The following videos are available for checkout from the Division. (See Crystal in 385 Soda Hall, crystal@cs, 2-0930.) Checkout instructions follow this list. *** UC BERKELEY VIDEOTAPES: Jim Gray, McKay Lecturer "Scaleable Networks and Platforms (SNAP) for Data Intensive Applications" Recorded: March 1, 1995 Run Time: apprx. 50 mins. CS Special Seminar: "Ergonomics for Computer Operators" Marianne Gibson and Shari Ser Physical Therapists Summit Medical Center, Oakland Recorded: March 18, 1993 Run Time: apprx. 75 minutes David Patterson "RAID" Recorded: November 11, 1994 (CS61A - Brian Harvey) Run Time: ? Michael Clancy "Research in Programming Education" Recorded: November 4, 1994 (CS61A - Brian Harvey) Run Time: ? Domenico Ferrari "Multimedia Networking" Recorded: October 14, 1994 (CS61A - Brian Harvey) Run Time: 50 minutes Richard Fateman "Symbolic Computation" Recorded: October 7, 1994 (CS61A - Brian Harvey) Run Time: 50 minutes Jerry Feldman UC Berkeley & ICSI "Natural Computation and AI" Recorded March 25, 1994 Run Time: 50 minutes "Sequoia 2000: CS Applied to Global Change Research" Recorded: 1993 Run Time: 15 mins. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SPECIAL SERIES (28 tapes) Computers, Freedom & Privacy Recorded in 1993 Run Time: from 75 - 115 minutes Jim Mayer, director CALIFORNIA NEWSREEL/Ideas in Motion "Computers in Context" Recorded 1987 Run Time: 33 minutes Introduces Americans to a new human-resource based computer paradigm now emerging in Scandinavia. This innovative "tool perspective" reconceives systems design as part of larger organizational strategies to augment, rather than replace, worker skill, creativity, and initiative. The three worksites featured show how computer systems can broaden participation, decentralize problem-solving, encourage on-the-job learning, and preserve jobs. "A "must see" for line managers and system designers. If American businesses are to compete, they must learn how to apply advanced technology in ways that will fully utilize and develop the capabilities of the people who operate it. The three instances in this video are pioneering examples." Richard Walton, Harvard Business School ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- SPECIAL SERIES: 15 VIDEOLECTURES FROM THE 1994 GRACE HOPPER CELEBRATION OF WOMEN IN COMPUTING Abstracts are available at UVC's home page (http://www.uvc.com/) TOPIC CATEGORY: WOMEN IN COMPUTER SCIENCE (4 tapes, #1-4)) 1) WOMEN IN COMPUTER SCIENCE Mildred Dresselhaus Massachusetts Institute of Technology Order #GMH-Dresselhaus 55 minutes 2) MAKING ELECTRONIC LEARNING ENVIRONMENTS SUCCEED FOR GIRLS AND BOYS Maria Klawe University of British Columbia Order #GMH-Klawe 38 minutes 3) STRATEGIC DEFENSE RESEARCH Anita Jones Department of Defense Order #GMH-Jones 52 minutes 4) "THE MANAGEMENT OPTION." Panel Discussion. Moderator: Bronwyn Fryer, Working Women Magazine Order #GMH-Panel-2 81 minutes TOPIC CATEGORY: OBJECT TECHNOLOGY (1 tape - #5) 5) THE STRUCTURE OF DISTRIBUTED PROGRAMS. Barbara Liskov Massachusetts Institute of Technology Order #GMH-Liskov 47 minutes TOPIC CATEGORY: SOFTWARE ENGINEERING AND PROGRAMMING (3 tapes-#6-8) 6) COMPUTERS AND RISK Nancy Leveson University of Washington Order #GMH-Leveson 39 minutes 7) ABSTRACTION AND CODIFICATION IN SOFTWARE ENGINEERING Mary Shaw Carnegie Mellon University Order #GMH-Shaw 45 minutes 8) LANGUAGE IMPLEMENTATION Susan Graham University of California, Berkeley Order #GMH-Graham 44 minutes TOPIC CATEGORY: INFORMATION SUPERHIGHWAY (2 tapes-#9-10) 9) ENCRYPTION - A SWORD THAT CUTS TWO WAYS Dorothy Denning Georgetown University Order #GMH-Denning 42 minutes 10) INFORMATION HIGHWAY: COMPUTER AND POLICY ISSUES Panel Discussion: Moderator: Dr. Barbara Simons, IBM Order #GMH-Panel-1 80 minutes TOPIC CATEGORY: HUMAN COMPUTER INTERACTION (2 tapes-#11-12) 11) COOPERATIVE AGENTS: MAN AND HUMAN Ruzena Bajcsy University of Pennsylvania Order #GMH-Bajcsy 46 minutes 12) COLLABORATIVE PLANS AND DIALOGUE PARTICIPATION