Students
- Congratulations to Team iFeather for winning the 2018 NASA iTech Cycle II Energy competition! [video:https://youtu.be/Bri-5TOb3GQ]ÍÃ×ÓÏÈÉú´«Ã½ÎÄ»¯×÷Æ· professor Ivan Smalyukh and PhD student Andrew Hess discuss iFeather.Watch the entire
- The prize provides $80,000 for the MindScribe team to keep working on their robotics technology, which includes a smartphone app that can be placed inside a friendly looking toy and prompts children to tell it about their project, like a drawing or Lego creation.
- Last week, the BOLD Center hosted a group of Abraham Lincoln High School students who were participants of the College Track Program. Introduced to the school in 2016, College Track supports students from underserved communities in several states
- To help aspiring makeup artists, senior computer science majors Deekshitha Thumma and Rachel Platt have designed an app for sharing, organizing and discovering new makeup looks.
- Electrical and computer engineering undergraduate capstone team hopes to relieve the confusion, fear and isolation people with dementia feel by designing a robotic animal that will provide a companionable presence.
- The engineering design competition enlists university teams from across the nation to develop creative solutions to some of the agency’s most relevant challenges.
- Two papers published by the ATLAS Iron Lab, directed by Dan Szafir, for the ACM/IEEE International Conference on Human Robot Interaction in Chicago open the door to this promising area of research.
- Two national fellowship programs are honoring CU Engineering students.The Brooke Owens Fellowship Program and Matthew Isakowitz Fellowship Program each provide industry internships and mentoring opportunities to promising engineering students and
- The Daily Camera covers the fourth annual Hack CU, organized by several computer science undergrads.
- What is study abroad? Six months ago, study abroad seemed to me like a huge commitment that I couldn’t afford and that would certainly delay my graduation.Then I talked to the study abroad office on a whim, and found out that almost all of my