[Event] CS50: The Good Parts

January 27, 2014  |  Comments Off  |  by mingminhui  |  Events

Don’t have time to put 20 hours a week into taking CS50?

The TechMedia Club and the Business Analytics Club is bringing you an opportunity to learn the best of CS50 in only 2 hours a week for 7 weeks.

If you anticipate working alongside software developers in tech organizations or prototyping for your own startup, this is the course for you. The course lays out fundamental concepts and principles of development taught by HBS EC student Delaney Manders, who has nearly two decades of software development experience.

By the end of the course, you will be able to talk the talk well enough to pass the average technical interview (or dazzle engineers at a party) and be able to engage with technical co-founders or software teams. You will be able to script your Facebook feed, scrape your classcard, and build a web application. Moreover, you will come away with an understanding of some of the history, practice and culture of modern software development.

No prior exposure to programming is required. For students who have gone through FirehoseWeekend or similar intro classes this is an ideal way to deepen your understanding.

Classes will consist of 50 minutes of technical instruction and cultural background, followed by an optional (but strongly recommended) supervised tutorial period with assigned questions to practice skills.

Session 1 – Tues Feb 4: 3:30-5:30 (Getting started with bits, bytes, variables, boolean logic and loops)
Session 2 – Tues Feb 11: 3:30-5:30 (Functions, arrays, objects & data structures)
Session 3 – Tues Feb 18: 3:30-5:30 (Computational complexity & algorithms)
Session 4 – Tues Feb 25: 3:30-5:30 (Working with strings & text)
Session 5 – Tues Mar 4: 3:30-5:30 (Building a modern web application with JS, HTML5 & CSS)
Session 6 – Tues Mar 11: 3:30-5:30 (Consuming REST APIs with Javascript)
Session 7 – Tues Apr 1: 3:30-5:30 (Cloud computing)

To sign up, fill-out this form and come to the first session in Aldrich 109.

Email Del ([email protected]) or Ming ([email protected]) with any questions.

[Event] The Path of Digital Learning with Sanjay Sarma and Anant Agarwal

January 20, 2014  |  Comments Off  |  by mingminhui  |  Events

The Boston Seminar Series is honored to host a discussion on the past and future of digital learning with Prof. Sanjay Sarma, the director of Digital Learning at MIT, Prof. Anant Agarwal, President of edX, and Abe Murray, Google Senior Product Manager. Hunt Lambert ’85, Dean of Harvard’s Division of Continuing Education and Harvard Extension School, will be our moderator. Google, a partner with edX on MOOC.org, will be hosting the event in Kendall Square.

Speakers:

Sanjay Sarma is the Fred Fort Flowers and Daniel Fort Flowers professor of mechanical engineering and newly appointed Director of Digital Learning at MIT. Sarma was one of the founders of the Auto-ID Center at MIT, which, along with a number of partner companies and its “spin-off,” EPCglobal, developed the technical concepts and standards of modern RFID. He also chaired the Auto-ID Research Council consisting of six labs worldwide, which he helped to establish. Today, the suite of standards developed by the Auto-ID Center, commonly referred to as the EPC, are utilized by over a thousand companies on five continents. Between 2004 and 2006, Sarma took a leave of absence from MIT to found the software company OATSystems, which was acquired by Checkpoint Systems in 2008. He is a consultant and board member at several companies, including EPC Global, and also serves as a permanent guest of the board of GS1 and a member of the board of governors of GS1US. Sarma also serves on the City of Boston’s Complete Streets Advisory Group.

Anant Agarwal is the President of edX. Anant taught the first course of edX on circuits and electronics from MIT, which drew 155,000 students from 162 countries. He has served as the director of CSAIL, MIT’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, and is a professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at MIT. He is also a founder of Tilera Corporation which created the Tile multicore processor. He led the development of the Raw multicore processor, the Sparcle multi-threaded microprocessor, and the Alewife parallel computer. He also led the VirtualWires project at MIT and was the founder of Virtual Machine Works. Anant won the Maurice Wilkes prize for computer architecture, and MIT’s Smullin and Jamieson prizes for teaching. He holds a Guinness World Record for the largest microphone array, and is an author of the textbook “Foundations of Analog and Digital Electronic Circuits.” His work on Organic Computing was selected by Scientific American as one of 10 World-Changing Ideas in 2011, and he was named in Forbes’ list of top 15 education innovators in 2012. Anant holds a Ph.D. from Stanford and a bachelor’s from IIT Madras. Anant is a member of the National Academy of Engineering, a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and a fellow of the ACM. He hacks on WebSim, a web-based circuits laboratory, in his spare time.