Barbara Grosz Harvard University Order #GMH-Grosz 38 minutes TOPIC CATEGORY: NATURAL LANGUAGE (1 tape, #13) 13) FINDING THE INFORMATION WOOD IN THE NATURAL LANGUAGE TREES Karen Sparck Jones Cambridge University Order #GMH-Sparck-Jones 41 minutes TOPIC CATEGORY: PARALLELISM (1 TAPE, #14) 14) DESIGN CHALLENGES IN MASSIVELY PARALLEL, FINE GRAIN ARCHITECTURES Mary Jane Irwin Pennsylvania State University Order #GMH-Irwin 40 minutes TOPIC CATEGORY: COMPILERS (1 tape, #15) 15) COMPILERS - NEW CHALLENGES & NEW DIRECTIONS Fran Allen IBM Corporation - T.J. Watson Research Laboratory Order #GMH-Allen 41 minutes CONFERENCE INFORMATION The First Grace Hopper Celebration of Women in Computing was held in Washington, DC, June 9-11, 1994. Its purpose was to celebrate the continuing achievements and contributions of women in computing. Dr. Anita Borg from Digital Equipment Corporation was the General Chair. 17 of the leading women in computer science spoke. We are offering videolectures of 15 presentations. Unfortunately, due to technical difficulty, we are unable to offer the presentations by Irene Greif of Lotus and Elaine Cohen of the University of Utah. The sponsors included ACM, IEEE Computer Society, the Computing Research Association (CRA), the Office of Naval Research, the National Science Foundation, Digital Equipment Corporation, Microsoft Corporation, Motorola Corporation, Sun Microsystems, Unisys, AT&T, Intel Foundation, Lotus Corporation, Silicon Graphics International, Charitable Foundation, Actel Corporation, AAAI, Autodesk Corporation, and Amy Pearl. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- THE MACHINE THAT CHANGED THE WORLD SERIES, 1992 THE WGBH COLLECTION: FILMS FOR THE HUMANITIES & SCIENCES Giant Brains, Inventing the Future, The Paperback Computer, The Thinking Machine, The World at Your Fingertips Run Time: 58 minutes each ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- UNIVERSITY VIDEO COMMUNICATIONS, LECTURER SERIES I-VI Academic Leaders in Computer Science and Electrical Engineering DISTINGUISHED LECTURE SERIES VI Richard Karp UC Berkeley & ICSI "NP-Complete Problems" Recorded August 2, 1993 Run Time: 38 minutes Kenichi Miura Fujitsu America, Inc. "Vector-Parallel Approach to High-Performance Computing and the VPP500" Recorded September 10, 1993 Run Time: 41 minutes DISTINGUISHED LECTURER SERIES V Armando Garcia IBM Corporation "The Power Visualization System" Recorded November 9, 1992 Run Time: 50 minutes Kurt Piersol Apple Computer, Inc. "Inter-Application Communication" Recorded September 15, 1992 Run Time: 55 minutes Michael L. Powell Sun Microsystems Labs, Inc. "Objects and Interfaces for System Software Structure" Recorded September 18, 1992 Run Time: 59 minutes UVC SPECIAL PRESENTATION Leaders in EECS Gordon Bell & Carver Mead "How Things Really Work: Two Inventors on Innovation" Recorded July 30, 1992 Run Time: 30 minutes DISTINGUISHED LECTURER SERIES IV Kurt Akeley Silicon Graphics, Inc. "Architectures of High-Performance 3D Graphics Accelerators" Recorded April 10, 1992 Run Time: 53 minutes James Forster Cisco Systems "Multiprotocol Routing in Large Networks" Recorded April 9, 1992 Run Time: 45 minutes John Hennessy Stanford University "Scalable Multiprocessors and the DASH Approach" Recorded April 10, 1992 Run Time: 52 minutes Daniel Hillis Thinking Machines Corporation "Architecture of the CM-5" Recorded November 11, 1991 Run Time: 58 minutes Michael J. Mahon Hewlett-Packard "PA-RISC Design Issues" Recorded April 21, 1992 Run Time: 57 minutes Dick Sites & Dirk Meyer Digital Equipment Corporation "Alpha Architecture" Recorded April 15, 1992 Run Time: 73 minutes Jim Montanaro Digital Equipment Corporation "The Design of the Alpha 21064 CPU Chip" Recorded April 15, 1992 Run Time: 42 minutes Guy L. Steele, Jr. Thinking Machines Corporation "What is the Sound of One Network Clapping? A Philosophical Overview of the Connection Machine CM-5" Recorded March 1992 Run Time: 48 minutes Craig Upson Silicon