«Ta‘lim tarixi» fanidan OB uchun test savollari 1. Pedagogika tarixi fani nimani o'rgandi? Qadimdan hozirgacha tarbiya, maktab, pedagogika nazariyati taraqqiyotini.
Yan Solihinis aCharles N. Millican Chair Professor of Computer Science at University of Central Florida, Director for Cybersecurity and Privacy Cluster, and an IEEE Fellow. (Charles N. Millican was the founding president of UCF).
He obtained his B.S. degree in computer science from Institut Teknologi Bandung in 1995, B.S. degree in Mathematics from Universitas Terbuka Indonesia in 1995, M.A.Sc degree in computer engineering from Nanyang Technological University in 1997, and M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in computer science from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 1999 and 2002. He is a recipient of 2010 and 2005 IBM Faculty Partnership Award, 2004 NSF Faculty Early Career Award, and 1997 AT&T Leadership Award. He is well known for pioneering cache sharing fairness and Quality of Service (QoS), efficient counter mode memory encryption, and Bonsai Merkle Tree, which have significantly influenced Intel Cache Allocation Technology and Secure Guard eXtension (SGX)'s Memory Encryption Engine (MEE). In 2017, he received IEEE Fellow “for contributions to shared cache hierarchies and secure processors”. He is listed in the HPCA Hall of Fame and ISCA Hall of Fame.
From 2002-2018, he was a Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at NCSU. He joined as an Assistant Professor in 2002, was promoted with tenure early to Associate Professorship in 2007, and was promoted early to Professorship in 2012. From 2015-2018, he was a Program Director at the Division of Computer and Network Systems (CNS) at the National Science Foundation. His responsibilities include managing the Secure and Trustworthy Cyberspace (SaTC), Computer Systems Research (CSR), and Scalability and Parallelism in the eXtreme (SPX). He co-founded the NSF/Intel Partnership on Foundational Microarchitecture Research (FoMR) program.
His research interests include computer architecture, especially architecture support for security, memory hierarchy design, non-volatile memory architecture, programming models, and workload cloning. He has published more than 90 journal/conference papers, and more than 40 US patents. He has delivered 67 invited talks/seminars, including several keynote presentations and multi-day tutorials. His research has received MICRO Best Paper Runner-up Award (2017), IEEE Micro Top Picks (2011), and several Best Paper nominations/finalists (ISPASS 2013, IPDPS 2012, and HPCA 2005). He has released several software packages to the public: ACAPP - a cache performance model toolset, HeapServer - a secure heap management library, Scaltool - parallel program scalability pinpointer, and Fodex - a forensic document examination toolset. His research has been covered by the IEEE Spectrum, US News, PC World, HPCWire, Slashdot, and others. He has written two graduate-level textbooks:
- Fundamentals of Parallel Multicore Architecture, CRC Press, 2015. (CRC Press) (Amazon)
- Fundamentals of Parallel Computer Architecture: Multichip and Multicore Systems, Solihin Publishing & Consulting LLC, 2009.
- Yan Solihin's CV (Click here, updated in October 2017)
- Yan Solihin's Cybersecurity CV (Click here, updated in October 2017)
Recent Announcements
- Positions available: Postdocs in Cybersecurity + PhD students for Fall 2019
Posted Jul 11, 2018, 7:47 AM by Yan Solihin - IEEE Spectrum's article 'Researchers Invent a Way to Speed Intel’s 3D XPoint Computer Memory'Read more about the news at: https://spectrum.ieee.org/tech-talk/semiconductors/memory/engineers-invent-a-way-to-speed-intels-3d-xpoint-computer-memoryRead more about the technology ...
Posted Jun 16, 2018, 10:08 AM by Yan Solihin - Congratulations Seunghee for passing the PhD final defense!
Posted Jun 16, 2018, 10:04 AM by Yan Solihin - Congratulations to Satish and Mohammad for passing the qualifying exam!
Posted May 8, 2018, 11:23 AM by Yan Solihin
Oloibiri is a small community in Ogbia LGA located in Bayelsa State, in the eastern Niger Delta region of Nigeria. The inhabitants of Oloibiri community are mainly fishermen and farmers. This is the first place Oil was first discovered in Nigeria.
Oloibiri is a historic town to the oil and gas industry in Nigeria. Nigeria's first commercial oil discovery in Oloibiri town by Shell Darcy in January 15, 1956.
The discovery of oil in Oloibiri changed Nigeria's economic status for the better as a flurry of activities: investments, tourism, oil exportation, etc., came to be.And with an initial production of 5,000 barrels of oil per day (which would later become as much as 2,000,000), Nigeria became the 6th largest oil producer on the chart of the Organisation of petroleum Exporting Countries OPEC.
Oloibiri well was the first commercial oil well in Nigeria. Oloibiri Oilfield was the first commercial oil field in Nigeria as well as West Africa. Nigeria exported its first crude oil in February 1958 from the Oloibiri oil field. Nigeria's first crude oil export came from Oloibiri field in February 1958. Nigeria's first crude oil pipeline was laid from Oloibiri oil field to Port Harcourt on the Bonny River (Bonny Export Terminal).
Current state[edit]
Inasmuch as Oloibiri town was the 'birthplace' of oil in Nigeria, it is a sight for sore eyes.[clarification needed] The place is under-developed, the people are poor peasants, the epidemic rate is off the charts,[clarification needed] the unemployment rate is alarming,[clarification needed] and their land has suffered deadly blows from oil spills. The oil in Oloibiri has since dried up but there is nothing to show that it was the place where Nigeria's oil breakthrough started. In plain terms, it could be said that the town of Oloibiri was used and 'dumped' after the oil explorers found no more use for it. The Federal Government of Nigeria once promised to build a museum in Oloibiri, but till date, that promise has not been fulfilled.
References[edit]
- 60 Years After Nigeria's Crude.Vanguard Nigeria. Retrieved on October 10, 2016.
- Oloibiri: Where It All Began.Leadership Newspaper. Retrieved on October 10, 2016.
Coordinates: 4°40′02″N6°18′30″E / 4.66722°N 6.30833°E