Huntington D. Lambert (Hunt) is Dean of the Division of Continuing Education at Harvard University. The Division serves 20,000 students annually and includes Harvard Extension School, with more than 650 online and on-campus courses, as well as numerous undergraduate and graduate degree programs; Harvard Summer School, which offers more than 300 courses to nearly 6,000 students each summer and includes study abroad programs in more than 30 worldwide locations; Harvard Institute for Learning in Retirement; Harvard Professional Development Programs; and the Crimson Summer Academy. Previously, Lambert served as Associate Provost of OnlinePlus at Colorado State University (CSU), which enrolls more than 10,000 students in four undergraduate, 27 masters, and three PhD programs. Prior to this, Lambert was a founder and interim CEO of CSU Global Campus and Associate Vice President of Economic Development at CSU. He is also the former Director of the Colorado State University Entrepreneurship Center and a former member of the faculty at the CSU College of Business. During his business career, he was part of 25 startups in 12 countries, 22 of which are still operating. He has helped another 15 startups during his time at CSU including Solix Biofuels, EnviroFit, and Keen One Foods. He has taught strategy, entrepreneurship, and business plan development.

Abe Murray is an entrepreneur and high tech generalist with over a decade of experience in the industry as company founder, project leader and individual contributor. Abe Murray is also a private developer, producing software for personal and entrepreneurial use. He captained a commercial fishing vessel and lead a mussel farming aquaculture company from a young age. A graduate of Harvard Business School, Murray founded a novel web 2.0 company with a fellow classmate. At Google, he built and launched the eBook platform before joining the Research team.

When: Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Where: Google, Kendall Square, 3 Cambridge Ctr , Cambridge MA (above the MIT Coop)

Agenda: 6:00 pm, Registration & Reception (includes select beer & wine)
7:00 pm, Presentation
8:00 pm, Dessert & Coffee & Discussion
9:00 pm, End of program

Cost: $25 for members of the MIT Club of Boston
$25 for guests of members
$25 for MIT Club of NH or AMITA members (contact Lina or Helen for discount code)
Free for Google employees (contact Lina or Helen for discount code)
$35 for all others
$5 extra for all registrations after 1/29/14

Note: All guests must show a valid photo ID and check in with building security
Deadline: Early registration ends Wednesday, January 29

More information here

[Event] Learn2Code FirehoseWeekend returns to HBS!

January 18, 2014  |  Comments Off  |  by mingminhui  |  Events

Learn to code in one weekend! (February 21-23)

Back by popular demand, the HBS TechMedia’s Education Team is partnering up with FirehoseWeekend to bring MBA students an exclusive coding bootcamp. This is the perfect event for non-technical people to learn how to build a web application in one intense Drink-from-the-Firehose Weekend. You’ll learn how to build an awesome web application using Ruby on Rails, HTML5, CSS3, Github and Heroku, gain a clear understanding of how the whole technical process of building a Minimum Viable Product (MVP) works, and improve your communication skills with developers.

The class is taught by two web developers and UX experts, who have created this same FirehoseWeekend event in multiple cities and mentor young entrepreneurs in building products people want. Both have years of experience building products people want for some of the most successful startups in Boston (WHERE.com/eBay/PayPal/peerTransfer/Jana).

Schedule for the Weekend of 02/21-02/23:

  • Friday Night (6:30PM-10PM): Software Install Night. We help you get the tools you’ll use for the rest of the weekend up and running on your machine.
  • Saturday (9AM-6PM): Get the Web Development low-down. Create your initial project. Write code all day long together with instructors leading the class.
  • Sunday (9AM-5PM): Write more code, finalize features, wrap up changes. Get application live. Show it to the world.
  • Sunday (5PM): Afterparty. Drink Beer and celebrate with us.

This event is open to TechMedia Club members and non-members. Sign-ups will close by Friday 02/21 and are limited to the first 25 respondents. The cost to attend is $150 for TechMedia Club members and $200 for non-members (compared to $400 to take the course regularly). Please do not sign-up if you cannot commit to the entire weekend (attendance will be taken each day).

