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Adam Champion’s CSE Website


Hi there, and welcome to my CSE Department website! My name is Adam Champion, and I'm a Ph.D. student in computer science and engineering here at The Ohio State University. My advisor is Prof. Dong Xuan (his last name is pronounced “schwenn”). Feel free to browse around the site using the links shown above.  Your current web page will be displayed in bold red text, whereas “normal” links will be displayed in light gray text.

You’re currently viewing my home page, which is a “hub” from which you can access my other web pages. The links above should be self-explanatory.

This webpage uses XHTML 1.0 Strict and CSS 2.0, and so it should render correctly in any standards-compliant browser such as Firefox or Opera. If you are using Internet Explorer to view this site, then I strongly urge you to use one of these two browsers.

In order to view this site, you must set your display resolution to 1024 × 768 or greater. Enjoy your stay here!



Publications





News and Updates



Thursday, 17 May 2007
Trusted Computing and Digital Rights Management Thesis Online

This past year, I’ve written an undergraduate thesis on trusted computing (TC) and digital rights management (DRM). I presented my work at OSU’s Denman Undergraduate Research Forum. As some people have requested that I put my thesis online, you may download it here (256KB PDF). My Denman poster is also online; you can view it here (3.5MB PDF) as well as at the Science and Engineering Library until the end of May.



Saturday, 31 March 2007
New Papers

I’ve added a couple new papers to the site:

  1. CSE 651 Homework 0
  2. Combating the Botnet Scourge, a paper for CSE 551
  3. How to Support QoS in End Systems, a paper for CSE 679


Tuesday, 9 May 2006
CSE 601 Paper and Presentation

I just added my CSE 601 paper to the Articles section (also in PDF form. In it, I discuss some of the deleterious effects of software patents and argue that the patentability of computer software should be abolished. (Those who wish to protect proprietary algorithms may still do so under the copyright and trade-secret laws, which provide hefty fines for intellectual-property infringement.) You can also view my CSE 601 presentation on this site.







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