News
- A three-member team, including Creative Technology and Design undergraduate students Colin Soguero and Mason Moran, took first prize at HackCU for their project, ChessLens, an augmented reality application that helps chess players improve their game. 聽
- Kailey Shara, ATLAS PhD student and a member of the Emergent Nanomaterials Lab,聽won two top prizes within several days to fund her company, Chembotix, taking home a total of $17,500.聽聽
Shara won first place at the NVC 14 Female Founder Pitch ($5000) and the NVC Finals Audience Choice Award ($1000), as well as two first-place wins with CU 小蓝视频's New Venture Launch program ($11,500).
- If clothes and textiles are to be digitally enhanced, we have to take the "hard" out of hardware, designing circuitry and components that are indistinguishable from the fabric in which they are embedded.
- Sasha de Koninck, an Intermedia Art, Writing and Performance PhD student and聽a member of the Unstable Design Lab, will host a virtual 鈥淔uture Heirlooms Workshop鈥 at the Textiles from Home Conference on March 17, 4-6 p.m
- Laura Devendorf, director of the Unstable Design Lab in the ATLAS Institute and assistant professor of information science, will deliver a lecture entitled 鈥淒esigning Not Knowing鈥 on March 11 as part of Georgia Tech鈥檚 GVU Brown Bag Seminar Series.
- To honor and remember the lives lost in the past year, CU 小蓝视频 joined the state of Colorado remembrance March 5 with a magenta-colored light display from the tower of the Roser ATLAS building.
- LeeLee James, BTU's student assistant, is also the "Twirling Tech Goddess" on YouTube. Her show encourages radical diversity and inclusion by making learning tech more fun, accessible and relatable to people underrepresented in STEM.
- Wayne Seltzer, ATLAS Institute's technologist-in-residence, was featured as one of four MIT alumni who are 鈥榤aking鈥 their mark with a love for building and tinkering. As a maker mentor, Seltzer has worked with many students and the BTU community.
- ATLAS students will host the sixth annual T9Hacks the weekend of March 19-21, promoting interest in creative technologies, coding, design and making, among college women and others traditionally underrepresented in hackathons.
- Julia Uhr's game, "There are No Eyes Here," received the Best Remix award at the third annual Public Domain Game Jam. The painting-based puzzle utilizes elements of Wassily Wassilyevich Kandinsky paintings as levers, and players locate the elements they can manipulate to complete each stage.