Fall 2002 Database Seminar


Invitation

We are soliciting talks from our faculty members, students, and visitors from industry and other institutions. Please consider sharing your interesting research on database systems with us. The dates open are listed below -- but if you happen to be available at some other date than those listed, or at a date that's already taken, please contact Neoklis Polyzotis. We are very flexible in moving talks around!


Schedule

Unless otherwise announced, this one-hour seminar is held every Friday of the semester in room 2310 CS&S at 1:30 pm.

You can also check out the upcoming talks in the department's event page.

Date Speaker(s) Title Abstract/Paper Comments
Sep 6   No Seminar    
Thursday Sep 12
(1:30pm 2310CS)
Jennifer Widom
Stanford University
Query Processing, Approximation, and
Resource Management in a Data Stream
Abstract Note unsual date
and time
Sep 13   No Seminar    
Sep 20 Database Faculty
University of Wisconsin
Meet the database group Abstract Meet the faculty and students of the database group
Sep 27 Raghu Ramakrishnan
University of Wisconsin
Database Modules, or Why We Need to Break Up DBMSs Abstract
Slides
 
Monday Sep 30
(1:00pm 2310CS)
Goetz Graefe
Microsoft Research
B-Tree Indexes & CPU Caches Abstract Note unsual date
and time
Oct 4   No Seminar    
Oct 11 Chung-Sheng Li
IBM T. J. Watson Research Center
EpiSPIRE: Model-based Retrieval of Multi-modal Information & Bio-surveillance Abstract  
Oct 18   No Seminar    
Oct 25   No Seminar    
Nov 1   No Seminar    
Nov 8 SIGMOD Deadline No Seminar    
Nov 15 No Seminar
Monday Nov 18
(1:00pm 2310CS)
Sam Madden
University of California,Berkeley
TinyDB: A Database Engine for Sensor Networks Abstract Note unsual date
and time
Nov 22 Rajasekar Krishnamurthy
Neoklis Polyzotis
Practice Talks for ICDT and CIDR Abstracts  
Nov 29 Thanksgiving Recess No Seminar    
Dec 6 No Seminar
Tuesday Dec 10
(4:00pm 2310CS)
Alin Dobra
Cornell University
Processing Aggregate Queries over Continuous Data Streams Abstract Note unsual date
and time
Dec 13


This page is maintained for the Fall 2002 semester by Neoklis Polyzotis