Perry Naughton and Alric Althoff were award National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowships. Perry, a second year PhD student, is involved in engineering innovation that spans robotics, signal processing, and computer vision. He is currently a CISA3 NSF IGERT-TEECH fellow. Alric, a first year PhD student, studies algorithms and hardware for compressive sensing and tensor analysis. His research aims to both decrease cost and increase performance of sensors relevant to industry and science. Alric is currently funded by the San Diego Fellowship. They join the growing list of Kastner Group members receiving NSF Graduate Research Fellows; this includes current group members Jason Oberg and Dustin Richmond, and previous group members Bridget Benson and Jennifer Trezzo. See the CSE press release for more info
Category Archives: Uncategorized
ERA Keynote
Ryan gave a keynote at the Encuentro Regional Academico (ERA) conference in Tijuana, Mexico on April 10. The presentation focused on the projects in our Engineers for Exploration program. While he was there, he saw a couple of familiar face – Kenia Picos and Ulises Orozco – who spent time as visiting students in the Kastner Group.
Innovation Trends Cyber Security Symposium
Ryan is the moderator for the iTrends Symposium on Cyber Security held Thursday April 8 at the Qualcomm Institute. The symposium aims to education UCSD students on the opportunities in Cyber Security. The panelist include Dr. Stephen D. Russell, SPAWAR Director of Science & Technology/CTO, Jeff Nichols, Director of Information Technology, Sempra Energy, Paul Martini, Co-founder/CEO, iboss Network Security, and Chad Nelly, Vice President of Operations, ESET North America.
Security Technology Featured at San Diego Venture Group Event
Tortuga Logic, a startup spun out of the Kastner Group, was one of the companies highlighted at the San Diego Venture Group’s ‘Incubators and Accelerators’ event at the Hyatt Regency. This event featured over 300 investors, entrepreneurs, and industry professionals. Tortuga Logic develops technology for creating provably secure systems.
Hardware Accelerated Object Tracking Paper Accepted to FCCM
Our paper, which builds a hardware accelerated system for multiple target tracking, was accepted to FCCM 2014. Our system combines multi-core CPU and an FPGA; this allows it to run over 65 times faster than a highly optimized multithreaded implementation running only in software. Congrats to the authors, Matt Jacobsen, Pingfan Meng, Siddarth Sampangi, and Ryan Kastner.
Brina Lee discusses life as first Instagram female engineer
Brina, a Kastner group MS Alumna, was the first female engineer at Instagram. In a recent interview in Elle magazine, she discusses her journey into studying computer science and the challenges of being a minority in a large tech company (Instagram is now a part of Facebook). Brina previously had an op-ed in the Huffington Post providing more specifics on how she became a software engineer.
Medical Device Security Workshop
In his panel talk at the HIMSS workshop “Medical Device Security Risks and Challenges: A Multidisciplinary Response”, Ryan urged the medical device community must start considering hardware in their quest of building reliable and security medical devices. He also called for enhanced collaboration between a bevy of different stakeholders who develop, use, and regulate these devices. A discussion on this (and more) can be found in a interview that he gave to the Healthcare Info Security Group.
IEEE Micro Top Picks
Our paper Networks-On-Chip with Provable Security Properties has been accepted for publication in the 2014 Top Picks issue of IEEE Micro. This issue acts as a best paper award for papers submitted to the elite computer architecture papers in 2013. This paper was originally published in ISCA 2013. Congrats to Ryan and Jason as well as our UCSB collaborators, Hassan Wassel, Ying Gao, Tim Sherwood, and Fred Chong as well as Ted Huffmire from the Naval Postgraduate School.
2013 Top Story
Our research to develop a hardware accelerated system for flow cytometry was listed as one of the 20 Top Stories for UCSD CSE Department and as a memorable story in the Jacobs School Year in Review. This research was originally presented at FPL in September.
ASPLOS 14 Paper
Our paper “Sapper: A Language for Hardware-Level Security Policy Enforcement” was accepted to ASPLOS. Congrats to Jason, Ryan, our collaborators at UCSB (Xun Li, Vineeth Kashyap, Ben Hardekopf, Tim Sherwood, Fred Chong), and UT Austin (Mohit Tiwari).