Calendar Archive

September 2015

General Members Assembly 9/24/15

During this assembly the spoken language will be Dutch! This Thursday a new board will be elected and a change will proposed to the HR. The relevant documents can be found on the drive of MYFMF.

Drinks at the Members Room 9/23/15

Join us for (free!) drinks and snacks at the FMF members room

BAPC preliminaries 9/19/15

BAPC Groningen is a preliminary contest for the national BAPC. The national BAPC is a preliminary contest for the Northwestern Europe Regional Contest (NWERC), which is itself a preliminary contest for the worldwide contest ICPC. As such, teams competing in the BAPC can work their way up to the largest programming contest in the world!

Borrel Lecture 9/15/15

Monthly lecture that covers multidisciplinary scientific areas with free drinks and snacks.

Drinks at the Members Room 9/9/15

Join us for (free!) drinks and snacks at the FMF members room before the NIXX Bios

Pool Tournament 9/3/15

Coming thursday, the 3d of September, it is time for the opening activity from the DOEN! Like last year, we are going pooling at Cue Action. This is a great way for the new members to get to know some people and for old members to get to know the new people. You can sign up at fmf.nl or the NSFW. The activity is free. Hope to see you all there!

Drinks at the Members Room 9/2/15

What better way to start the year with some (free!) drinks and snacks? Join us at the FMF members room!

July 2015

Niet-Nixx-Bios: Her 7/2/15

This month we have an awesome surprise. We have a license left for another movie night. The Nebula was not able to organize this, so some industrious members have taken it upon themselves to show a movie. They are thus proud to announce this months 'niet-nixx'.

Kamerborrel 7/2/15

There is still some budget left so the board decided to organise one last kamerborrel for this lecture year. Free beer, soda and snacks will be available.

June 2015

The Physics colloquium: Shaken not Stirred! James 6/25/15

Everyone knows James Bond and his many dangerous adventures he has to survive. But how can he catch a plane in the free fall as shown at the beginning of the movie Goldeneye? How likely is it that the magnetic watch from the movie "Live and Let Die" really works? These and similar questions in the life of top agents are answered in the lecture from a physics standpoint and garnished with film sequences. At the end of the lecture, the question is discussed why James Bond's vodka Martini has to be always shaken and is not allowed to be stirred.