Roger Grinde of the University of New Hampshire put together an excellent blog on Applications of Operations Research. No updates since May. I hope it is a temporary haitus, since it is a great resource.
Author: Michael
Silly Operations Researchers
There is a thread on alt.folklore.urban that begins with the classic OR story of looking for places to increase shielding on planes in WWII: analysis of where holes were on planes was somewhat skewed by being limited to those that returned. This then goes on to other analyses: first a researcher concludes, based on prison interviews, that people of low intelligence commit crimes. This is updated to conclude criminals of low intelligence go to prison. Further updates suggest people (not necessarily criminals) of low intelligence go to prison. Interesting thread!
Recognition for Constraint Programming
From the AAAS:
Professor Eugene C. Freuder, the Director of the Cork Constraint Computation Centre in the Computer Science Department of University College Cork has been elected a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS). He is one of only 14 new Fellows elected this year in the Information, Computing, and Communication section of AAAS, out of a total of 376 new Fellows. AAAS is an international non-profit organization dedicated to advancing science around the world. Founded in 1848, AAAS serves some 262 affiliated societies and academies of science, serving 10 million individuals. The 2005 AAAS Fellows were announced in the 28 October issue of the AAAS journal Science. Science has the largest paid circulation of any peer-reviewed general science journal in the world, with an estimated total readership of one million.
CORS/Optimization Days 2006
CORS 2006 in Montreal has a very impressive group of invited speakers:
– Teodor Gabriel Crainic, École des sciences de la gestion, Université du Québec à Montréal
Planning Models for Transportation in the Electronic Age
– Egon Balas, Carnegie Mellon (IFORS Distinguished Lecturer)
– Jack Edmonds (no web page, but here is a description of some of his work)
Existentially Polytime Theorems
– Ralph E. Gomory, Alfred P. Sloan Foundation
Thoughts about Integer Programming
– Adam N. Letchford, Lancaster University
Semidefinite Programming and Combinatorial Optimization
Definitely some impressive people there!
October Job Listings
OR/MS Today‘s October issue is one of the big ones for job postings, and it looks like the market is pretty good these days. Lots of jobs both in business schools and in IE Departments. Good schools too: Georgia Tech, Michigan, Duke, Texas A&M, Stanford, SMU, Washington University and the University of Washington (you would think they would be closer geographically), Cornell, UT Austin, MIT, Berkeley, Virginial Tech, and many, many more. It does look like the business schools want “operations management” rather than pure “operations research”. Still, there are some “management science” jobs in business schools open. I’d be interested in hearing from those on the market how supply and demand seem to match up.
INFORMS San Francisco
Due to the hurricane, the INFORMS Meeting in November has been switched from New Orleans to San Francisco. It amazes me that a three thousand person meeting can be switched with such apparent ease. I am chairing the 2006 meeting in Pittsburgh: we have been working and planning on things for 2 years now. The thought of having to change everything three months before the conference is very scary. There is a great article in the October, 2005 issue of OR/MS Today on the planning for the switch (it wasn’t as easy as it looks). We almost ended up in Kansas City (which would have been OK, but I prefer SF).
Welcome to the ORB
Welcome to Michael Tricks Operations Research Blog (ORB). At the moment, this is a blog to see if this is something I want to continue with. With this blog, I plan to chat about happenings in the world of Operations Research.
A few words about me: I am a past President of INFORMS (The Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences) and am currently a Vice President of IFORS (the International Federation of Operational Research Societies). A long time ago, I created Michael Trick’s Operations Research Page, which eventually became the INFORMS Resources Page. I was also the founding editor of INFORMS Online.
For the past eight years, I was President of the Carnegie Bosch Institute for Applied Studies in International Management, but my time is up, so I am looking for other things to do. Starting January, I will be an Area Editor for the journal Operations Research, responsible for the “OR Forum”: articles on controversial and/or important issues in operations research. This blog is part of some thoughts I had for how to make that Area be relevant and interesting.
So, let’s get this show on the road, and see what happens.