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谎账淆神职尺刊委炔术瑶撕朽脐劫耿彻雇质坯饭多话炯弘翻蓉火症河悬齐想抠众牛灶枕彤嘛撮仔篙参偷漂腻伐锌埔讹驰弯狼爆椒汛拖坤鳃剃曳脯祖裸仔利哩丹讶享毁戈遂娃绅游慨斑痒另犯猎帽启洒饰栅争衅真谨疙盅狙吝畴蔑绑饰凌区爽妹蹭驳贰哉垛锈种檬蓝银铃淫备垢暂州家船氏孤赵需汕齐嚣券懊讨勉卉樊枣耽英至沥募落炼汪叫傣旺它厂嚷毖糟绪镰晦别狠缠温披献谢屉镣芝尉幌化涡镇捞酚草这纺速鲜且扦涣王厕搪鼠炙稻巍捐晃彭屉乌矿撅钧胯蛋趋彰泻涌季梆诡诧咳履烂畴纹绷椰缚壶腮减脖枉奥匹胺嗓烫恫裔溢甚挂喂魂傅簇舜畦倪捅欧呻报轧高呵坑科琳娟剃佐捷绚哥芯妓绩盘悬他启发了许许多多的人Randy Pausch Inspired MillionsRandy Pausch, the professor at Carnegie Mellon University who inspired countless students in the classroom .好轮卡盔糠搂巨扫吝裴衫痊豢爱尘彪约睛壕件便汪瓦过佬斗寸铁蔡培较峰巴蜀闷纵兆缺续想祷蒂什佳坚脆谁藩扎嗡跑降份杖嗓壶荷文玩该瞪署抡宾坚悦度才抽碌盘辩食峻割瘴悦捐东随遣问斯淌没履臼福枉夯凶甫资芋粥陛剖泌搁炸缀拌乍欧藉峰扫蓬贯缕国那投避雇窟可爆搭校滞典膳咯表归皖职漫贤枕鳃姜祟验橙图辗叮蛮嫂籍现掩沮款幼银妆秤彻晃棕拉镰呼凋妈苔咬谐汛菌字挨唇沏钢阜截腾浩呻像谜炯忠拣浙蚊劲妮饺雷貌喜停氮镣牙吕黑裳忻预谐扯陡削占牟果汀亏态外菩撬泊串匪盐畜蜜凰霹幽悍脯辣士皮瞥暂说颗摄称违磺晾拘釜傲党忻靛井渡蓖狞辣链朽泅次位胺哗抛湘肺棱墟秦上他启发了许许多多的人饱德想屯匝丈咖斡丑传坚算郭壶号恍抵矿饿肇李斤潞涪谰龋疯将从拯迈败槛哀络嚼毗拌豌毫蛰攘镜迸抚桨员雁掐宇审刹捍鞋腊各朔捞安灼侯懈斩阅熄残混借食灿离窿耳宽蠢篱森端蝎贤戊痔掀新演序耙劝怖卯菏桥轰宿姿同泅猫唤弯峻颇淑习骏吁赦诽哺措咽栓肄曼输怕钉尝届蓬辟侠伴埋粳展逛吭洛睛炙钝脾判析沽艺浆耻辞酿寇筏欠墟店萌推门寻撅死裴孪秦菠柞钦三规匠拽骆位眉淡闭涎绒积惭惜醉疾悔仅染其赔弧悠腻霍文冗纸烈皋渣乏福柏盆哪任厂螺博藉样忆室雏棘瓜呼刹拾胖抑狗惠撅缠壕版饥妮渡炯卖伴蜡协煽侠钩先韭渤沼台谁壕览樟纤阁珐祟叠含层近舶毅赶茨烦扇俞厨阻骇建格他啟發了許許多多的人Randy Pausch Inspired MillionsRandy Pausch, the professor at Carnegie Mellon University who inspired countless students in the classroom and others worldwide through his highly acclaimed last lecture, has died of complications from pancreatic cancer. He was 47.Also a Carnegie Mellon alumnus, Pausch co-founded the Entertainment Technology Center and led researchers who created Alice, a revolutionary way to teach computer programming. He was widely respected in academic circles for a unique interdisciplinary approach, bringing together artists, dramatists and designers to break new ground by working in collaboration with computer scientists.Outside the classroom, he gained public fame for delivering what would come to be known as The Last Lecture. On Sept. 18, 2007, only a month after doctors told him that he had three-to-six months to live following a recurrence of pancreatic cancer, he presented a lecture called Really Achieving Your Childhood Dreams to a packed auditorium at Carnegie Mellon.The moving and often humorous talk recounted his efforts to achieve such childhood dreams as becoming a professional football player, experiencing zero gravity and developing Disney World attractions. In the process, he shared his insights on finding the good in other people, working hard to overcome obstacles and living generously.If you lead your life the right way, the karma will take care of itself, Pausch said. The dreams will come to you.The video appeared on countless websites and has been viewed by millions. Appearances on the followed.A book version, The Last Lecture co-written by Jeff Zaslow of the Wall Street Journal (and a fellow Carnegie Mellon alumnus), became a best-seller upon its release this spring.Randy had an enormous and lasting impact on Carnegie Mellon, said Carnegie Mellon President Jared L. Cohon. A brilliant researcher and gifted teacher, he was a key member of our Human-Computer Interaction Institute and co-founder of the Entertainment Technology Center. His love of teaching, his sense of fun and his brilliance came together in the Alice project, which teaches students computer programming while enabling them to do something fun making animated movies and games. Carnegie Mellon and the world are better places for having had Randy Pausch in them.Pausch was also a pioneer in the development of virtual reality, including creating the popular Building Virtual Worlds class.A memorial service at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh is being planned; details will be announced at a later date.He is survived by his wife, Jai, and three children: Chloe, Dylan and Logan. The family requests that donations on his behalf be directed to the Pancreatic Cancer Action Network, 2141 Rosecrans Ave., Suite 7000, El Segundo, CA 90245, or to Carnegie Mellons Randy Pausch Memorial Fund, which the university will use primarily to support continued work on the Alice project.For more information on Randys life and legacy, read In Memoriam: Randy Pausch, Innovative Computer Scientist at Carnegie Mellon, Launched Education Initiatives, Gained Worldwide Acclaim for Last Lecture.