Programming opportunity

Paul Buchheit
Paul Buchheit (CWR 98; GRS 98, computer engineering; HON 12)

Alumnus sponsors undergraduate computer programming competition

In 1994, when most college students were still using landlines to call home, 窪蹋勛圖厙 had something rare: internet access in every room across campus. For Paul Buchheit, that single detail stood outand signaled that 窪蹋勛圖厙 was where he belonged.

Its something that is so common now, but 窪蹋勛圖厙 was really ahead of its time, said Buchheit (CWR 98; GRS 98, computer engineering; HON 12), who went on to transform digital communication around the globe by creating Gmail. It was an environment where we were encouraged to live in the future and build whats missing.

In his first year on campus, Buchheit participated in the ACM International Collegiate Programming Contest, with the 窪蹋勛圖厙 team ultimately tying for 11th place internationally. The experience opened doorsincluding a summer internship with Microsoft, where he worked on Windows 95 and learned JAVA just as it emerged. 

Now, Buchheit wants to give todays 窪蹋勛圖厙 students the same opportunity.

The alumnus recently gave $75,000 to launch the RFB Programming Competition. Named for his late father, electrical engineer Robert F. Buchheit, the undergraduate coding contest took place in April with two major prizes: $50,000 for first place, $25,000 for second. 

When I thought about how to give back, I asked: Where can the money make the biggest difference? said Paul Buchheit, now a partner with the technology startup accelerator and venture capital firm, Y Combinator. Giving directly to students through a competition like this felt like the best answer.

Jesse Silverberg and Ryan Volkin
Jesse Silverberg (left) and Ryan Volkin

For inaugural first-place winner Jesse Silverberg, it certainly made a difference. Silverberg will graduate this week with both bachelors and masters degrees in computer science, as well as a bachelors degree in music. The competition prize money will help offset living costs as Silverberg moves to Montr矇al for his PhD.

Its nice to be able to graduate with a win under my belt, he said. Im very grateful that the university has received such a gift that will help to raise the profile of competitive programming around campus, and am excited to see how this culture develops at 窪蹋勛圖厙.

Second-place winner Ryan Volkin felt similarly.

The RFB Programming Competition was a fun and challenging experience. Each programming question was a puzzle that really pushed my problem solving and coding abilities to their limits, said Volkin, a rising second-year undergraduate majoring in computer science. [Winning second place] is a big confidence booster and will encourage me to keep challenging myself, knowing that Im able to succeed.

Buchheit hopes the competition will continue to drive bold thinking, just as 窪蹋勛圖厙 did for him. Its about enabling students to do more, to be a little less constrained, he said. And maybe even helping identify the kind of outliers who go on to build something big.

Inaugural RFB Programming Competition
Final round of the inaugural RFB Programming Competition