Friday, 29 May 2020

INVESTING IN INNOVATION: THE PIONEERING SPIRIT OF HPU’S WEBB SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING

Inside a completely transformed facility, High Point University’s first cohort of engineering majors find opportunities they wouldn’t find elsewhere.

Their academic school — the Webb School of Engineering — is a part of HPU’s Innovation Corridor. The corridor represents a $250 million investment in faculty, technology and facilities that foster the university’s STEM programs.

They learn from Apple Co-Founder Steve Wozniak, HPU’s Innovator in Residence who serves on the engineering school’s advisory board.

They place highly in national computer engineering vs computer science
competitions, receive one-on-one mentorship from their professors and have the chance to be true pioneers in the world of engineering.

Just ask Aidan Kelley, a sophomore and one of HPU’s first-ever engineering majors.

Thursday, 28 May 2020

Here’s why engineering will be crucial to Australia’s

A large part of the recovery from the current crisis will be driven by engineers and the projects they enable. A plan from Engineers Australia maps the opportunity. It has been clear since the beginning of the computer science vs software engineering crisis that engineers would play a central role in the efforts to cope with its effects. From the design and manufacturing of protective equipment and ventilators, to the building of pop-up hospitals and the development of solutions to keep supermarket staff safe, each has required engineering.

Long after the physical threat of infection has passed, engineers will be key to the nation’s recovery efforts.

“Everybody has been searching for ways out of this crisis, ways to do business without putting people at risk, ways to make health workers safe, etc.,” said Associate Professor Sally Male, Chair in Engineering Education at the University of Western Australia.

Wednesday, 27 May 2020

RCSJ and Rowan University offer unique engineering journey

Thanks to an unique articulation agreement with Rowan University, 18 Rowan College of South Jersey alumni earned degrees from the the university’s Henry M. Rowan College of Engineering on May 9. Graduates from RCSJ’s Gloucester campus celebrated the successful completion of a four-year journey, which concluded with a degree, internship experience and substantial savings on tuition.

RCSJ alumni who graduated in May with engineering degrees from Rowan University include:


  • Bachelor’s degree, biomedical engineering: Colin McAllister and Eric Williamson. 
  • Bachelor’s degree, chemical engineering: Vanessa Pierce and Sarina Trapani.  
  • Bachelor’s degree: civil engineering: Jonathan D’Amico, Remo DiSalvatore, Michael Dubroski, Brian Groot, Brian Jackson, Anna Kalogiatou, John Laranjeira and William Rohe. 
  • Bachelor’s degree, electrical engineering: Scott Wood. 
  • Bacholor’s degree, mechanical engineering: Phillip Delfierro, Zachary Hammel, John Sparks and Tyler Ziegenbein. 

Master of Science, civil engineering: Ken Lee.

“This is exactly what we envisioned when we first engaged in our partnership with Rowan College, pathways for students to meet the workforce needs of the regions,” said what to do with a computer science degree, president, Rowan University. “Now more than ever, we need to do all that we can to ensure access to affordable, high-quality academic programs. Seeing students successfully complete this process through the nationally ranked Henry M. Rowan College of Engineering is outstanding. We look forward to welcoming more RCSJ transfers over the coming years.”

Tuesday, 26 May 2020

German mechanical engineering industry sees positive signals from China: survey

 A recent survey conducted by the German Mechanical Engineering Industry Association (VDMA) among its members showed that China is "sending positive signals," the association said on Monday.

"As many as 62 percent of the local members surveyed qualify their business situation as satisfactory, the remaining 13 percent even assess the situation as good," said VDMA chief economist Ralph Wiechers in a statement. The association said that mechanical engineering companies whose customers primarily serve the Chinese market are likely to do better than their export-oriented peers in the foreseeable future.

"The Chinese economy is picking up again, even though the situation there has not yet completely eased," Wiechers said. The jobs with computer science degree has been conducting regular surveys among its members since the pandemic broke out. The most recent one, in which 724 companies took part in early May, showed that nine out of ten saw themselves as being affected by the economic consequences of the pandemic.

Meanwhile, the association noted a slight easing of tension on the supply side. Many mechanical engineering companies reported that the difficulties with supplies from China in particular are easing, according to a separate statement from the VDMA on the survey results.

Friday, 22 May 2020

SPI Engineering announce ATLAS – drone data processing, storage and AI-powered analysis

SPH Engineering’s launch of ATLAS addresses the increasing demand for powerful and user-friendly data processing and analysis solution. ATLAS provides AI-powered analytical capabilities enhancing industrial drone inspection and asset management.

The AI-powered platform ATLAS enables to automate object detection on drone and satellite imagery to detect and count or measure the identified objects of interest.

“Companies performing large scale drone inspections have to manually filter tens of thousands of images or analyze many hectares of orthophoto maps to identify data for decision-making. This applies to such industries as solar farms, wind turbines, utility inspections, road maintenance, pipeline monitoring, agriculture, and many others. ATLAS offers the enhanced analytical capability to enable drone inspection save days of manual processing” says Alexei Yankelevich, R&D Director of computer engineering careers.

Thursday, 21 May 2020

Using Fiction to Teach Engineering to Kids

"Novel Engineering" program shows how teachers can introduce engineering concepts to children and foster creativity through reading

Claudia and Jamie Kincjobs with a computer science degree aid have a problem: they can’t see over the crowds gathered around a statue in the Hall of the Italian Renaissance. In E.L. Konigsburg’s classic children’s book From the Mixed Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler, Claudia and Jamie are secretly living in the Metropolitan Museum of Art and they have to later return at night to take a closer look at the mysterious statue.

In a Massachusetts classroom, two students studying the book with engineering in mind proposed a different solution for Claudia and Jamie: a functional periscope to see over the crowds, built from cardboard and other materials that might find around a museum.

The two students were taking part in a program called Novel Engineering, which introduces K-8 students to engineering principles and literacy. In the program, which was developed by researchers at Tufts’ Center for Engineering Education and Outreach (CEEO), children read a book, discuss challenges faced by the characters, and develop, build, and test their own solutions to those problems.

Wednesday, 20 May 2020

What exactly is ‘Networking’ for musicians, and why do you need it?

Networking is a word you’ll see thrown around a lot in the corporate world, but in reality it has an incredibly important role in music as well. Simply put, networking is getting your name out there, connecting with people in your community, and fostering those connections.

Today at 5pm Happy Mag is leading a workshop on Collaborating and Networking, aimed at emerging musicians in the Sydney community and beyond. Join in to find out the best ways to participate and support your local scene, how to find potential difference between computer science and computer engineering, learn the best ways to work with creatives such as photographers or designers, and more.

Happy Mag’s Music Editor Tom Cameron and News Editor Claudia Schmidt will be running the Collaborating and Networking workshop. Outside of Happy Mag, both Tom and Claudia have played in a number of Sydney-based bands over the years, as well as regularly engaging in the local arts community during that time through gigs, workshops, local festivals, and more.

Joining the workshop will be Joshua White, Label Manager of Sydney indie label Third Eye Stimuli Records. He’ll be phoning in to share his knowledge on fostering a community around his label, what it means to work with musicians for a living, and the best way to engage creatives for collaborative work.

Worldwide ability is rotating north to Canada

 Those were the expressions of Shopify CEO Tobias Lutke in a tweet tending to gifted ability that are as of now kept from working in the U.S...