The De La Salle University Association for Computing Machinery (DLSU ACM) Student Chapter is a newly established organization under the Department of Software Technology.
As a student chapter of ACM — the world's largest educational and scientific computing society — DLSU ACM is an internationally recognized organization that envisions itself to be at the forefront of initiating activities for students whose career goals and interests align with research-oriented paths and applied computing.
This is the first member recruitment of the DLSU ACM Student Chapter, through which it opens its doors to undergraduate students of the University. Our first round of member recruitment starts during the CSO Annual Recruitment Week (October 3 to 8) and extends until October 15.
Pre-registration can be done through this link: https://bit.ly/DLSU-ACM-PreReg
GlimpSE is a webinar that gives insights on jobs under the software engineering field, specifically, business analysis, security engineering, and quality assurance. The webinar will be framed to distinguish the differences and synergy in their roles and their value in technology.
Cali Can See is a hands-on workshop that aims to introduce students to the fundamentals of digital image processing in preparation for research or side projects related to computer vision — a field that aims to teach computers how to make sense of the visual world.
You Shall Not Pass is a hands-on workshop that aims to introduce students to the fundamentals of cybersecurity (such as penetration testing and ethical hacking) and serve as a primer for software engineering-related careers related to the development and testing of desktop and web-based applications.
Dock, Cover & Hold is a workshop that aims to introduce students to the basics of using Docker, a popular platform-as-a-service for containerization — the packing of software code and dependencies into a single "container" — and explore its relevance in different areas of research (e.g., bioinformatics) and software development.
Cali Learns CUDA is a workshop that allows students to learn about the basics of parallel programming — a technique that leverages the power of modern computers to carry out computations simultaneously — using CUDA and explore its relevance in different areas of research (e.g., big data mining and deep learning) and software development.
This is a two-day research ideation workshop for Grade 11 students. The first day is dedicated to talks introducing research areas and potential topics under computer studies. The second day is dedicated to live breakout sessions for refining research ideas with invited professors.