Einladung zum Fakultätsjubiläum.

Festveranstaltung zum Fakultätsjubiläum

Unsere Fakultät feiert heuer 50 Jahre Lehrprogramm im Bereich Informatik an der Universität Wien und gleichzeitig auch ihr 20-jähriges Bestehen. Aus diesem Grund fand am 4. Oktober 2024 der letzte Programmpunkt dieses Jubiläumsjahres statt. Die Fakultät für Informatik hat zu einer Festveranstaltung mit Vorträgen von u.a. Yvonne Rogers (University College London) und Daniel A. Reed (University of Utah, Microsoft) geladen.

Die Feierlichkeiten fanden im Großen Festsaal der Universität Wien statt.

 

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Programm

Musik (Ensemble der Fakultät für Informatik)

Kjetil Bjerkestrand: Fanfare

Eröffnung und Begrüßung

Sebastian Schütze (Rektor der Universität Wien)

Einleitende Worte

Wilfried Gansterer (Dekan der Fakultät für Informatik)

50 Jahre Informatik an der Universität Wien

Günter Haring (emer. o. Univ.-Prof., Gründungsdekan der Fakultät für Informatik)

Vortrag "Computing Futures in a Changing World"

Daniel Reed

Musik (Ensemble der Fakultät für Informatik)

Oleg Stolter: Le Carnaval de Venise für Playel (Legoklavier) und Kammerensemble (eingerichtet von Howard Arman) – URAUFFÜHRUNG

Vortrag „How can HCI meet AI in the I?”

Yvonne Rogers

Abschließende Worte

Wilfried Gansterer (Dekan der Fakultät für Informatik)

Musik (Ensemble der Fakultät für Informatik)

Johann Strauss: Entweder-oder! – Polka schnell op. 403

Buffet im Kleinen Festsaal

 

Ensemble der Fakultät für Informatik: Peter Reichl (Violine), Hanna Reiter (Viola), Flora Lebloch (Violoncello), Oliver Hödl (Playel), Martin Schmidt (Flöte), Florian Wörister (Saxophon), Christof Zellhofer (Trompete), Alexander Hecke (Posaune), Judith Ammann (Tuba), Kristi Nini (Klavier), Patricia Hu (Klavier und Triangel).

Ein herzliches Dankeschön an den "Wiener Opernsommer Belvedere" für die finanzielle Unterstützung des Kompositionsauftrags für Playel und Kammerensemble!

Festveranstaltung zum Nachschauen

Bilder der Festveranstaltung

Vortragende

Yvonne Rogers

Yvonne Rogers is the director of the Interaction Centre at UCL (UCLIC), deputy head of department for Computer Science and a Professor of Interaction Design. Her research is in the areas of human-computer interaction, ubiquitous computing and interaction design. Her current research focuses on how human behaviour is being impacted and augmented through the design and adoption of new technologies. She is particularly interested in how human-centred applications of AI can be developed that benefit society. Central to her work is a critical stance towards how visions, theories and frameworks shape the fields of HCI, cognitive science and ubiquitous computing. She been instrumental in promulgating new theories (e.g., external cognition), alternative methodologies (e.g., in the wild studies) and far-reaching research agendas (e.g., “Being Human” manifesto) and has pioneered an approach to innovation and ubiquitous learning. In 2022 she was awarded the ACM SIGCHI Lifetime Achievement Research Award and was elected as a fellow of the Royal Society. Other awards include the Royal Society Robin Milner Medal (2021) and a MRC Suffrage and Science Award (2020) for being one of the leading women in 'mathematics & computing’. She was also awarded a chair of excellence from the University of Bremen (2020-2025).

Yvonne Rogers

Daniel Reed

Daniel A. Reed is Presidential Professor (emeritus) in Computer and Computational Science at the University of Utah, where he previously served as Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs (Provost). He has served in a variety of senior academic and industry roles, including as Vice President for Research at the University of Iowa and as Microsoft’s Corporate Vice President for Technology Policy and Extreme Computing. While at Microsoft, he helped shape Microsoft's long-term vision for technology innovations in cloud computing and the company's policy engagement with governments and institutions worldwide.  Before joining Microsoft, he was the founding director of the Renaissance Computing Institute (RENCI) at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and both Head of the Department of Computer Science and Director of the National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) at the University of Illinois.

Dr. Reed just completed two years as chair of the U.S. National Science Board (NSB), which provides oversight for the U.S. National Science Foundation, and serves as a member of the Internet2 Board of Trustees. For a decade, he also served as chair of the U.S. Department of Energy’s Advanced Science Computing Advisory Committee. Dr. Reed has also served as a member of the U.S. President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology (PCAST) and the U.S. President’s Information Technology Advisory Committee (PITAC). He is the past chair of the Board of Directors of the Computing Research Association (CRA), which represents PhD-granting computer science departments in North America. As chair of CRA, he was one of the co-founders of the Computing Community Consortium (CCC), responsible for envisioning new ideas on computing research.

Dr. Reed is a Fellow of the ACM, the IEEE, and the AAAS. He received his B.S. from Missouri University of Science and Technology and his M.S. and Ph.D. from Purdue University, all in computer science.

Daniel Reed