Dear Members and Friends of CITRIS,
I
am just back from Taiwan, where we held the second CITRIS-Asia Research
Symposium at the National …
CITRIS and the Banatao Institute
Creating information technology solutions for society's most pressing challenges
Dear Members and Friends of CITRIS,
I
am just back from Taiwan, where we held the second CITRIS-Asia Research
Symposium at the National …
Deadline is April 23 at 5:00 p.m. for the second annual CITRIS White Paper competition, which will give away $25K in cash prizes for the best ideas that demonstrate the ability of IT to address a major societal challenge.
Read about the technology behind the dazzling holiday gala in addition to our efforts to support student research in the February/March newsletter.
CITRIS researchers are among those searching for the next big computing substrate.
Dear Members and Friends of CITRIS,
One
of the great pleasures of working for CITRIS is the opportunity to see
the technologies that will profoundly …
With electronic identity theft on the rise, TRUST researchers are
fighting back with a growing arsenal of software and legal defenses.
Preventing California’s many natural hazards from turning into natural disasters is the aim of the new California Hazards Institute, a multicampus research program of the University of California.
In a new report, the UC Davis authors of the most sophisticated analysis of California’s water management system say the system should be able to adapt to a warmer climate and a larger population, albeit at a significant cost.
Chevron Corp. will fund up to $25 million in research at UC Davis in the next five years to develop affordable, renewable transportation fuels from farm and forest residues, urban wastes and crops grown specifically for energy.
The composition of lipid membranes, similar to those that surround living cells, can now be mapped at the nanometer scale. The work, by researchers at Stanford University, the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and UC Davis, is published in the Sept. 29 issue of the journal Science.
The U.S. Department of Energy has awarded two grants, worth $1.6 million and $1.2 million per year for five years, to projects in advanced computing led by researchers at UC Davis.
These popular talks are held every Wednesday at
noon in 290 Hearst Memorial Mining Building on the UC Berkeley campus and are
all free, open to the general public, broadcast live online, and archived on the
CITRIS website.
Dear Members and Friends of CITRIS,
Global
climate change, national security concerns, and rising pollution are
just some of the problems caused, in …
Two agricultural proposals’one on supporting
urban agriculture in Mexico City and the other on alleviating water scarcity in
California farming’are co-winners of the first annual CITRIS White Paper
competition and will receive $7500 each.
On April 20, five new R&D centers opened in Hong Kong to further
promote the development of innovation and technology. Hosted by
local universities and technology support organisations, including CITRIS, the Centers
provide a one-stop service for applied research, technology transfer and
commercialisation and help facilitate industries to move up the value chain.
More>>
Applying innovative technology to meet the needs of society is
central to CITRIS's mission. In this newsletter, we focus on two areas
of research that …
Research by CITRIS researchers and corporate partners is helping bring
high tech to the developing world at a price that's right.
Due to pollution, a breath of fresh air isn't what it used to be. Find
out how a new center at CITRIS campus UC Davis is increasing our
understanding of the causes and effects of bad air on human health
A recent landmark agreement increases the collaboration between the University of California System, including CITRIS, and leading Indian scientific organizations and universities, to a far deeper level in areas of science, technology, research and education. More
CITRIS is sponsoring a $20K "white paper" competition that is open to teams of undergraduate and graduate students from all 4 CITRIS campuses (Berkeley, Davis, Santa Cruz, and Merced). Papers are due May 1, 2006. More
The end of the year is often a time to reflect and look back, but
here at CITRIS our minds are on the future. What will the next big
technological …
From providing border surveillance to helping the elderly, how "smart dust" is going to revolutionize the future.
A feature article in the November 9 issue of the East Bay Express explores Professor Goldberg’s integration of art and engineering.
A unique collaboration between Berkeley students led by a CITRIS
researcher and the Chicago Fire Department is bringing critical
information to firefighters when they most need it.