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Grad school: Difference between revisions

From dankwiki
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| MIT (Computational Systems Biology) || || GREs sent ||
| MIT (Computational Systems Biology) || || GREs sent ||
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| University of California at Berkley (Computer Science) || || Not started ||
| University of California at Berekley (Computer Science) || || Not started ||
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| University of Washington (Computer Science) || || GREs sent ||
| University of Washington (Computer Science) || || GREs sent ||

Revision as of 07:14, 27 October 2009

I should have been accomplishing something more useful than learning ImageMagick...
I should have been accomplishing something more useful than learning ImageMagick...

General notes

  • Dianne O'Leary's "Graduate Study in the Computer and Mathematical Sciences: A Survival Manual" is pretty outstanding (aside from the God stuff, which you can take or leave). It's full of pithy gems like this (quoted from the 2009-08-21 version):

    It is possible to spend almost all of your time in literature review and seminars. It is easy to convince yourself that by doing this you are working hard and accomplishing something. The truth of the matter is that nothing will come of it unless your are an active reader and listener and unless you assign yourself time to develop your own ideas, too. It is impossible to "finish a literature review and then start research". New literature is always appearing, and as your depth and breadth increases, you will continually see new connections and related areas that must be studied.

    and:

    If you have a full or part-time job outside the university, you may feel that you are between two worlds, without belonging to either one. Neither the university nor the workplace is well adapted to dealing with the other, and each may place demands that are incompatible with those of the other. Your biggest problems may be the double commute, scheduling difficulties, and isolation.

    I can certainly vouch for this last.

PhD Applications

  • CS GRE Subject Test: 2009-10-10 at GSU
  • Scores going to: GT, MIT, Harvard, UWaterloo, UWashington
School (Program) Application Deadline Status Fees
Carnegie Mellon (Computer Science) Not started
Georgia Tech (Computer Science) GREs sent $50
Georgia Tech (Computational Science & Engineering) GREs sent $50
Harvard (Computer Science) 2009-12-15 GREs sent $105
UIUC (Computer Science) Not started
MIT (Computer Science) GREs sent
MIT (Computational Systems Biology) GREs sent
University of California at Berekley (Computer Science) Not started
University of Washington (Computer Science) GREs sent
University of Waterloo (Computer Science) GREs sent

MSCS at the Georgia Institute of Technology

I am currently a Masters student at Georgia Tech's College of Computing, following the MS-Computer Science (Thesis Option) track. I specialize in:

  • high-performance computing
    • algorithms, programming methodologies, languages and compilers for multicore/manycore
    • cache-, cpu-, and topology-adaptive programming methodologies, compilers and libraries
  • ...and thus, perhaps, computational solutions to Big Problems. Cancer sucks. Fusion's hard.
    • Let's give the scientists some bigger boxing gloves.
  • algorithms for, and implementation of, high-throughput/low-latency pattern matching
    • for network security (wire-speed, low-latency, rich operators)
    • and bioinformatics (high-volume, gappy/fuzzy, multidimensional)
    • especially using architecture-aware automata theory (Memory-tuned, SIMD-based Glushkov, Thompson, XFA, etc...)
  • intrusion detection and prevention (theory and implementation)

Upon entering MSCS in Fall 2008, I'd have said intrusion detection first, programming language design second, and esoteric automata theories third. Indeed, many things do come to pass.

I've prepared some Disarmingly Forthright Advice for CSMS students at this (as of 2009) 9th-ranked graduate computer science program of ours, and also some preparation materials for the CS Subject Exam GRE. Take these animadversions for whatever they're worth.

Fall 2008

Spring 2009

Fall 2009

Spring 2010

  • CS7000 - Masters Thesis (9 hours)
    • with whom?? professors: your name could be here!

GT College of Computing Notes