Hardware stops viruses and worms; System halts their spreading before they reach end-user stage
Photo by David KilperHardware developed by John Lockwood scans for viruses and worms that are transmitted over a network and filters out unwanted data.John Lockwood and graduate students in his laboratory have developed a hardware platform called the “Field-programmable Port Extender.”
Bone marrow registry created by student
Thanks to biomedical engineering student Laura Seger, nearly 400 donors have registered through the Washington University Marrow Registry.
Sustainable management of rivers is focus of Earth Day forum April 22
“Dialogue for Development: Investing in Sustainable Communities” is the unifying theme of a two-day, community-wide symposium.
Rankings have medical school, GWB at No. 2
The Department of Biomedical Engineering in the School of Engineering & Applied Science moved up two spots to 14th in the nation.
Stanford’s McCarty to give Ryckman Lecture
Perry L. McCarty, Ph.D., of Stanford University’s Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, will deliver the inaugural Ryckman Lecture at 3 p.m. today in Lopata Hall, Room 101. McCarty will speak on “Precautionary Approach for Toxic Chemicals in the Environment — Experiences and Concepts in the Making.” The Ryckman Lecture is sponsored by the Washington […]
Stahl, Turner named faculty achievement award-winners
Photo by Mary ButkusPhilip D. Stahl and Jonathan S. Turner chat at the April 17 Chancellor’s Gala at the Knight Center.Chancellor Mark S. Wrighton made the announcement at the Chancellor’s Gala April 17; the awards will be conferred this fall.
Aria-9 has successful trip
Project Aria is a University outreach program designed to allow K-12 students to participate in space-related projects.
Kulkarni’s patented technology makes our world safer
Courtesy photoHis work has drawn considerable interest from industry and government in our nation’s war on bioterrorism.