Link to register: https://harvard-firehoseweekend.eventbrite.com

Instructor Bios:

  • Marco Morawec is a web developer and UX product manager. He currently builds MVPs for Startups and is a Startup Institute web dev alum and Angelhack (Boston’s biggest Hackathon) winner. Previously he was the user experience lead for peerTransfer building a $500M international tuition payment platform.
  • Ken Mazaika is a Ruby on Rails web developer. Previously he has worked at PayPal/eBay. He is a Startup Institute instructor for the WebDev track and a Ruby on Rails contributor.

You can learn more about the event at firehoseweekend.com and ask any questions directly to the instructors at [email protected] and [email protected]

[Event] General Assembly: J-Term Business Hacking Bootcamp at Harvard

January 17, 2014  |  Comments Off  |  by mingminhui  |  Events

Successfully bringing an idea to market requires a combination of skills which are rarely taught together: the insight of UX designer; the skills of a mobile developer; the customer acquisition and engagement tactics of a digital marketer; and the commercial nous of a senior business leader. This four-day immersive will provide individuals with the core, practical skills to set them up to develop the blueprints for a product and drive it into market.

By the end of this bootcamp, participants will be able to:

  • Understand the fundamentals of user experience design, usability and user research.
  • Create wireframes and prototype to test and refine new ideas with users.
  • Understand what’s going on under the hood with the mobile app development process and learn how communicate more efficiently with developers.
  • Apply digital marketing tools and techniques to acquire and retain users for a business.

Learn more and register here.

[Event] Fireside Chat with Dropbox Founder and MIT Technology Review EIC

January 6, 2014  |  Comments Off  |  by mingminhui  |  Events

MIT Enterprise Forum of Cambridge: A Fireside Chat with Drew Houston, Founder & CEO of Dropbox and Jason Pontin, Editor in Chief, MIT Technology Review 

Monday, January 27, 2014, 5-7:00pm
MIT Stata Center, Kirsch Auditorium, 32 Vassar Street, Cambridge, MA

Free for MITEF Members to attend, just login to your account on our website first to get the full discount. Free For full-time Students.  $45 for non-members.
Become a member today and attend this event for free! 

Join us for a special MIT Enterprise Forum of Cambridge event on Monday, January 27.

Jason Pontin, Editor in Chief and Publisher, MIT Technology Review will host a fireside chat with  Drew Houston, Founder and CEO of Dropbox.

Drew Houston

Drew graduated from MIT and wrote the first lines of code for Dropbox while at a train station in Boston. These days he’s usually out and about running Dropbox’s business affairs, but he still contributes a lot to Dropbox’s client software. In the little free time he has, Drew can be found jamming on his guitar.

About Dropbox

Dropbox is a free service that lets you bring your photos, docs, and videos anywhere and share them easily. Dropbox was founded in 2007 by Drew Houston and Arash Ferdowsi, two MIT students tired of emailing files to themselves to work from more than one computer.

Today, more than 200 million people across every continent use Dropbox to always have their stuff at hand, share with family and friends, and work on team projects.

Jason Pontin 

Editor in Chief and Publisher, MIT Technology Review
Chairman, MIT Enterprise Forum

As editor in chief, Jason Pontin is responsible for the editorial direction, media platforms, and business strategy of MIT Technology Review, including the rapidly expanding U.S. and international websites, the award-winning print magazine, videos, newsletters, business reports, and live events such as EmTech, the company’s annual conference focused on emerging technologies. He also serves as chairman of its international entrepreneurial network, MIT Enterprise Forum. Mr. Pontin joined MIT Technology Review in 2004 as its editor and was named publisher in August 2005.

From 1996 to 2002, Mr. Pontin was the editor of Red Herring, a business and technology publication. From 2002 to 2004 he served as editor in chief of the Acumen Journal, which he founded, covering the business, economic, and policy implications of discoveries in biotechnology and the life sciences. He has written for national and international publications, including the New York Times, the Economist, the Financial Times, Wired, and the Believer. He is a frequent guest on television and radio.

Mr. Pontin was born in London and raised in Northern California. He was educated in England, at Harrow School and Oxford University.

[NYTrek] Info Session & Sign-Up!

November 17, 2013  |  Comments Off  |  by mingminhui  |  Events

Come to the NYC TechMedia Trek information session on Monday 11/18 at 3pm in Aldrich 108! After a short presentation about the trek, Professor Tom Eisenmann will deliver a short talk about the startup scene in NYC.

