DIKU has its roots at the Institute for Mathematical Sciences, where in 1963, the first computer was bought.[4]
In 1969, Peter Naur became the first professor in Computer Science at the University of Copenhagen, and in 1970, DIKU was officially established its own department.[5]
Research
As of 2021, the department is home to 82 academic staff, 126 research staff and 38 support staff. Research is organised into seven research sections:[6]
The department offers programmes at BSc as well as MSc level, both in core computer science and in interdisciplinary subjects. Bachelor's programmes are 3-year programmes and mostly taught in Danish, whereas Master's programmes are 2-year programmes and taught in English. In 2020, DIKU enrolled 610 new Bachelor's students and 136 new Master's students.[12]
As of 2021, DIKU offers the following study programmes:[13]
Bachelor of Science (BSc) in Computer Science
Bachelor of Science (BSc) in Machine Learning and Data Science
Bachelor of Science (BSc) in Computer Science and Economy
Bachelor of Science (BSc) in Communication and IT
Bachelor of Science (BSc) in Health and IT
Master of Science (MSc) in Computer Science
Part-time Master of Science (MSc) in Computer Science
Master of Science (MSc) in IT and Cognition
Master of Science (MSc) in Communication and IT
In addition, the department awards the research degree Doctor of Philosophy (PhD). PhD students are enrolled in the Faculty of Science's Doctoral School for a typical study period of between three and four years.[14]
Location
DIKU is based at University Park in Copenhagen, part of the university's North Campus. Its building complex comprises the former Department of Anatomy. The building was completed in 1942 to design by Kaj Gottlob.[15]
The Human-Centered Computing Section is located in Sigurdsgade, close to the North Campus.
Student life
An important social event is the DIKU revue which is held each year in June. The DIKU revue is always in competition with the physics revue and never misses an opportunity to computer-animate the complete and utter destruction of the physics institute at the H. C. Ørsted Institute.
As something unique among the institutes of Copenhagen University, the DIKU cantine is entirely student driven and open 24 hours. It is the natural hub for all social events on DIKU.
The two largest social events are the DIKU revue and the Julefrokost (Christmas lunch) of the canteen.
Mads Tofte, the first managing director of the IT University of Copenhagen and co-developer of the Standard ML programming language, who graduated with a MSc in Computer Science and Mathematics in 1984.
Michael Seifert, a Danish computer programmer who developed the popular multiplayer text-based role-playing game DikuMud, was a BSc then MSc student at the department from 1990 to 1996.
Miscellaneous
The domaindiku.dk was registered on October 29, 1987, and was one of the first .dk domain names to be registered.[16]
The popular DikuMUD codebase was developed at DIKU in March 1990, and derives its name from the institute.[17]
^Shah, Rawn; Romine, James (1995). Playing MUDs on the Internet. John Wiley & Sons, Inc. p. 22. ISBN0-471-11633-5. DikuMud first appeared in mid-March of 1990 when a group of programmers at the Department of Computer Science at the University of Copenhagen, Denmark got together and began work on a multiplayer game that is similar to but improved on AberMuds. These coders were Hans Henrik Stærfeldt, Katja Nyboe, Tom Madsen, Michael Seifert, and Sebastian Hammer.