Useful Links
- ACM Library
- IEEE Computer Society
- CiteSeer
- Google Scholar
- Advice to PhD Students by Stephen Sterns
- How to read, write and present papers by Nitin Vaidya
- How to give a good talk by Bruce Randall Donald
- Guides to surviving CS graduate school by Ronald T. Azuma
- You and Your Research by Richard W. Hamming
- Research career advice by David Patterson
- CS Conference Rankings by Osmar R. Zaiane
- CS Conference Rankings by Sourav S. Bhowmick
- CS Journal Rankings by Sourav S. Bhowmick
- CS Journal Rankings by Chu-Hong Hoi
Colleagues
- Prof. Edward Chang (UCSB, Google)
- Prof. Chih-Jen Lin (NTU, now visiting Google)
- Dr. Dong Zhang (Google)
- Hongjie Bai (Google)
- Yangqiu Song (PhD candidate at Tsinghua University)
- Gengxin Miao (PhD student at UCSB)
- Jon Chu (Undergraduate student at MIT)
- Haoyuan Li (Undergraduate student at Peking University)
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 - SETI is the abbreviation for Search ExtraTerrestrial Intelligence, whose 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 Pyhsics 2005 project supported by the American Physical Society.