CS545 - Stanford Database Seminar 2003
The Stanford Database Seminar will be held during the winter quarter
only.
It is being organized by Jennifer Widom.
- Time and place: Fridays 4:15-5:15 PM in Gates B12, ten
talks from January 10th through March 14th. (Note the later time and
shorter duration from previous years.)
- Mailing list: To be added to the seminar mailing list,
send your name, affiliation, and preferred mailing address to Marianne
Siroker, siroker@infolab.stanford.edu.
- Enrolled students: Students enrolled in the seminar as
CS545 must attend 8 of the 10 scheduled lectures to pass the course,
no makeups permitted.
- Directions and parking: The Gates Building can be seen
on this (somewhat outdated) campus
map. Most parking on campus is unregulated after 4:00 PM.
- Seminar Archive
- January 10th: Dennis Shasha, New York University
(bio)
AQuery: a simple, efficient extension to SQL for ordered data
(abstract)
(slides)
- January 17th: Dale Skeen, Vitria Technologies
(bio)
The Evolution of Business Integration: from Data to Process
(abstract)
- January 24th: Yannis Papakonstantinou, U.C. San Diego
(bio)
Incremental Validation of XML Databases
(abstract)
(slides)
- January 31st: Adam Bosworth, BEA (bio)
Data Routing Rather than Databases: The
Meaning of the Next Wave of the Web Revolution
to Data Management
(abstract)
- February 7th: David Lomet, Microsoft Research (Redmond)
(bio)
Principles of Redo Recovery
(abstract)
- February 14th: Rakesh Agrawal, IBM Research (Almaden)
Hippocratic Data Management
(abstract)
- February 21st: Carlo Zaniolo, UCLA
ATLAS: a Small but Complete Extension of SQL for Data Streams and Data Mining
(abstract)
- February 28th: Cynthia Dwork, Microsoft Research (Mountain View)
Link Evolution: Analysis and Algorithms
(abstract)
- March 7th: Paul Brown, IBM Research (Almaden) (bio)
Internal Architectures for Object-Relational DBMS Engines
(abstract)
- March 14th: Jim Gray, Microsoft Research (San Francisco)
Thinking Relational: Using SQL for spatial data access the way god
intended-- it's sets stupid!
(abstract)