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The CS Games (Computer Science Games) is an annual computer science competition that includes challenges form all aspects of computing. Organized by students from different university every year, the competition typically attracts more than 30 teams (between 6 and 10 members per team) from universities from across North America, but primarily from Canada and northeastern United States. It is open to undergraduate students majoring in computer science, computer engineering, software engineering and related fields.〔http://www.csgames.org/〕 == History == Due to a lack of collegial competition in the computer technology field in 2003, a group of students from McGill University (Denis Lebel, Olivier Hébert, Marc Lanctot, Julian Wolfson, Marc Boscher, Alexandre Denault, and Miriam Zia) created the CS Games that combined a dozen 3-hour academic and social competitions.〔http://csgames.org/2013/files/csgames-sponsorship-package-2013.pdf〕 After 2004, the event had grown beyond a McGill organized event. It was decided that any university could host the CS Games. A different university would be chosen each year. Since then, the competitions have been held in Québec City (Université Laval ’05, ’13), in Montréal (École de technologie supérieure ’06, McGill University ’07, Université de Montréal ’09, Polytechnique ’10, Concordia University ’11), in Sherbrooke (Université de Sherbrooke ’08) and in Winnipeg (University of Manitoba ’12). In 2006, it was decided a permanent CS Games Council consisting of ex-organizers would be created to select and coach hosting committees. 2012 edition was the 10th anniversary of the event. It was hosted by University of Manitoba. After 2012, a new logo and branding was created for the CS Games.〔http://csgames.org/resources/logo/csgames-visual-identity-guidelines.pdf〕〔http://blog.csgames.org/2012/07/our-new-logo.html〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「CS Games」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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