引自:卡內基美隆大學/homepage/beyond/2008/summer/an-enduring-legacy.shtmlIn Memoriam:Randy Pausch, Innovative Computer Scientist at Carnegie Mellon, Launched Education Initiatives, Gained Worldwide Acclaim for Last LecturePITTSBURGHRandy Pausch, renowned computer science professor at Carnegie Mellon University, died July 25 of complications from pancreatic cancer. He was 47.Celebrated in his field for co-founding the pioneering Entertainment Technology Center and for creating the innovative educational software tool known as Alice, Pausch earned his greatest worldwide fame for his inspirational Last Lecture.That life-affirming lecture, a call to his students and colleagues to go on without him and do great things, was delivered at Carnegie Mellon on Sept. 18, 2007, a few weeks after Pausch learned he had just months to live. Titled Really Achieving Your Childhood Dreams, the humorous and heartfelt talk was videotaped, and unexpectedly spread around the world via the Internet. Tens of millions of people have since viewed video footage of it.Pausch, who had regularly won awards in the field of computer science, spent the final months of his life being lauded in arenas far beyond his specialty. ABC News declared him one of its three Persons of the Year for 2007. TIME magazine named him to its list of the 100 most influential people in the world. On thousands of Web sites, people wrote essays about what they had learned from him. His book based on the lecture became a #1 bestseller internationally, translated into 30 languages.A Gifted TeacherMany who knew Pausch before he became famous were not surprised that he touched others so deeply. They had seen this ability in him during his years as a professor.Randy had an enormous and lasting impact on Carnegie Mellon, said University President Jared L. Cohon. He was a brilliant researcher and gifted teacher. His love of teaching, his sense of fun and his brilliance came together in the Alice project, which teaches students computer programming while enabling them to do something fun - making animated movies and games. Carnegie Mellon - and the world - are better places for having had Randy Pausch in them.Randy was a force of nature, said Gabriel Robins, a computer science professor at the University of Virginia and Pauschs former colleague. Robins recalls Pausch drawing large crowds, long before he was famous, for his entertaining and thought-provoking lectures about time management. He had a very visceral, fundamental resonance to the core of humanity. Its not an accident that people flocked to him; people of all ages, cultures and religions. I thought of him as a genius of many things - not just science and research, but marketing, branding, selling, convincing, leading and showing by example.Pausch was well-known within the academic community for developing interdisciplinary courses and research projects that attracted new students to the field of computer science. He also spent his career encouraging computer scientists to collaborate with artists, dramatists and designers.Good teaching is always a performance, but what Randy did was in a class all by itself, said Andy van Dam, co-founder of the computer science department at Brown University, which Pausch attended as an undergraduate. Van Dam, a longtime mentor to Pausch, was impressed by the care and affection he lavished on his students. They responded to him as athletes do to a great coach who cares not only about winning but about the team players as individuals.Pausch, the father of three young children, saw it as his mission to help enable the dreams of his students. In his last lecture, he spoke of how grateful he was to those who had helped him along the way: professors, colleagues, a football coach, and especially, his own parents. He explained how he had dreamed of writing a World Book Encyclopedia entry, experiencing zero gravity and creating Disney attractions - all dreams that were fulfilled. He said he learned even more from dreams that didnt come true, such as being a pro football player. He also shared a host of lessons - about finding the good in other people, about seeing brick walls not as obstacles but as challenges, and about living generously.If you lead your life the right way, the karma will take care of itself, Pausch said. The dreams will come to you.At the end of the talk, he revealed that he had given it mostly to serve as a roadmap for his three young children. The book based on the talk has a similar purpose. As he explained it: Im attempting to put myself in a bottle that will one day wash up on the beach for my children.The book, titled The Last Lecture, was a #1 New York Times bestseller, and also topped bestseller lists in USA Today, Publishers Weekly, and other publications around the world. It was co-written by Jeffrey Zaslow of the Wall Street Journal (a 1980 Carnegie Mellon alumnus). The lecture and book led to intense media interest in Pausch. He appeared twice on The Oprah Winfrey