Technology

  • Deep Science: AI adventures in arts and letters

    A team from the University of Washington wanted to see if a computer vision system could learn to tell what is being played on a piano just from an overhead view of the keys and the player’s hands. The UW’s Eli Shlizerman, assistant professor in the applied mathematics and the electrical and computer engineering departments, and Kun Su and Xiulong Liu, doctoral students in electrical and computer engineering, created Audeo.

    03/05/2021 | Tech Crunch
  • Quantum Leap

    UW scientists explain new developments in the field of quantum computing.

    03/01/2021 | UW Magazine
  • ‘This is bigger than just Timnit’: How Google tried to silence a critic and ignited a movement

    Big Tech has used its power to control the field of AI ethics and avoid accountability. Now, the ouster of Timnit Gebru from Google is putting the movement for equitable tech in the spotlight. Emily M. Bender, professor of linguistics at the UW, is quoted.

    02/26/2021 | Fast Company
  • Australia, fighting Facebook, is the latest country to struggle against foreign influence on journalism

    Facebook’s “fight with Australia is again raising debate around social media networks’ enormous control over people’s access to information ... My research in the history of international media politics has shown that a handful of rich countries have long exerted undue influence over how the rest of the world gets its news,” writes Vanessa Freije, assistant professor of international relations at the UW.

    02/19/2021 | The Conversation
  • If Work Is Going Remote, Why Is Big Tech Still Building?

    Google, Facebook and others promise more flexibility to work from home. But they’re charging ahead with plans for more offices. Margaret O'Mara, professor of history at the UW, is quoted.

    02/16/2021 | Wired
  • Amazon wealth reigns: Jeff Bezos, MacKenzie Scott lead list of top U.S. philanthropists for 2020

    Amazon founder Jeff Bezos was the top American philanthropist in 2020, giving away $10.1 billion to nonprofit efforts associated with climate change and education, according to a ranking released this week by The Chronicle of Philanthropy. MacKenzie Scott, the ex-wife of Bezos, ranked second on the list with donations to a wide array of non-profits that totaled $5.7 billion. The UW's Ed Lazowska, professor of computer science and engineering, and Margaret O'Mara, professor of history, are quoted.

    02/10/2021 | GeekWire
  • Opinion: After Amazon, what’s next for Jeff Bezos?

    “If history is any guide, the next act of Jeff Bezos, the man who turned a crazy-at-the-time idea to sell books over the internet into a $1.67 trillion behemoth, could be more consequential than the last,” writes Margaret O'Mara, professor of history at the UW.

    02/09/2021 | The New York Times
  • UW physicist pens math-free tour of quantum mechanics and technology

    Miguel Morales, professor of physics, has authored a new series on quantum mechanics for a general audience.

    02/08/2021 | UW News
  • Seldom-seen Amazon unit made the call that brought down pro-Trump Parler

    The ability of companies such as Facebook, Twitter and Google to control what people see online is so potent, it is the subject of antitrust hearings. But the decision by Amazon to push Parler off its dominant cloud-computing service illustrates just how powerful its content-moderation capabilities are as well. Margaret O’Mara, professor of history at the UW, is quoted.

    01/13/2021 | The Washington Post
  • ‘This has not happened before’: Tech historian on Trump, social media, and an unprecedented moment in American history

    Twitter’s decision Friday to join Facebook in permanently suspending President Trump’s account underscored the fundamental role of social media in one of the most tumultuous periods in American history. If it feels strange and unusual, that’s because there’s no historical precedent, neither in media nor the presidency. Margaret O’Mara, professor of history at the UW, is interviewed on the GeekWire podcast.

    01/09/2021 | GeekWire
  • Amazon surpasses Boeing as Washington’s biggest employer. Here’s what that means for how we live.

    Last year, Amazon surpassed Boeing as the state’s largest private employer, usurping a title the airplane manufacturer had likely held since the post-World War II era. The UW’s Margaret O’Mara, professor of history; Jeff Shulman, professor of marketing; and Andrew Hedden, associate director of the Harry Bridges Center for Labor Studies, are quoted.

    01/03/2021 | The Seattle Times
  • The Kraken comes to town

    In an era of quantum computing and self-driving cars, Sarah Stroup, professor of classics at the UW, teaches a class called "STEM in the Ancient World." [This is the second segment of "The Record"]

    12/30/2020 | KUOW
  • Opinion: Silicon Valley isn’t over just because tech companies are moving away

    “Silicon Valley’s obituary has been written prematurely before; boom-and-bust cycles have defined the region’s economy for decades,” writes Margaret O’Mara, professor of history at the UW.

    12/28/2020 | The New York Times
  • Opinion: Poetry vs. programming — wandering the city, a writer finds the intersection of literature and code

    Frances McCue is a poet, writer, co-founder of nonprofit community writing center Hugo House and a teaching professor of English at the University of Washington. She reads a piece in a special installment of the GeekWire Podcast.

    12/20/2020 | GeekWire
  • Ousted Black Google Researcher: 'They Wanted To Have My Presence, But Not Me Exactly'

    On Wednesday, several of Timnit Gebru's former colleagues wrote a letter to Google CEO Sundar Pichai asking that she be reinstated, saying her departure has "had a demoralizing effect on the whole of our team." Emily M. Bender, professor of linguistics at the UW, is quoted.

    12/17/2020 | NPR