ECE 585 SEMINAR SERIES - FALL 1996

Friday, 3:00 - 4:50 p.m., 322 Clemens Hall
Contact: Prof. Alexander Cartwright
214 Bonner Hall, Tel: 716-645-1053
E-Mail: anc@buffalo.edu
Reception following seminar

List of Speakers (as of September 20)

Dates Speaker Title
September 6 --- ---
September 13 --- Canceled
September 20 Dr. Nihar Mahapatra
313 Bell Hall
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering
Quality Equalizing Strategy:
A Scalable, High-Performance Load Balancing
Method for Parallel Branch-and-Bound Algorithms
September 27 Dr. Ping-chin Cheng
301 Bonner Hall
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering
Multi-photon fluorescent microscopy and pattern generation
October 4 Dr. Guifang Li
Rochester Institute of Technology
Optical Sub-Carrier Modulation (SCM)
October 11 No Seminar SEAS Faculty Meeting
October 18 CANCELED!!!!!
Dr. Ozan Tonguz
246 Bell Hall
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering
CANCELED!!!!!
October 25 Dr. Henry van Driel
University of Toronto
Optical Phase control of Semiconductor Opto-electronic Properties
Abstract
November 1 CANCELED!!!!
Dr. Chu Ryang Wie
201 Bonner Hall
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering
JAVATM Applet Programming
This talk was canceled due to the
inadequate classroom facilities for running
Java Applets. We apologize for this inconvenience. However,
if you are interested in the talk it is available electronically
at http://jas.eng.buffalo.edu/applets/education/samsung/
Please feel free to browse this information to see what can
be done with Java.
November 8 Dr. Dean Richardson
SUNY Institute of Technology at Utica/Rome
State University of New York, Utica, NY 13504
Vertical Cavity Surface Emitting Lasers (VCSELs)
November 15 Dr. Iain Goodhew
Department of Cybernetics
University of Reading
Whiteknights, Reading, U.K.
Cross-Atlantic Hook-up of Intelligent Robots Via the Internet
Abstract
November 22 Dr. Kasra Etemadi
217 B Bonner Hall
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering
Plasma Processing
December 6 Timothy Terrill
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering
An ATM Adaptation Layer Protocol Designed to Transmit Quality-Critical TCP Traffic Over Degraded Communication Links
Abstract
Page Last Modified: Sunday, October 05, 1997 by anc@buffalo.edu