-------- Original Message --------  Subject: [eecs-grads] Know a Non-Profit
that could use some help?  Date: Wed, 8 Aug 2012 16:14:59 -0700  From: David
Patterson <[email protected]> <[email protected]>  To:
[email protected]

Following the Berkeley tradition of doing well by doing good, last semester
the Software Engineering course (CS 169) reached out to non-profit
organizations for IT problems that teams of Berkeley EECS students could
tackle. It went well:
- 93% teams reporting that their customers “happy” or “thrilled”
- 50% of the customers tried to hire the students to continue working on
their app.
Berkeley students felt that learning how to build software for
non-technical customers was one of the most educational aspects of the
course.

 With the Software Engineering course (CS 169) growing faster than Moore's
Law, we need 30 to 40 new projects for this Fall.

 If you know someone at a non-profit organization (preferable
NON-technical)  that has an IT problem they would like help with, please
ask them to fill in this form by the end of the month:


https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/viewform?formkey=dEJlODB3SE4tbWhSbi0tUUJ4RUhZQnc6MA#gid=0

 Thanks,
Armando Fox and Dave Patterson

 P.S. One project was to help nurses at the Oakland Children's Hospital
with a difficult scheduling problem, which they had been doing manually.
https://vimeo.com/46770083 is 3-minute video interview with the nurse
managers describing the problem and  https://vimeo.com/44837891 is a
2-minute screencast of the app that the Berkeley students developed. Other
projects have included:
     -A map-based site for reporting lost pets and helping owners find them
     -A web site that provides access to healthcare info translated into
various languages for underserved ethnic communities
     -A site that tracks student health issues per-school for use in rural
school areas in third world nations (to quickly contact emergency personnel
and have recent health info on hand in case of student health emergency)
     -A site that fosters informed debate on viewer-chosen topics, with
vote-up/vote-down mechanisms like StackOverflow or Reddit
     -A site that matches interested undergrads to research opportunities
that match their skills & background (http://researchmatch.heroku.com)
     -A site that helps automate the planning of Visit Day, where admitted
EECS grad students converge on campus wanting interviews with faculty and
vice-versa
     -A site that displays hyper-local info about your neighborhood, such
as crime stats, very local news items, etc; and others.
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