Graphics lunches
The graphics group runs a weekly brown-bag lunch focused on graphics,
visualization, and interactive techniques. Each consists of a research
presentation by a Stanford or outside researcher. Presentations are typically
40-50 minutes. Although the lunch was designed for faculty and advanced
graduate students, anyone is welcome to attend.
Agendas will be announced in advance via email and on these web pages. There
will not be a lunch every week. On certain weeks, we will instead have staff
meetings open only to members of the graphics group. Therefore, you should
check your email or look at our web pages before showing up.
To subscribe to our emailing list, send email to
glunch-request@graphics.stanford.edu
placing the following single line in the message body:
subscribe
To unsubscribe, place the following line in the message body:
unsubscribe
Where:
Gates 392
When:
Thursdays, 12:15
Contacts:
Marc Levoy
< levoy@cs.stanford.edu >
Pat Hanrahan
< hanrahan@cs.stanford.edu >
1995-1996 graphics lunches:
-
September 28: Special Introductory Lunch
- October 26: Maneesh Agrawala, Andrew Beers, Navin Chaddha, Stanford,
Model-Based Motion Estimation for Synthetic Animations,
to appear in Proc. Multimedia '95.
- November 9
Ned Greene, Apple Computer
Hierarchical Visibility and Tiling
- November 30
Bill Lorensen, GE (at Stanford through March, 1996)
Visualization Techniques for Maintainability Design
- December 14
Tom Porter, PIXAR
A Behind the Scenes Look at the Making of Toy Story
- February 15
Don Brutzman, Naval Postgraduate School
Graphics Internetworking: Bottlenecks and Breakthroughs
- March 7
Demos of force feedback devices
Louis Resenberg, Immersion Corporation
- March 21
Gavin Bell, SGI
VRML 2.0: Interactive 3D Graphics on the Internet
- April 4
Mark Pesce, Big Book Inc.
Getting Spaced
- April 18
Michael Halle, MIT Media Lab
Multiple viewpoint rendering
- May 9
Steve Worley,
A New Solid Texturing Basis Function
- May 16
Steve DiPaola, OnLive! Technologies
Designing for 3D Virtual Communities
- June 13
Gerhard Roth
Institute for Information Technology
National Research Council of Canada