News for Future students

Wednesday, February 23, 2022

Master’s student Cheryl Lao receives 2022 Adobe Research Women-in-Technology Scholarship

photo of Cheryl Lao

Cheryl Lao, a master’s student at the Cheriton School of Computer Science, is one of 16 recipients across North America and one of four from Canada to receive a 2022 Adobe Research Women-in-Technology Scholarship. As a recipient of this prestigious award, she will receive $10,000 USD for education expenses and a year-long Adobe Creative Cloud subscription.

Tuesday, February 22, 2022

Universal blockchain interoperability network Axelar raises $35 million USD Series B funding, joins ranks of unicorns

photo of Professor Sergey Gorbunov

Axelar, a decentralized network that connects application builders with blockchain ecosystems, applications and users, has successfully completed a $35 million USD Series B funding round, bringing its market valuation to $1 billion USD.

Tuesday, February 15, 2022

Researchers from Cheriton School of Computer Science and Preferred Networks, Inc. collaborate on machine learning and HCI

photo of Fabrice Matulic and Professor Daniel Vogel

Fabrice Matulic is a senior researcher at Preferred Networks, Inc., a technology company headquartered in Tokyo, Japan. He is also a former postdoctoral researcher in the Cheriton School of Computer Science, where he worked in the field of human–computer interaction.

Friday, January 21, 2022

Recent PhD graduate Jeremy Hartmann launches company offering virtual reality streaming services

image of Jeremy Hartmann's virtual avatar within the VR space

Jeremy Hartmann successfully defended his dissertation in December 2021 and launched an entrepreneurial venture that took his academic research to the next level.

Wednesday, January 12, 2022

Lila Kari and M. Tamer Özsu lend CS expertise to BIOSCAN, a global multidisciplinary biodiversity project

photo of Professors Lila Kari and M. Tamer Özsu

The biosphere, the zone in which life on Earth is found, contains an estimated 10 million multicellular species. But perhaps the most surprising fact about life on Earth is how little we know about its diversity. Only 2 million species are known to science — organisms that have been studied in sufficient detail to at least be described, classified and given a scientific name. With at least another 8 million species yet to be discovered, cataloguing the diversity of life is in many ways a moonshot — a vast endeavour that succeeds by bringing together specialists across many disciplines.

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