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USU students to release `Bug Theatre'

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  • USU students to release `Bug Theatre'

    The Herald Journal

    USU students to release `Bug Theatre'

    By Herald Journal staff report
    Published:
    Saturday, July 4, 2009 4:00 AM CDT

    Ask undergraduate computer scientists about their most vexing
    programming challenge and they'll sum it up in one word: bugs.
    Having one typo in a line of code - maybe just a missing semicolon -
    can cause the whole program to fail. Finding the problem can take
    hours.
    `It's so frustrating when you know the code you've written should work
    but it doesn't,' said Nare Hayrapetyan, a third-year USU Huntsman
    Scholar from Armenia.
    Budding programmers should have an easier time thanks to research
    conducted by Hayrapetyan and fellow computer science majors Alison
    Cooley and Elise Derr. The trio is working with faculty mentor Renee
    Bryce to research the causes of student programming bugs and develop
    learning materials to ease the obstacles.
    The team plans to develop a `Bug Theatre' program using online videos
    and Web-based tutorials to identify common bugs and offer advice and
    software tools to avoid them. The students have selected a movie motif
    to keep the subject humorous and entertaining.
    `The students have great ideas and will create movie posters and
    tickets that will advertise the finished program,' Bryce says. `Over
    the course of the next year, they'll develop online movies about bugs
    that will benefit not just USU students but will be available over the
    Web to users everywhere.'
    Funding for the effort comes from a grant from the Computer Research
    Association's Committee on the Status of Women in Computing
    Research. The award provides each of the three undergraduates a $3,000
    stipend for the 2009-10 academic year, a $4,000 stipend for summer
    2010, and money to attend two computer science conferences.
    Computer bugs are not only a headache for students but a significant
    bane for the computing industry.
    `The National Institute for Standards and Technology estimates that
    computer bugs cost our economy $59 billion a year,' she says. `Bugs
    are usually annoyances but they can potentially cost lives.'
    Cooley, who hopes to pursue a career with the FBI, looks forward to
    the research challenge and developing movies for her fellow students.
    `I wish I'd had something like `Bug Theatre' to help me out,' she
    says.
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