Engineering researchers awarded provincial funding
Four professors at Waterloo Engineering were recently awarded $570,000 in provincial funding to build their research teams and pay for research-related infrastructure.
Four professors at Waterloo Engineering were recently awarded $570,000 in provincial funding to build their research teams and pay for research-related infrastructure.
A second-year Waterloo Engineering student shared the top prize at a recent hackathon focused on the creation of technology to protect privacy.
Lena Nguyen of systems design engineering teamed up with Anne Chung, a second-year computer science student at the University of Waterloo, to develop software that puts browsers on kids mode by disabling web page fields asking for sensitive information such as addresses and credit card numbers.
A new kind of imaging technology invented at Waterloo Engineering could tell cancer doctors exactly where to cut during surgery to remove tumors.
That would eliminate secondary surgeries to get malignant tissue that was missed the first time, which happens in about 10 per cent of all cancer cases that involve tumors.
Talented young creators from around the world are coming together at the University of Waterloo this weekend for the sixth annual Hack the North event.
The largest hackathon in Canada and one of the largest in North America with 1,500 participants this year, the free student-run event gets crucial support from the Faculty of Engineering and is based in the three newest engineering buildings.
A team of recent Waterloo Engineering alumni is in the running for $1 million at the United Nations with a brand new startup it pivoted to in an English castle business accelerator last month.
Xuemin (Sherman) Shen, an electrical and computer engineering professor, has been recognized with the 2019 Award of Merit from the Federation of Chinese Professionals Ontario (FCCP) Education Foundation.
Zhongwei Chen, a chemical engineering professor, and Nandita Basu, a civil and environmental engineering professor, were elected to the Royal Society of Canada (RSC) today.
An architecture grad student’s winning paper illustrates the paradoxes of Somali nomadism and the desire for a temporary hut to be a home.
Researchers at Waterloo Engineering have uncovered a problem that could skew the results everywhere groundwater levels are monitored and used to set government policies.
Their study revealed that a discrepancy between scientific data and anecdotal reports on groundwater levels in southern India was caused by a statistical phenomenon known as ‘survival bias.’
A School of Architecture professor and renowned Holocaust historian has won a prestigious award that recognizes exceptional Canadian researchers and their achievements.