Primary links
2012 John P. Imlay Jr. Lecture Distinguished Professor, former College of Computing dean and current Center for 21st Century Universities Director Rich DeMillo tackled the future of higher education in his 2012 Imlay Lecture, "Abelard to Apple: The Fate of American Colleges and Universities," held Oct. 22, 2012. |
April 24, 2012 - The College of Computing hosted the 21st Annual Awards Celebration to honor the accomplishments of students, faculty and staff. |
April 21, 2011 - Michael I. Jordan, Pehong Chen Distinguished Professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science and the Department of Statistics at the University of California, Berkeley, delivered the Thomas E. Noonan Distinguished Lecture "Statistical Inference of Protein Structure and Function." |
John P. Imlay, Jr. LectureOctober 7, 2010 - Nick Feamster, Assistant Professor in the School of Computer Science, gave the John P. Imlay, Jr. lecture on the "Challenges and Opportunities for Tomorrow's Networks." |
Christopher Klaus on the Future of Video GamesJuly 15, 2010 - The Computing Alumni Organization sponsored a lecture by Christopher Klaus, "The Future of Video Games and Their Growth in Georgia." |
Thomas E. Noonan Distinguished LectureApril 22, 2010 - Having just been named the next John P. Imlay Dean of Computing at Georgia Tech, Zvi Galil delivered the Thomas P. Noonan Distinguished lecture, a few months before he officially began his tenure. |
March 2, 2007 - The College of Computing celebrates the creation of a research and educational platform that defines a “new face” of computing and highlights the different cultural and social aspects of a field that has become wholly-integrated into our lives. |
January 2007 - In conjunction with the New Face of Computing Symposium, we asked the students of the College of Computing, “what does The New Face of Computing mean to you?” Eleven teams of student filmmakers responded with digital film shorts they shot and edited in one week. |

2012 John P. Imlay Jr. Lecture
Christopher Klaus on the Future of Video Games
Thomas E. Noonan Distinguished Lecture