Loading…
Student sign-up timeline:
  • Monday, November 18 @ 3:15 – 12th Grade
  • Tuesday, November 19 @ 3:15 – 11th Grade
  • Wednesday, November 20 @ 3:15 – 10th Grade
  • Thursday, November 21 @ 3:15 – 9th Grade
  • November 21-30 – Sign-ups/changes open to all. After December 1, schedules will be frozen.

to bookmark your favorites and sync them to your phone or calendar.

strong>WRC [clear filter]
arrow_back View All Dates
Wednesday, January 8
 

8:55am PST

Inside the North Korean Cyber Crime Machine
Wednesday January 8, 2025 8:55am - 10:10am PST
WRC
The Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK - aka North Korea) government has made extensive investments into offensive cyber security capabilities. What separates the DPRK from other top tier countries in the cyber space is their full embrace of financially motivated crime in addition to more classic state activities like espionage and covert operations / disruption. In this session we’ll spend time talking through the various branches of DPRK cyber activities including crypto/bitcoin attacks, attacks targeting security researchers, the billion dollar raid targeting the Bangladeshi National Bank, and recent efforts to plant DPRK operatives under stolen identities in western countries as regular remote IT workers.
Facilitators
BA

Brad Arkin

Chief Trust Officer, Salesforce
Brad is Chief Trust Officer at Salesforce, the #1 AI CRM. He oversees the company’s security strategy, building trust with stakeholders, and protecting customer data in an AI-first world. Previously, he was Chief Security and Trust Officer at Cisco, and served as the Chief Security... Read More →
Wednesday January 8, 2025 8:55am - 10:10am PST
WRC

10:15am PST

Quantum Science and Technology
Wednesday January 8, 2025 10:15am - 11:30am PST
WRC
We will discuss how lasers, rather than blow stuff up, can cool atoms down to temperatures near absolute zero. At these temperatures, atoms can form macroscope waves that are the matter analog of lasers. Experiments can use these matter waves as emulators for studying quantum materials such as high-temperature superconductors. Moreover, laser-cooled atoms can serve as the key ingredient in quantum devices like sensors and computers. We'll present examples of what the new revolution in quantum science and engineering might bring.
Facilitators
BL

Ben Lev

Physics Professor at Stanford
Benjamin Lev is a Professor of Physics and Applied Physics at Stanford University. He received his Bachelor’s degree from Princeton in 1999 and his Ph.D. from Caltech in 2005, both in physics. Benjamin has received a Packard Foundation Fellowship and the Presidential Early Career... Read More →
Wednesday January 8, 2025 10:15am - 11:30am PST
WRC
  1 Block

12:35pm PST

The Jugular Art: A Visual Romp through the History and Contemporary Craft of Political Cartooning
Wednesday January 8, 2025 12:35pm - 1:50pm PST
WRC
Political cartoons have been part of public debates around the world for more than 250 years. Two-time Pulitzer Prize-winning cartoonist David Horsey will take students on a visual journey through the history of political cartoons and then talk about his own career; how he creates cartoons, the presidents he has lampooned, the readers he has angered, the wild scenes he has observed -- all illustrated with copious examples of his award-winning cartoons.
Facilitators
DH

David Horsey

The Seattle Times
David Horsey is a two-time Pulitzer Prize-winning editorial cartoonist for The Seattle Times.
Wednesday January 8, 2025 12:35pm - 1:50pm PST
WRC

1:55pm PST

Elements and the Universe
Wednesday January 8, 2025 1:55pm - 3:10pm PST
WRC
Our Universe is 15 billion years old. In its early phases, it consisted of mainly hydrogen and helium, with only a small admixture of lithium. Yet today, when we look at our hand, we find it consists mainly of carbon and oxygen, a bit of hydrogen and nitrogen, plus some calcium present mainly in our bones. Those elements are crucial to the formation of life, but how and where did they form? In this lecture, presented on an introductory level, Dr. Madejski will talk about the history of elements and how they got dispersed into interstellar space via stellar explosions.
Facilitators
GM

Greg Madejski

Stanford University
My English-speaking friends know me as Greg. I was born in Poland, but my college and graduate education was in the U.S., respectively at MIT and Harvard. After spending 14 years at NASA/Goddard, I arrived in Stanford in 2000. My research interests are mainly in extragalactic high-energy... Read More →
Wednesday January 8, 2025 1:55pm - 3:10pm PST
WRC
  1 Block
 
Share Modal

Share this link via

Or copy link

Filter sessions
Apply filters to sessions.
Filtered by Date -