CS 3010/3011 - Industry Forum - Spring 2009

Fri 11:50-12:40PM, MEB 3147 (Large Conference Room)


Organizer: Matthew Flatt
3122 Merrill Engineering Building
Office phone: 801-587-9091
Email: mflatt@cs.utah.edu

Outline

The Industry Forum is designed to expose students to topics that are not discussed in depth as part of the normal curriculum, but that are likely to be important after they graduate. Each week one or more guest speakers, typically local and national business leaders, will give a talk and answer questions on a topic of interest to them. Topics will run the gamut from the highly career oriented (e.g., how to write a resume and interview or how to decide if graduate school is right for you) to the highly technical (e.g., how video special effects are generated or how software development organizations manage complex system development).


Schedule (subject to change)

Date Speaker Topic
1/16 Patrick McShane, UofU Career Services Course overview and Career Planning
1/23 Calvin Gaisford, Boyd Timothy, Appigo Starting an iPhone Software Company
1/30 John Ogilvie, Ogilvie Law Firm A Primer on Intellectual Property Law
2/6 Ryan Johnson, Fast Enterprises LLC Gentax: Configuring the Whims of Legislature
2/13 Jon Flynn, Fusion-io Emerging Industry of Solid State Storage
2/20 Tammy Green, Distinguished Engineer, Novell Practical Security
2/27 Jon Morrey, Backcountry.com Becoming a “Rockstar” Software Engineer
3/6 No meeting
3/13 David Bean, CTO of Attensity Attensity: Bleeding Edge AI in Salt Lake City? You bet! (or)
Why Starting a Company Before You're Done With Your Degree is a Colossally Bad Idea
3/27 John Regehr Is Grad School Right for You?
4/3 No meeting
4/10 Tom Ngo, VP R&D Disney Imagineering How virtual creatures can learn to walk and jump by artificial evolution - and other fun topics
4/17 Paul Mayfield, Microsoft Desktop Virtualization
4/24 Harold Carr, SUN Microsystems The Journey of the PEPT Remoting Pattern (so far)

The Fall 2008 speaker schedule can be found here.
The Spring 2008 speaker schedule can be found here.
The Fall 2007 speaker schedule can be found here.
The Spring 2007 speaker schedule can be found here.
The Spring 2006 speaker schedule can be found here.
The Spring 2005 speaker schedule can be found here.


Assignments and Grading

CS 3010 and 3011 differ slightly in their assignments and grading policies. Associated with each class, there will be a short writing assignment (e.g., filling out an evaluation of the presentation, submitting a resume, etc.). Here are details on what a talk evaluation should include.

CS 3010 is offered only on a credit/no-credit basis. To receive credit for the course, students will need to turn in ten written assignments that demonstrate at least "reasonable" effort. Assignments are due at the start of the following week's class. You may turn them in via email to the instructor or hand in a hardcopy in class. Because it is offered on a credit/no-credit basis, CS 3010 cannot be applied towards a CS elective course requirement.

CS 3011 is offered for a letter grade. Students taking CS 3011 must hand in (at least) ten written assignments. In addition, you must write a 5-page final report on a topic of your choice related to the course, e.g., an overview of what you learned/liked/disliked, a more detailed study of a subject that one of the speakers raised, etc. Because it is offered on a letter grade basis, CS 3011 can be applied towards a CS elective course requirement.

Students will be able to receive credit for a written assignment via other activities, e.g., hosting a speaker or writing an article for the Teapot. If you wish to host a speaker, please contact the instructor. Hosting consists (roughly) of meeting the speaker when they arrive, helping them get settled in (e.g., making sure they have a parking pass, showing them to the classroom, helping them set up their laptop if they are using one, etc.), talking to the speaker to get acquainted with them, introducing them to the class, and then wrapping things up.


Applying CS 3011 Towards Your CS Electives

Make sure to register for CS 3011 if you wish to apply the industry forum credit towards your CS elective requirements! You can retake CS 3011 for credit up to three times.


Online resources

Once you are enrolled in the course, signup for the class email list (cs3010@list.eng.utah.edu) ASAP. You may do so via https://sympa.eng.utah.edu/sympa/info/cs3010.


College of Engineering Academic Guidelines

You can read about the College of Engineering's policies on appeals, withdrawing from courses, and repeating courses here.