
Professor and Undergraduate Program Coordinator
Information Technology Department (IT)
Rochester Institute of Technology (RIT)
Golisano Building, Bldg 70 - Room 2100
102 Lomb Memorial Drive
Rochester, NY 14623-5608
USA
IT Advising Email:
itugrad@it.rit.edu
Personal/Professional Email:
jab@it.rit.edu
Phone: (585)475-7453
Fax: (585)475-2181
Office: Golisano Building, 70-2111 (in the IT department office)
How to get to me
If you have questions about the undergraduate IT program,
either as a current or a prospective student,
you probably should make an appointment to meet with
Rita Dean, Susan Herzberg or Jennifer Hinton,
our IT Academic Advisors.
To find out whom to see and to make an appointment with the appropriate
person,
call the Information Technology department office at (585)475-6179
or stop by the office in the Golisano building (70-2100).
If you have emailable advising questions, send them to
itugrad@it.rit.edu.
Research Interests
- GenJam, my genetic algorithm that learns
to improvise jazz, and the software sideman in my Virtual Quintet.
- Evolutionary Computer Music,
the title of the book I co-edited for Springer,
which was launched in April, 2007
(available at Amazon).
Also the subject of my
tutorial on Evolutionary Music
at
GECCO-2004 and 2005.
- Use of sequences in composition
(Read about and hear PGA-1 from Fibonacci '98)
- Computer Music in general
- Creativity, especially the nature of creativity and what it means to be
creative.
For instance, is GenJam creative?
I'm exploring this and other fun questions as a member of the
Creativity and Invention Working Group (CIWG).
One byproduct of this group is the cool photo to the right by
John Retallack,
who photographed the members of the CIWG as part of his "Colleagues" project.
No less hair than before (see above), but it's a lot grayer...
- IT Curriculum Development -- Read my paper on
the Importance of Synergy, given at CITC-3,
and The Role of Programming in IT,
given with Dianne Bills at SIGITE '05.
- Human Factors and User Interaction/Interface Design
- Computer Games, not as a player, but as an observer of the
impact games is having on the computing world and society in general.
My interest stems from the unprecidented shift I've observed in the career goals
of entering freshmen over the last few years
toward our new BS degree in Game Design and Development.
Check out games.rit.edu!
Classes (Fall, 2008)
-
4002-718 Current Themes in Information Technology
-
4002-201 Freshman Seminar
Out on the Web
A note on style
You may have noticed that this Web site reflects a minimalist,
almost retro style with respect to the level of technology that is employed.
This is a conscious decision reflecting the author's design philosophy
that "less is more."
He believes that content must be presented as transparently as possible
and must not be obscured by elaborate and often gratuitous displays
of "features."
This Web site also demonstrates the author's utter lack of knowledge
about any but the most rudimentary "features" and amply
displays his embarrassing lack of skill in creating compelling Web presentations.
The best that can be said is that this is a time capsule of what Web sites
looked like in the early days of the Internet.
Al Biles <
jab@it.rit.edu
>
Last modified: 17 January, 2008