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Students of Shanghai
Jiaotong University Win 2010 ACM ICPC 'Battle of the Brains'
February 9, 2010
Students
from Shanghai Jiaotong University have been crowned the 2010 ACM (ACM)
International Collegiate Programming Contest (ICPC) World Champions. The
competition took place today at Harbin Engineering University (HEU) in
Harbin, China, home of the International Snow and Ice Sculpture
Festival.
Referred to as " The Battle of the Brains," the ACM ICPC World Finals
challenged the world's top 103 university teams to use open standard
technology in designing software that solves real-world problems. Each
team of three students faced eleven problems of varying levels of
difficulty. Framed around IBM's Smarter Planet initiative, the contest
problems were modeled after real-world issues such as developing
programs which will predict where rain water from tsunamis and
hurricanes will accumulate. In five short hours, students solved more
than a semester's worth of computer programming material.
The teams were awarded medals based on the number of problems they
solved correctly in the shortest amount of time. Shanghai Jiaotong
University successfully solved seven of the problems. The World
Champions will return home with the "world's smartest" trophy as well as
IBM prizes, scholarships and the greatest prize of all - a guaranteed
offer of employment or internship from IBM.
"As the initiatives of IBM's Smarter Planet continue to gain momentum,
the possibilities for using new technologies to help improve our
everyday lives grow exponentially," said Doug Heintzman, director of
strategy at IBM Software Group and sponsorship executive of the ICPC.
"The students who qualified for this year's World Finals are among the
leaders in the push to create, develop and execute these advancements
for our future."
At the ACM-ICPC, a world technology showcase also brought students
hands-on experiences with emerging technologies, which will help
generate new ideas and build careers.
"These students are at the top of their field, with the potential to
solve the world's most serious problems," said Dr. Bill Poucher, ICPC
executive director and professor of the Baylor University. "The ACM-ICPC
provides the forum for these students to showcase their capabilities and
gain exposure among top recruiters, like IBM who are in need of fresh
talent to fill the jobs of tomorrow."
Moscow State University, National Taiwan University, and Taras
Shevchenko Kiev National University finished the competition in second,
third, and fourth places all winning Gold medals, as well as employment
or internship offers from IBM.
The regional champions are Stanford University (North America Region);
Moscow State University (Europe Region); The British University in Egypt
(Africa and the Middle East Region); Universidade Federal de Pernambuco
(Latin America Region); Shanghai Jiaotong University (Asia Region); and
The University of Western Australia (South Pacific Region).
This year's top thirteen teams that received medals are:
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Shanghai
Jiaotong University (GOLD)
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Moscow
State University (GOLD)
-
National
Taiwan University (GOLD)
-
Taras
Shevchenko Kiev National University (GOLD)
-
Petrozavodsk State University (SILVER)
-
Tsinghua
University (SILVER)
-
Saratov
State University (SILVER)
-
University of Warsaw (SILVER)
-
St.
Petersburg State University (SILVER)
-
Zhongshan
(Sun Yat-sen) University (BRONZE)
-
Fudan
University (BRONZE)
-
KTH -
Royal Institute of Technology (BRONZE)
-
Ural
State University (BRONZE)
The 103 teams in the
World Finals in Harbin were selected from more than 7,109 teams of 1,931
universities from 82 countries on six continents. Since 1997, the
IBM-sponsored ICPC has grown 800 percent in size. |