John G. Kemeny Computing Prize

The John G. Kemeny Computing Prize is awarded annually for innovative computing projects by Dartmouth undergraduates. In addition to public recognition of excellence in computing, it also carries a cash award.


2005 Winners

The Dartmouth College Department of Computer Science is pleased to announce the 2005 winners of the Kemeny Prize for Excellence in Undergraduate Computing. We commend the award winners on their enthusiasm for computing and their innovative uses of computational resources.


First Prize, Innovation category
David Schnur '05 , "GPUGrid: A framework for distributed computation on graphics processors."

Second Prize, Innovation category
Timothy Williamson '05. "Making People Look Silly."

First Prize, Software Design category
Matthew Bell '05. "A toy rock climbing robot."

Second Prize, Software Design category
Nicholas Santos '06. "The Dartmouth Free Press Website."

Honorable Mentions (alphabetical order)
Duo Ai '05, "3D First-Person Sea Battle Game" and "3D Car Racing Game: Need For Duo."

Nicholas S. Baum '05. "Dartmouth Senior Roommate Search."

J. Garrett Morris '05. "Binding Time Analysis for Haskell."

Ohene K. Ohene-Adu '05. "Vision Enabled Autonomous Rock-Climbing."

Lee Winikor '07, Andrew Flynn '07, Terrence Irving '06. "Turkish: A Climbing Robot."


The 2005 Kemeny Prize Committee



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