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2016 Annual Affiliates Meeting

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Annual Affiliates Meeting: April 11 - April 14, 2016

Location: Arrillaga Alumni Center
Fisher Conference Center
326 Galvez Street
Stanford, CA 94305

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The Annual Meeting will be hosted for the 48th consecutive year by the Computer Forum at the Arrillaga Alumni Center at Stanford University. The four-day event will present opportunities for our industrial partners to hear about latest developments in timely and critical areas of technology.

Day 1

Security Workshop

The Annual Security Workshop, now in its 17th year, will present cutting edge research on computer security from the Stanford Security Lab. Topics include web security, security for embedded devices and mobile phones, operating systems, code analysis, secure user interfaces, cryptography, and many others. The workshop is organized by Professors Dan Boneh and John Mitchelland will involve talks from faculty and PhD students.

April 11, 2016
McCaw Hall,
Alumni Center

Day 2 

Plenary Session and Poster Session

The theme of the Plenary Session, organized by Professor Hector Garcia-Molina, will be "Big Data" and will feature selected talks by faculty and industry leaders.

 

The seated luncheon will feature a presentation by Hal Varian, Chief Economist at Google, on productivity paradox. The day will conclude with a reception and a poster session of CS and EE student research.

April 12, 2016

McCaw Hall, Alumni Center

Day 3

HCI + Design Workshop

Join us for the HCI + Design workshop as we highlight new work on human-robot interaction, interactive art, shape-shifting technology humor generation tools, social computing, crowdsourcing and visualization. This is a workshop organized by Professors Maneesh Agrawala and James Landay.

April 13, 2016

McCaw Hall, Alumni Center

Day 4

IoT Workshop

The Internet will soon connect us to the physical world through personal health monitors, proximity networks, smart homes, smart cars, and automation networks. These new networks provide tremendous opportunity, but also bring tremendous risks. Today, hackers steal credit card numbers; tomorrow, they will be able to control your home, steal your personal medical data, and track you as you walk down the street. Existing approaches to secure computing systems are insufficient for these new cyber-physical applications, as they have very different trust models and network architectures, bridging pervasive local area networks, personal mobile devices, server storage, and web-based applications.

 

This workshop is organized by Prof. Philip Levis will present research by the Secure Internet of Things Project, a collaboration between Stanford University, UC Berkeley, and the University of Michigan. It will consist of talks by faculty and students on embedded computing, hardware, security, operating systems, applications, networking, and new design technologies to help the Maker movement.

April 14, 2016

Fisher Conference Center, Alumni Center