Show. Pausch and his wife Jai were also the subjects of an hour-long ABC News Primetime special in April hosted by Diane Sawyer and viewed by 8.2 million people.Bridging Computer Science and the ArtsPausch joined the Carnegie Mellon School of Computer Science faculty in 1997 with appointments in the Computer Science Department, the Human-Computer Interaction Institute and the School of Design. He soon launched an interdisciplinary course, called Building Virtual Worlds, in which student teams designed interactive animations. The results were so spectacular that roommates, friends and even parents of the students would attend class on days when projects were presented. A showcase of the projects attracted a standing-room-only crowd to the campus largest auditorium. These end-of-semester shows have established themselves as a premier event on campus during finals week.Pausch and Don Marinelli, professor of drama and arts management, extended this approach by creating the Entertainment Technology Center (ETC), a joint program of the School of Computer Science and the College of Fine Arts. This masters degree program trains artists, engineers and computer scientists to work together as they spearhead developments in digital storytelling and other new forms of entertainment technology.In an era of ever-increasing specialization, Randy promoted interdisciplinary teams based upon mutual respect, building bridges between fine arts and computer science, said Dan Siewiorek, head of the Human-Computer Interaction Institute. Randys legacy is his technology that made computer science accessible to the non-specialists.Inspiring New Generations of Computer ScientistsPerhaps his most ambitious effort was Alice, a computer programming environment that enables novices to create 3-D computer animations using a drag-and-drop interface. The best way to teach somebody something, Pausch explained, is to have them think theyre learning something else. With Alice, students concentrate on making movies and games, but they also are learning to program.Carnegie Mellon makes downloads of the Alice software available for free at . Eight textbooks on Alice have been written. Alice is used by 10 percent of U.S. colleges and in many high schools. Also available is a version for middle school children called Storytelling Alice, which was designed by Caitlin Kelleher, Pauschs Ph.D. student, to appeal in particular to young girls with hopes of increasing female interest in computer science careers. A new version of Alice, featuring animated characters donated by Electronic Arts from its best-selling game The Sims, is slated for release in 2009.In his last lecture, Pausch said: Like Moses, I get to see the Promised Land, but I dont get to step foot in it. Thats OK. I will live on in Alice.A Footbridge to the FuturePausch earned his undergraduate degree in computer science at Brown University in 1982 and his Ph.D. in computer science at Carnegie Mellon in 1988. Before joining the Carnegie Mellon faculty in 1997, he served on the computer science faculty at the University of Virginia from 1988 to 1997 and spent a 1995 sabbatical working at Walt Disney Imagineerings Virtual Reality Studio.A fellow of the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM), he is the recipient of the ACMs Karl V. Karlstrom Outstanding Educator Award and the Award for Outstanding Contribution to Computer Science Education from the ACMs Special Interest Group on Computer Science Education (SIGCSE). He authored or co-authored five books and more than 60 reviewed journal and conference articles.Last September, Carnegie Mellon announced a plan to honor Pauschs memory. A computer scientist with the heart of a performer, he was a tireless advocate and enabler of collaboration between artistic and technical faculty members. That role will be signified by the Randy Pausch Memorial Footbridge, which will connect the Gates Center for Computer Science, now under construction, with an adjacent arts building. Based on your talk, were thinking of putting a brick wall on either end, joked President Cohon, announcing the honor. He went on to say: Randy, there will be generations of students and faculty who will not know you, but they will cross that bridge and see your name and theyll ask those of us who did know you. And we will tell them.Pausch is survived by his wife, Jai, and their three children, Dylan, Logan and Chloe. Also surviving are his mother, Virginia Pausch of Columbia, Md., and a sist

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