To sign-up for the trek:
1) Fill out the sign-up form
2) Submit your resume 1-page PDF
at http://www.dropitto.me/hbsnytrek and enter password “nytrek”
3) Pay via Paypal $33, pay to [email protected], note: club members get priority on some events.

The NYC TechMedia Trek will be held Thursday evening 1/30 – Friday evening 1/31

[NYTrek] Info Session Monday 11/18

November 10, 2013  |  Comments Off  |  by mingminhui  |  Events

Come to the NYC TechMedia Trek information session on Monday 11/18 at 3pm in Aldrich 108! After a short presentation about the trek, Professor Tom Eisenmann will deliver a talk about the startup scene in NYC.

To sign-up for the trek:
1) Fill out the sign-up form
2) Submit your resume 1-page PDF
at http://www.dropitto.me/hbsnytrek and enter password “nytrek”
3) Pay via Paypal $33, pay to [email protected], note: club members get priority on some events.

The NYC TechMedia Trek will be held Thursday evening 1/30 – Friday evening 1/31

[NYTrek] Sign Ups Now Open!

November 3, 2013  |  Comments Off  |  by mingminhui  |  Events

It’s time for the NYC TechMedia Trek signup (by Mon 11/18)!

Sign up here: https://sites.google.com/site/hbsnytrek/home

Sign up Deadline: Mon 11/18

NYC TechMedia Trek: Thurs eve, Jan. 30 - Fri. eve, Jan 31st (company visits will be onFri. Jan 31st, happy hour or small group dinners may be held in NYC Thurs 1/30)

Pay via Paypal $33, pay to [email protected], note: club members get priority on some events.

Last year companies included Google, Facebook, ZocDoc, Behance, Kickstarter, Foursquare, On Deck Capital, Dwolla… This year we have many more coming your way as well as some fun surprises. So get ready!

Info session details coming soon…

[Workshop] HBS Learn2Code FirehoseWeekend

November 1, 2013  |  No Comments  |  by mingminhui  |  Events

Learn to code in one weekend!

HBS TechMedia’s Education Team is partnering up with FirehoseWeekend to bring MBA students an exclusive coding bootcamp. This is the perfect event for non-technical people to learn how to build a web application in one intense Drink-from-the-Firehose Weekend. You’ll learn how to build an awesome web application using Ruby on Rails, HTML5, CSS3, Github and Heroku, gain a clear understanding of how the whole technical process of building a Minimum Viable Product (MVP) works, and improve your communication skills with developers.

The class is taught by two web developers and UX experts, who have created this same FirehoseWeekend event in multiple cities and mentor young entrepreneurs in building products people want. Both have years of experience building products people want for some of the most successful startups in Boston (WHERE.com/eBay/PayPal/peerTransfer/Jana).

Schedule for the Weekend of 11/15-11/17:

  • Friday Night (6:30PM-10PM): Software Install Night. We help you get the tools you’ll use for the rest of the weekend up and running on your machine.
  • Saturday (9AM-9PM): Get the Web Development low-down. Create your initial project. Write code all day long together with instructors leading the class.
  • Sunday (9AM-5PM): Write more code, finalize features, wrap up changes. Get application live. Show it to the world.
  • Sunday (5PM): Afterparty. Drink Beer and celebrate with us.

This event is only open to TechMedia Club members. Sign-ups will close by Friday 11/8 and are limited to the first 25 respondents. The cost to attend is $140 (compared to $300 to take the course regularly). Lunch will be provided Saturday and Sunday. Please do not sign-up if you cannot commit to the entire weekend (attendance will be taken each day) — there is no refund!

Link to register: https://www.wepay.com/events/hbs-firehoseweekend

Instructor Bios:

  • Marco Morawec is a web developer and UX product manager. He currently builds MVPs for Startups and is a Startup Institute web dev alum and Angelhack (Boston’s biggest Hackathon) winner. Previously he was the user experience lead for peerTransfer building a $500M international tuition payment platform.
  • Ken Mazaika is a Ruby on Rails web developer. Previously he has worked at PayPal/eBay. He is a Startup Institute instructor for the WebDev track and a Ruby on Rails contributor.

You can learn more about the event at firehoseweekend.com

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