killer" investigation, the murder of Mrs. Bobbie Jo Stinnett and the removal of her unborn fetus, and the murder by Kansas State University Professor Thomas Murray of his ex-wife, the HARCFL is comprised of 13 full-time examiners and six administrators detailed to the laboratory from 15 different participating law enforcement entities. A presentation will be given regarding the administration and operation of the HARCFL, as well as potential internships associated with laboratory and the criminal justice and computer science programs. Guest Speaker - Dan Connolly fron the W3COn October 27, Dan Connolly from the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) spoke at Park's ACM Club meeting. The W3C is the governing body for the Web and Dan is near the top of the W3C hierarchy (just under HTML inventor, Tim Berners-Lee). During his presentation, Dan spoke about the inner workings of the W3C and more specifically about his recent work on updating the W3C's Web Architecture Recommendations. Using Windows Media Player (or a compatible player), view his presentation here. --------------------------------- University ResourcesThis page was last modified on Thursday January 10 2008 |
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