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.
2007 Winners
The Dartmouth College Department of Computer Science is pleased to
announce the 2007 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.
- Team Design
- First Prize:
- Cory Cornelius and Dan Peebles, "Achilles"
- Second Prize:
- Chase Decker, Corey Goff, David MacKenzie, William Chen,
"Wireless Networking without Fixed Infrastructure"
- Team Innovation
- First Prize:
- Jeff Fielding and Tiger Huang, "Real-time Peer to Peer Gaming"
- Second Prize:
- Emily Greenberg and Ruslan Dimov, "The Interactive Mirror"
- Individual Design
- First Prize:
- Andrew Flynn, "WikiD: A Dartmouth Wiki Implementing Fine-Grained, Decentralized Access Control"
- Individual Innovation
- First Prize:
- Alex Steinberg, "Lighting with Paint"
- Honorable Mentions (alphabetical)
- Nick Christman and Ruslan Dimov, "Blitz++"
- Mark Henle, "Closest and Farthest-Line Voronoi Diagrams in the Plane"
- Senate Taka, "Visualization of FG Pipelines"
The 2007 Kemeny Prize Committee
- Prof. Andrew Campbell, COSC
- Prof. Sean Smith, COSC (chair)
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