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Through our programs for Latin America, External Research & Programs provides research grants, training assistance, conference support, and faculty development assistance. The goals of the
Latin American academic programs are to advance the research agenda and
support the research community in Latin America, support research
collaborations between Latin American Universities and Microsoft
Research, and develop innovative curriculum and new pedagogies.
One example of
program support in Latin America are the Microsoft learning
laboratories, which are outfitted with leading-edge computing equipment
(such as computers, network hardware, handheld devices, and printers) donated by Microsoft Research. These learning laboratories become a focus of activity
for academic pursuits on campus, including student work, projects,
classes, research, and social activity. The learning laboratories are
supported by student consultants, who receive direct support from
Microsoft Research. These student consultants are technical contacts at
the learning laboratories who provide guidance and technical
assistance for such things as students’ course work, student software
competitions, faculty teaching, faculty research projects, and
proof-of-concept projects. The learning labs also provide a
distribution point Microsoft software through the MSDN Academic
Alliance. The software is used for all academic purposes on campus;
including course work, projects, and research.
Over the past three
years, twenty-two (22) research grants have been awarded to academic
researchers in Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Mexico and Colombia through our
Latin American program:
Argentina
- Carlos Alejandro Perez, Universidad
Tecnológica Nacional
Ubiquitous Computing
- Victor Braberman, Nicolas Kicillof;
Universidad de Buenos Aires
Trace it!: Event Trace Generator for Distributed Embedded Real-Time
Applications
SetPoint: An Aspect
Oriented Framework Based on Semantic Pointcuts
- Claudia Pons, Universidad Tecnológica
Nacional/University of La Plata
PAMPA, A Tool for Integrating Formal Methods in model-driven Software
Engineering Course
- Marcelo Risk, Universidad Tecnológica
Nacional
Mathematical Whiteboard Using ConferenceXP
- Gustavo Rossi, Claudia Pons; Universidad
Tecnológica Nacional/University of La Plata
Teaching Modeling Languages Formally
- Claudio Verrastro, Universidad Tecnológica
Nacional
Techniques of Robotics and Artificial Intelligence Applied to a Personal
Robot
Brazil
- Roberto Ierusalimschy, Pontificia
Universidade Católica do Rio de Janeiro
LUA.Net: Integrating
LUA with the CLI
Improving Rotor for
Dynamically Typed Languages
- Andre Santos, Universidade Federal de
Pernambuco
Integrating Haskell
with .Net using Rotor
- Rodolfo Jardim de Azevedo, Universidade
Estadual de Campinas
Looking for New Instructions and Optimizations in Embedded Systems
- Arnaldo Moura,
Universidade Estadual de Campinas
A Fresh Curriculum for an Introduction to Programming Course
- Claudia Bauzer Medeiros,
Universidade Estadual de Campinas
Web Service Multimodal Tools for Strategic Biodiversity Research,
Assessment and Monitoring
- Flavio Soares Correa Da Silva, Universidade
de São Paulo
Laboratory for Computer Games Technology
- Fabio Kon/Alfredo Goldman, Universidade de
São Paulo
Porting INTEGRADE to Windows
- Daniel Schwabe, Pontificia Universidade
Católica do Rio de Janeiro
Software Factory
Environment in .Net for Web Applications based on OOHDM
Chile
- Miguel Nussbaum, Pontificia Universidad
Católica de Chile
Computer Supported Collaborative Learning using Wirelessly
Interconnected Handheld Computer
Hands on Experience Course for Applications in Mobile Technology
- David Fuller, Pontificia Universidad
Católica de Chile
Teaching project:
Embedded Systems Laboratory Course at PUC
- Yadran Eterovic, Pontificia Universidad
Católica de Chile
Formal UML-based
Software Requirements and Design
- Alvaro Soto, Pontificia Universidad
Católica de Chile
A Robotics Lab to
support Computer Science Education
Colombia
- Carlos Cobos, Universidad del Cauca
SCORM Public-Access
Repository
(SciData Project)
Mexico
- Carlos Pfeiffer, Tec of Monterrey
Computer Vision Aided Navigation of Mobile Robots
Latin America programs are managed by Jaime Puente.
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