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Efficient new wireless system developed by Syracuse University scientist can save 10 percent of bandwidth
SU News Services(315) 443-3784 Driven by fast-growing use of smart phones and Internet videos, wireless communication among Americans is expanding so rapidly that a tsunami of megabytes could soon threaten to overwhelm the bandwidth available. The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has…
SU’s TRAC: Federal prosecutions sharply higher in 2009
The total number of federal criminal filings reached an all time high as a result of a flood of immigration prosecutions.
SU in the News: Monday, December 21
Maxwell School and College of Arts and Sciences’ Stuart Thorson featured in Korea’s JoonAng Daily for “science diplomacy”
SU in the News: Monday, December 21, 2009
SU NEWS AND EVENTS COVERAGE Stuart Thorson, professor of political science and international relations in the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs and The College of Arts and Sciences, is featured in a JoonAng Daily (Korea) article on “science…
Every corner of the globe: Maxwell chosen to host prestigious Humphrey Fellows
Eleven international professionals are pursuing non-degree study and professional development as the Maxwell School’s first cohort of Hubert H. Humphrey Fellows.
A different Lincoln
Anyone who has seen the Abraham Lincoln statue that anchors the Maxwell courtyard can’t forget it. But who is this Lincoln, and where did he come from?
Efficient new wireless system developed by Syracuse University scientist can save 10 percent of bandwidth
A Syracuse University scientist has invented a new technology for handling wireless traffic that significantly reduces bandwidth use.
SU Magazine Fall/Winter ’09 issue available now
The Fall/Winter ’09 issue of Syracuse University Magazine was published recently and will be distributed worldwide to an estimated 200,000 members of the University community, including alumni, faculty, staff and friends of SU.
New compounds may control deadly fungal infections
Novel agents shown to reduce growth of fungi by more than 80 percent.
NewsHouse: SU students, library officials and others discuss one of the library’s growing challenges: Too many books.
An hour and a half-long forum, called “What is a Library?”, featured questions from the audience about the library’s priorities heading into the future.