On Thursday 13 January 2005 12:15 pm, Antoine <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
wrote:
> Seung Hyun Cho wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > I am looking for the best university to study.
> >
> > Can anybody recommend me a good university? or the best?
> > (in the states or in england... or somewhere else)
>
> Try
> http://www.wcjc.cc.tx.us/
> or
> http://www.nwacc.edu/
>
> These are surely two pillars of international-quality education.

Okay.  If you are mentioning NWACC as one of the premire CSci programs, I 
know you must be joking or being purposely misleading.

The OP is clearly not a ntive english speaker, so you should have certainly 
included many smilies to make sure they weren't mislead.

www.uark.edu (the U I graduated from) has a better program than NWACC and I 
wouldn't recommend it as one of the better colleges, although it is 
*getting* better.

If you want a good look at universities, you should possibly try um, I 
think it is "Weekly News & World Report", I believe they publish 
university rankings that are fairly widely accepted as somewhat accurate.

In any case, since you have a narrow-ish field of interest, you should do 
your own research.  If you've read any acedemic papers or articles that 
interested you, figure out where the professors that wrote those documents 
teach / research.  If you can find a list of "top" CSci / CompEng 
univeristies, check their faculty pages to see if anyone is teaching any 
classes / doing research that piques your interest.  Even if they don't 
list the papers/articles they've writen themselves, you should be able to 
find a list.  Acedemic papers are rarely written in a vaccuum (It's 
frowned upon), so they will probably have other author's whose 
universities you can look up and/or references that can provide both good 
reading material and more professors to investigate.

If you have nowhere else to start, start at csce.uark.edu, the CSCE dept. 
of my alma mater.  Dr. Soraby has done interesting things with mesh 
networks.  Dr. Apon and Dr. Deaton have dome some cool grid computing 
stuff.  George Holmes is a verifiable OSS advocate.  Dr. Li is expert at 
algorithms and does work on parallelization of them / parallelizable 
variants.  I'm not sure who our resident security expert is (Looks like 
Dr. D. Thompson?), but I have talked to student that have done security 
research at the university.

If you come here, be sure to look me up. :)

-- 
Boyd Stephen Smith Jr.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
ICQ: 514984 YM/AIM: DaTwinkDaddy

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