Useful Links
- Google Scholar
- CiteSeer
- ACM Library
- IEEE Computer Society
- PhD study/Paper writing/Presentation
- Advice to PhD Students by Stephen Sterns (Yale)
- How to read, write and present papers by Nitin Vaidya (UIUC)
- How to write a conference paper by William Freeman (MIT)
- Notes on technical writing by Don Knuth (Stanford)
- What's wrong with these equations by David Mermin (Cornell)
- How to give a good talk by Bruce Randall Donald (Dartmouth)
- Guides to surviving CS graduate school by Ronald T. Azuma (UNC)
- You and Your Research by Richard W. Hamming (UMD)
- Research career advice by David Patterson (UC Berkeley)
- Conference/Journal Ranking
- CS Conference Rankings by Osmar R. Zaiane (U. of Alberta)
- CS Conference Rankings by Sourav S. Bhowmick (NTU)
- CS Journal Rankings by Sourav S. Bhowmick (NTU)
- CS Journal Rankings by Chu-Hong Hoi (CUHK)
Colleagues
- Prof. Edward Chang (UCSB, Google)
- Prof. Chih-Jen Lin (NTU)
- Dr. Dong Zhang
- Hongjie Bai (Google)
- Yangqiu Song (IBM China)
- Jon Chu (MS student at MIT)
Courses (Taken and Audited)
- CS 230: Design and Analysis of Algorithms
- CS 231: Algorithms for the Internet Age
- CS 271: Advanced Topics in Distributed Systems
- CS 276: Advanced Topics in Networking
- CS 280: Real-Time Computer Graphics
- CS 284: Mobile Computing
- CS 290I: Computer Imaging
- CS 290N: Bioinformatics
- CS 595D: Research Seminars on Databases and Information Systems
- CS 595F: Hot Topics in Systems and Networking
- CS 595I: Research Seminar on Video Content Analysis and Video Surveillance
- CS 595N: CS Faculty Research Colloquium
- ECE 205A: Information Theory
- ECE 268: Internet Computing and Web Technologies
- ECE 277: Pattern Recognition
- ECE 594: Large Scale Scientific Data Mining
- ECE 594N: Data Mining
- CS 501: Techniques of Computer Science Teaching
- LING7: International TA Workshop
- LING3G: Graduate Writing
Interesting Third Party Projects
- SETI@Home - Search ExtraTerrestrial Intelligence (SETI), its pupose is to find out if there exists intelligent lives outside earth. It will use your computing power while the computer is idle.
- Einstein@Home - This project facilitates computer's idle
time to search for pulsars, or spinning neuron stars. It is a Physics 2005 project supported by the American Physical Society.