Graphics, Inc. "Visual Programming in Data Flow Environments" Recorded April 10, 1992 Run Time: 60 minutes Tadashi Watanabe NEC Corporation "Toward the Ultra High-Speed Computing System" Recorded January 31, 1992 Run Time: 66 minutes DISTINGUISHED LECTURER SERIES III Frances E. Allen IBM Corporation "Optimizing Compilers for Parallel Computers" Recorded August 17, 1990 Run Time: 43:50 minutes Forest Baskett Silicon Graphics, Inc. "Cache-Coherent Multiprocessors: An Easy Approach to Hi-Performance Computing" Recorded October 18, 1990 Run Time: 40:35 minutes Edsger W. Dijkstra University of Texas at Austin "Reasoning About Programs" Recorded May 28, 1990 Run Time: 55:22 minutes James Donahue Olivetti Research California "Modula-3" November 29, 1989 Run Time: 42 minutes Q&A: 8 minutes James Gosling Sun Microsystems, Inc. "NeWS: A Networked and Extensible Window System" Recorded June 21, 1990 Run Time: 50:04 minutes Phil D. Hester IBM Corporation "Superscalar RISC Concepts and Design of the IBM RISC System/6000" Recorded August 17, 1990 Run Time: 49:45 minutes Daniel Hillis Thinking Machines Corporation "Massively Parallel Supercomputing: The Connection Machine" Recorded July 18, 1990 Run Time: 42:29 minutes Q&A: 10:46 minutes Elaine Kant Schlumberger Lab for CS "Automated Program Synthesis" Recorded May 28, 1990 Run Time: 52:35 minutes Jim Mitchell Sun Microsystems, Inc. "Operating Systems Architecture in the 1990's" Recorded June 21, 1990 Run Time: 50:10 minutes Guy Steele, Jr. Thinking Machines Corporation "Data Parallel Algorithms" Recorded July 18, 1990 Run Time: 44:18 minutes Q&A: 9:30 minutes DISTINGUISHED LECTURER SERIES II Dan Ingalls Apple Computer, Inc. "Object-Oriented Programming" Recorded July 19, 1989 Run Time: 44:51 minutes David A. Patterson and Wayne Rosing Sun Microsystems "The Design and Development of SPARC" Recorded July 19, 1989 Run Time: 61 minutes DISTINGUISHED LECTURER SERIES I John Backus IBM Corporation "Function Level Programming and the FL Language" Recorded October 28, 1987 Run Time: 43 minutes Q&A: 4 minutes William Clinger Tektronic, Inc. "Compiler Optimization For Symbolic Languages" Recorded on October 27, 1987 Run Time: 42 minutes Q&A: 7 minutes Ira Goldstein Hewlett-Packard Company "Natural Language Access to Databases" Recorded on October 28, 1987 Run Time: 34 minutes Q&A: 7 minutes Bill Joy Sun Microsystems "The Future of Computing: The Open Systems Imperative" Recorded on September 21, 1987 Run Time: 43 minutes Q&A: 9 minutes Alan Kay Apple Computer, Inc. "Doing With Images Makes Symbols: Communicating with Computers" Recorded on October 27, 1987 Lecture A: 45 minutes Lecture B: 40 minutes Q&A: 12 minutes Tom Knight Symbolics, Inc. "Architectural Support for Symbolic Computing" Recorded: 1987 Run Time: 45 minutes Q&A: 10 minutes Butler Lampson Digital Equipment Corporation "A Naming Service for a World-Wide Computer Network" Recorded: October 23, 1987 Run Time: 46 minutes Q&A: 7 minutes Michael Mahon Hewlett-Packard Company "H-P Precision Architecture" Recorded: October 13, 1987 Run Time: 42 minutes Q&A: 7 minutes Joseph Mundy GE Corporation "Model-Based Computer Vision" Recorded August 14, 1987 Run Time: ??? David Nelson Apollo Computer, Inc. "Network Computing" Recorded: September 21, 1987 Run Time: 42 minutes Q&A: 7 minutes Justin Rattner Intel Corporation "Architectures and Technologies for Concurrent Supercomputing" Recorded: October 13, 1987 Run Time: 43 minutes Q&A: 10 minutes Brian Reid Digital Equipment Corporation "Page Description Languages" Recorded October 13, 1987 Run Time: 45 minutes Q&A: 9 minutes Harold Stone IBM Corporation "Serializing in Parallel with a Combining Network" Recorded: September 11, 1987 Run Time: 41 minutes Q&A: 6 minutes -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- OTHER INSTITUTIONS: INTEL ACADEMIC RELATIONS Speaker: ??? "386 Microprocessor" Recorded: September 2, 1988 Run Time: 50 minutes Justin Rattner (2 sets) "Programming Techniques for Concurrent Supercomputers" Recorded: September 2, 1988 Run Time: 45 minutes Q&A: 16 minutes Speaker: ??? "i860 Microprocessor" Recorded: November 1989 Run Time: 50 minutes NEW YORK UNIVERSITY Robotics Research Lab, NYU "Teleoperative Experiments Using the Utah/MIT Dextrous Hand and the VPL DataGlove" Recorded: August 1988 Run Time: Apprx. 