The UNSW School of Computer Science and Engineering (CSE), also known as UNSW COMPUTING, is part of the UNSW Faculty of Engineering and was founded in 1991 out of the former Department of Computer Science within the School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science. It is now one of the largest Schools of its kind in Australia. The academic staff have research focus in areas such as Artificial Intelligence, Databases, Embedded Systems and Operating Systems, Networks, Programming Languages, Service Oriented Computing, Software Engineering and Computability Theory.
CSE is a partner in the National ICT Australia group (NICTA).
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MyUniversity Data
MyUniversity is an Australian Government website providing information about Australian universities. As data is collected from different sources, percentages may collate to over 100%. Information is provided university wide, and on select disciplines.
- Computing and Information Systems
- 100% of students have a positive outcome:
- 93.5% full-time job rate (highest amongst the Go8 and ATN universities in Australia)
- 7.8% of students go onto further full-time study
- 8.6% Attrition Rate (lowest amongst the Go8 and ATN universities in Australia)
- 100% of students have a positive outcome:
Excellence in Research for Australia
Australian Research Council's Excellence in Research for Australia initiative results for World-Class Research in Information Technology
- 2011: Broadest range (5 areas, the next highest was only in 2 areas) in Australia
- 2013: Only Australian University to achieve a rank of 5 (the highest ranking) in Computer Software
Rankings
School Achievements
Student Projects
Students of the School are involved in a number of high-profile projects, including:
- rUNSWift, the University's team in the international RoboCup Standard Platform League competition, is the most successful team in the world, with wins in 2000, 2001 and 2003 as well as coming second in 1999, 2002, 2005 and 2010.
- Sunswift Solar Car (officially the world's fastest solar-powered vehicle at 88 km/h, and winner of the Silicon Class of the 2009 Global Green Challenge).
- BLUEsat Satellite (Development in Progress).
- Robogals
Student Competitions
Computing Facilities
The School has computer laboratories for coursework teaching and student projects, including a number of specialist laboratories. In total, the network consists of approximately 700 computers for teaching, research and administration.
- 260 Intel-based computers running Linux in 13 generic teaching laboratories. Over 100 of these are iMacs, and Windows is available in "virtual machines" on all Linux labs
- 20 computers running Mac OS X in a teaching lab
- 40 Linux computers reserved for thesis students
- 50 computers in specialist teaching laboratories
- 45 computers in 3 virtual laboratories for teaching
- 30 locally developed research machines of various kinds
- 200 systems of various hardware and software configurations for academic staff and research students
- 50 computers for administration and systems support
- 35 Linux-based servers providing a number of server functions
- 33 computers in two Linux clusters for research
The School is committed to regular upgrades of its facilities and invests over $700,000 per year on equipment replacement.
UNSW also has a high capacity free wireless Internet service for students and staff.
Source of the article : Wikipedia
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