ECE Prof Ladan Tahvildari named Chair of IEEE TCSE
ECE ProfessorÌýLadan Tahvildari has been named Chair of the .
ECE ProfessorÌýLadan Tahvildari has been named Chair of the .
SE2023 studentÌýVikram Subramanian in the ACM undergraduate student research competition at for his work titledÌýAn empirical study of first-time open source contributors on Github, which was supervised by . Great work!
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SE2021 capstone project is now one of the , with their platform for shared web browsing. The team includes Philip Scott, Amby Balaji,ÌýDeclan Goncalves, and Keer Liu.ÌýCongratulations!
Professor (our founding Director of SE here at UÀ¶Ý®ÊÓÆµ) has received the .ÌýFull UÀ¶Ý®ÊÓÆµ story in the . Congratulations Jo!
SE studentsÌýEthan Chen, Samuel Hao, Emily Tao, William Wen, andÌýYifei Zhang are part of the team on , which is a website to crowd-source COVID-19 symptom distribution. This data might help researchers and the public to . The team also includes students from UÀ¶Ý®ÊÓÆµ CS and other universities.
SE2020 students Jasper Chapman-Black, Céline O'Neil and Sean PurcellÌýwon first-place in the Programming Challenge. The team developed an algorithm to simulate a drone reconstructing a broken 3D model, determined how to move the pieces back into place and created a visualization for it.
SE2020 students Jasper Chapman-Black, Céline O'Neil and Sean Purcell won first place in the (OEC) Programming Competition.ÌýThe team developed a system to control an hour-by-hour simulation of power generation in Ontario. “We combined a control system and a linear programming solver to pick the optimal combination of power sources to use, minimizing cost and CO2 emissions," says Purcell.
This weekend in Toronto, a group of Software Engineering students will be running , a new hackathon about privacy and socially beneficial technology. The event encourages youth to tackle the challenge of privacy in technology and begin to develop a design orientation that considers technology’s broader social impacts.
Fourth year SE students Spencer Dobrik, David Tsenter, Ryan Wang & Aaron Cotter are winners of the Spring 2019 Baylis Medical award for their health-tech capstone venture, Lukabox. Their aim is to solve medication non-adherence through an IoT pillbox that helps patients stay on top of their medication routines, while giving peace of mind to family members through seamless, real-time monitoring. They are thrilled to receive the Baylis Medical award and are proceeding with an initial round of user testing.
Congratulations SE 2019! All the best for the future!