15 minutes SCHLUMBERGER Vision & Graphics Demo Tape, 8/87 Recorded: August 1987 Run Time: ??? STANFORD Terry Winograd "Interfacing to the Information Highway" Recorded March 4, 1994 Run Time: apprx. 90 minutes TOSHIBA Computerworld Smithsonian Awards Video "A Search for New Heros" Recorded: 1990 Run Time: 18:40 minutes UNISYS College Information Software Products Group Career and Coop Ed. Opportunities Recorded: September 1993 Run Time: 15-20 mins.??? ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Here's the procedure for checking out CS educational videos located in 385 Soda: 1) $$$, please...and your picture You will be required to leave a $20 cash deposit and a current photo ID, which will be returned to you upon receipt of the video. This also applies to instructors who want to check out the videos for personal viewing; instructors will not need to leave a deposit and ID when videos are strictly for class presentation. 2) Where are these videos?... Come to 385 Soda; make an appt. first by emailing crystal@cs. If I am absent when you want to check out a video, you'll have to wait [no one else wants my job :)] (Also, it's best if just one staff person handles the money/ID transactions.) 3) One at a time, please... You can only checkout one video at a time. Keep in mind that instructors have lst priority, and your request to checkout a video can be bounced at the last minute. 4) Checkout period... You can checkout a video M-Th within a 24-hr. overnight period between 8 a.m.-5 p.m., i.e., pick it up at 11 a.m. and return it by 11 a.m. the following day. (Instructors are exempt from this requirement if they are showing it to a TuTh or MWF class; in such cases they are asked to return the video before 5 p.m. Friday in the same week they check it out.) 5) Forget a weekend video with popcorn and coke (sorry)... Videos cannot be checked out on a Friday or the day before a holiday that falls during the regular work week, i.e., 4th of July. 6) Returning the video... Come to 385 Soda; make an appt. first by emailing crystal@cs. (If I am not responding to your request for an appt., check with my supervisor to see if I'm out sick or on vacation; my supervisor is Anne Fuller, 3-6619, fuller@cs). If I am absent (sick/vacation) the day you are suppose to return the video, you will not be faulted for a late return. Send me email and say you tried to return the video, and I'll get back to you when I return. What happens if you don't return the tape on time and it really is your fault?: you go on the big "S" list and may be denied future privileges. 7) Please rewind!...and be kind Be considerate of the next user. Please treat these videos with care. They are expensive, and we may not be able to replace them. Users will be held responsible for tapes they do not return, or tapes they return that have been damaged from other than normal use, i.e., your dog ate it, you spilt your 5th cup of coffee on it, it fell out of the backpack, etc. You will be asked to pay the full expense of the tape. The UVC tapes cost $58.13 and the FFH tapes cost $89.25, which includes tax, shipping & handling. What if you refuse to pay?: please, I'd rather not have to deal with this one... 8) To keep it official... All of this will be transacted with an official form and signatures to ensure that I get your $20 and photo ID, you get the video, and vice- versa on your return. You will receive a copy of this signed form. 9) For the record... Duplication of these videos is illegal. 10) Want the videotape list? I can send you a list of all the videotapes I have for checkout. Email your request to crystal@cs. Any more questions? Call or email crystal@cs, 2-0930.