Articles
Events and news of what's happening around the Fredonia campus.
Events and news of what's happening around the Fredonia campus.
An Advanced Certificate in Cybersecurity, a 100 percent online program, will be offered beginning in the Fall 2021 semester. The graduate-level program provides background information and skills required for professionals to work in information technology, software engineering, network management, system administration and related areas.
For the last three months, the Global Data Compression competition was held at the Moscow State University, Russia, sponsored by Huawei Company.
Fredonia students enrolled in CSIT 425: Software Engineering, taught by Computer and Information Sciences Lecturer Denise Joy, presented their software development projects to Paychex, a large software development company headquartered in Western New York, in a Webex session on Dec. 4.
A paper co-authored by Fredonia graduate Aierkan Salayding, who received a B.S. in Computer Science, with a concentration in Software Development, in December 2019, has been accepted for presentation at the 11th annual IEEE Information Technology, Electronics and Mobile Communication Conference.
The National Science Foundation has awarded a $50,000 grant to a research team at the SUNY Fredonia that may lead to widespread use of their revolutionary Flight Data Tracker to better monitor and track airline flights and potentially save lives.
A revolutionary technology developed at SUNY Fredonia that has the potential to render the aircraft flight recorder (AKA the “black box”) obsolete achieved a major milestone on its path to commercialization – a successful test flight.
Real-world experience was gained by Computer Science students who unveiled software development projects they created at a day-long visit to the Webster, office of Paychex, a human resources, payroll, retirement and insurance provider.
“A Celebration of Student-centered Research” is the topic of the 42nd Robert W. Kasling Memorial Lecture, to be presented by Dr. Junaid Zubairi of the Department of Computer and Information Sciences on Tuesday, Oct. 1 at 2 p.m., in Juliet J. Rosch Recital Hall.
A new elective course in the Department of Computer and Information Sciences teaching students how to use computer hardware and software fundamentals by building robots culminated with the novel robotics olympics challenge.